Thursday Significance In Hinduism
- Thursday Significance In Hinduism Bible
- Thursday Significance In Hinduism History
- Thursday Significance In Hinduism History
Thursday is the day of the week between Wednesday and Friday. According to the ISO 8601 international standard, it is the fourth day of the week.
Benefits of Brihaspati (Guruvar) Vrat. The devotees wear yellow clothes and offer bhog and Prasad to the Lords dedicatedly; in some regions people also worship the banana plantain. There are many woes, unfulfilled desires, health disorders, poverty, and relationship problems in this materialistic world, which can be curtailed by worshipping Lord Vishnu and Lord Brihaspati on Thursdays.
- 1Name
- 2Cultural and religious practices
- 4Popular culture
Name[edit]
See Names of the days of the week for more on naming conventions.
Thor's (Jupiter's) day[edit]
The name is derived from Old EnglishÞūnresdæg and Middle EnglishThuresday (with loss of -n-, first in northern dialects, from influence of Old NorseÞorsdagr) meaning 'Thor's Day'. It was named after the Norse god of Thunder, Thor. [1][2][3]Thunor, Donar (German, Donnerstag) and Thor are derived from the name of the Germanic god of thunder, Thunraz, equivalent to Jupiter in the interpretatio romana.
In most Romance languages, the day is named after the Roman god Jupiter, who was the god of sky and thunder. In Latin, the day was known as Iovis Dies, 'Jupiter's Day'. In Latin, the genitive or possessive case of Jupiter was Iovis/Jovis and thus in most Romance languages it became the word for Thursday: Italiangiovedì, Spanishjueves, Frenchjeudi, Sardinian jòvia, Catalandijous, Galicianxoves and Romanianjoi. This is also reflected in the p-CelticWelshdydd Iau.
The astrological and astronomicalsign of the planet Jupiter (♃) is sometimes used to represent Thursday.
Thursday Significance In Hinduism Bible
Since the Roman god Jupiter was identified with Thunor (Norse Thor in northern Europe), most Germanic languages name the day after this god: Torsdag in Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish, Hósdagur/Tórsdagur in Faroese, Donnerstag in German or Donderdag in Dutch. Finnish and Northern Sami, both non-Germanic (Uralic) languages, uses the borrowing 'Torstai' and 'Duorastat'. In the extinct Polabian Slavic language, it was perundan, Perun being the Slavic equivalent of Thor.[4]
There are a number of modern names imitating the naming of Thursday after an equivalent of 'Jupiter' in local tradition. In most of the languages of India, the word for Thursday is Guruvāra – vāra meaning day and Guru being the style for Bṛhaspati, guru to the gods and regent of the planet Jupiter. In Sanskrit language, the day is called Bṛhaspativāsaram (day of Bṛhaspati). In Nepali language, the day is called Bihivāra as derived from the Sanskrit word. In Thai, the word is Wan Pharuehatsabodi , also in Old Javanese as Respati or in Balinese as Wraspati – referring to the Hindu deity Bṛhaspati, also associated with Jupiter.En was an old Illyrian deity and in his honor in the Albanian language Thursday is called 'Enjte'.[5]In the Nahuatl language, Thursday is Tezcatlipotōnal (Nahuatl pronunciation: [teskat͡ɬipoˈtoːnaɬ]) meaning 'day of Tezcatlipoca'.
Fourth day[edit]
In Slavic languages and in Chinese, this day's name is 'fourth' (Slovakštvrtok, Czechčtvrtek, Slovenečetrtek, Croatian and Bosniančetvrtak, Polishczwartek, Russian 'четверг' četverg, Bulgarian 'четвъртък', Serbian 'четвртак', Macedonian 'четврток', Ukrainian 'четвер' chetver.). Hungarian uses a Slavic loanword 'csütörtök'. In Chinese, it's 星期四 xīngqīsì ('fourth solar day'). In ancient Chinese, it is 木曜日. In Estonian it's 'neljapäev', meaning fourth day or fourth day in a week. The Baltic languages also use the term 'fourth day' (Latvianceturtdiena, Lithuanianketvirtadienis).
Fifth day[edit]
Greek uses a number for this day: Πέμπτη Pémpti 'fifth,' as does Portuguese: quinta-feira 'fifth day,' Hebrew: 'יום חמישי' ('Yom Hamishi' – day fifth) often written 'יום ה ('Yom Hey' – 5th letter Hey day), and Arabic: 'يوم الخميس' ('Yaum al-Khamīs' – fifth day). Rooted from Arabic, Indonesian word for Thursday is 'Kamis', similarly 'Khamis' in Malay and 'Kemis' in Javanese.
In Catholicliturgy, Thursday is referred to in Latin as feria quinta.Portuguese, unlike other Romance languages, uses the word quinta-feira, meaning 'fifth day of liturgical celebration', that comes from the Latin 'feria quinta' used in religious texts where it was not allowed to consecrate days to pagan gods.
Icelandic also uses the term fifth day (Fimmtudagur).
Vietnamese refers to Thursday as 'Thứ năm' (literally means 'day five').
Quakers traditionally referred to Thursday as 'Fifth Day' eschewing the pagan origin of the English name 'Thursday'.[6]
Cultural and religious practices[edit]
Christian holidays[edit]
In the Christian tradition, Maundy Thursday or Holy Thursday is the Thursday before Easter — the day on which the Last Supper occurred. Also known as Sheer Thursday in the United Kingdom, it is traditionally a day of cleaning and giving out Maundy money there. Holy Thursday is part of Holy Week.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church. Thursdays are dedicated to the Apostles and Saint Nicholas. The Octoechos contains hymns on these themes, arranged in an eight-week cycle, that are chanted on Thursdays throughout the year. At the end of Divine Services on Thursday, the dismissal begins with the words: 'May Christ our True God, through the intercessions of his most-pure Mother, of the holy, glorious and all-laudable Apostles, of our Father among the saints Nicholas, Archbishop of Myra in Lycia, the Wonder-worker…'
Ascension Thursday is 40 days after Easter, when Christ ascended into Heaven.
Islam[edit]
In Islam, Thursdays are one of the days in a week in which Muslims are encouraged to do voluntary fasting, the other being Mondays. There are a number of Hadith which narrated of prophet Muhammad fasting on these days.[7][8]
Judaism[edit]
In Judaism, Thursdays are considered auspicious days for fasting. The Didache warned early Christians not to fast on Thursdays to avoid Judaizing, and suggested Fridays instead.
In Judaism the Torah is read in public on Thursday mornings, and special penitential prayers are said on Thursday, unless there is a special occasion for happiness which cancels them.
Practices in Countries[edit]
In Buddhist Thailand Thursday is considered the 'Teacher's Day', and it is believed that one should begin one's education on this auspicious day. Thai students still pay homages to their teachers in specific ceremony always held on a selected Thursday. And graduation day in Thai universities, which can vary depending on each university, almost always will be held on a Thursday.
In the Thai solar calendar, the colour associated with Thursday is orange.
In the United States, Thanksgiving Day is an annual festival celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November.
Conventional weekly events[edit]
In Australia, most cinema movies premieres are held on Thursdays. Also, most Australians are paid on a Thursday, either weekly or fortnightly. Shopping malls see this as an opportunity to open longer than usual, generally until 9 pm, as most pay cheques are cleared by Thursday morning.
In Norway, Thursday has also traditionally been the day when most shops and malls are open later than on the other weekdays, although the majority of shopping malls now are open until 8 pm or 9 pm every weekday.
In the USSR of the 1970s and 1980s Thursday was the 'Fish Day' (Russian: Рыбный день, Rybny den), when the nation's foodservice establishments were supposed to serve fish (rather than meat) dishes.[9]
For college and university students, Thursday is sometimes referred to as the new Friday. There are often fewer or sometimes no classes on Fridays and more opportunities to hold parties on Thursday night and sleep in on Friday. As a consequence, some call Thursday 'thirstday' or 'thirsty Thursday'.[10]
Elections in the United Kingdom[edit]
In the United Kingdom, all general elections since 1935 have been held on a Thursday, and this has become a tradition, although not a requirement of the law — which merely states that an election may be held on any day 'except Saturdays, Sundays, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Good Friday, bank holidays in any part of the United Kingdom and any day appointed for public thanksgiving and mourning.'[11]
Additionally, local elections are usually held on the first Thursday in May.[citation needed]
The Electoral Administration Act 2006 removed Maundy Thursday as an excluded day on the electoral timetable, therefore an election can now be held on Maundy Thursday; prior to this elections were sometimes scheduled on the Tuesday before as an alternative.
Astrology[edit]
Thursday is aligned by the planet Jupiter and the astrological signs of Pisces and Sagittarius.
Popular culture[edit]
- In the nursery rhyme, 'Monday's Child', 'Thursday's Child has far to go'.
- In some high schools in the United States during the 1950s and the 1960s, rumours said that if someone wore green on Thursdays, it meant that he or she was gay.[12]
- Thursday is the day of the Second Round draw in the English League Cup.
- Super Thursday is an annual promotional event in the publishing industry as well as an important day in UK elections (see above).
Literature[edit]
- Gabriel Syme, the main character, was given the title of Thursday in G. K. Chesterton's novel The Man Who Was Thursday (1908).
- The titular day in Sweet Thursday (1954) (the sequel to John Steinbeck's novel Cannery Row (1945)), the author explains, is the day after Lousy Wednesday and the day before Waiting Friday.
- In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, the character Arthur Dent says: 'This must be Thursday. I never could get the hang of Thursdays'. A few minutes later the planet Earth is destroyed. In another Douglas Adams book, The Long Dark Tea-time of the Soul (1988), one of the characters says to the character Thor, after whom the day was named: 'I'm not used to spending the evening with someone who's got a whole day named after them'.
- In the cross media work Thursday's Fictions by Richard James Allen and Karen Pearlman, Thursday is the title character, a woman who tries to cheat the cycle of reincarnation to get a form of eternal life. Thursday's Fictions has been a stage production, a book, a film and an 3D online immersive world in Second Life.[13]
- Thursday Next is the central character in a series of novels by Jasper Fforde.
- In Garth Nix's popular The Keys to the Kingdom series, Thursday is an antagonist, a violent general who is a personification of the actual day and the Sin of Wrath.
- According to Nostradamus' prediction (Century 1, Quatrain 50), a powerful (but otherwise unidentified) leader who will threaten 'the East' will be born of three water signs and takes Thursday as his feast day.[14]
Cinema[edit]
- Thursday (1998 film) is a movie starring Thomas Jane, about the day of a drug dealer gone straight, who gets pulled back into his old lifestyle.
- The Thursday (1963), is an Italian film.
Music[edit]
- Thursday Afternoon is a 1985 album by the British ambient musician Brian Eno consisting of one 60-minute-long composition. It is the rearranged soundtrack to a video production of the same title made in 1984.
- Donnerstag aus Licht (Thursday from Light) is an opera by Karlheinz Stockhausen.
- Thursday is a post-hardcore band from New Brunswick, New Jersey, formed in 1997.
- 'Thursday's Child' is a David Bowie song from the album hours..(1999).
- 'Thursday's Child' is a song by The Chameleons on Script of the Bridge (1983).
- Outlook for Thursday was a hit in New Zealand for Dave Dobbyn.
- In the Placebo song 'Evil Dildo', the obscene telephone message is left on Thursday the 23rd of an unknown month and year. The day Thursday 23rd is often celebrated as Evil Dildo day by Placebo fans.[citation needed]
- Thursday (mixtape)' is the name of a mixtape by R&B artist The Weeknd released in 2011.
References[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thursday. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Thursday |
Look up Thursday in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- ^'Anglo-Saxon Week'. English Heathenism. Archived from the original on September 24, 2009. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
- ^Stone, John Robert (1997). 'Observing Bede's Anglo-Saxon Calendar'. The English Companions. Archived from the original on May 4, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
- ^'Online Etymology Dictionary'. Etymonline.com. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
- ^Selected writings: Comparative Slavic studies – Roman Jakobson – Google Books. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
- ^Lurker, Manfred. The Routledge Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils and Demons, Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. p.57
- ^'Guide to Quaker Calendar Names'. Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative) Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). Retrieved 30 March 2017.
In the 20th Century, many Friends began accepting use of the common date names, feeling that any pagan meaning has been forgotten. The numerical names continue to be used, however, in many documents and more formal situations.'
- ^'Is it better to fast on Mondays and Thursdays or on three days of each month? – Islam Question & Answer'. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
- ^'Fasting on mondays – Islamhelpline'. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
- ^Petrosian, Irina; Underwood, David (2006), Armenian Food: Fact, Fiction & Folklore, Armenian Research Center collection (2 ed.), p. 115, ISBN1411698657
- ^Hafner, Katie (November 6, 2005). 'How Thursday Became the New Friday'. The New York Times. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
- ^'Representation of the People Act 1983'. Schedule 1,ActofNovember 1, 1996. Retrieved 2016-11-03.
- ^Grahn, Judy (1990). Another Mother Tongue: Gay Words, Gay Worlds (updated and expanded ed.). Boston: Beacon Press. pp. 76–81. ISBN0-8070-7911-1.
- ^'Magazine – issue 80 – dance film: spiritual odyssey'. RealTime Arts. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
- ^Nostradamus. 'Century 1 – Quatrain 50'. Nostradamus Quatrains. Archived from the original on 2012-08-27. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
Hinduism, major world religion originating on the Indian subcontinent and comprising several and varied systems of philosophy, belief, and ritual. Although the name Hinduism is relatively new, having been coined by British writers in the first decades of the 19th century, it refers to a rich cumulative tradition of texts and practices, some of which date to the 2nd millennium bce or possibly earlier. If the Indus valley civilization (3rd–2nd millennium bce) was the earliest source of these traditions, as some scholars hold, then Hinduism is the oldest living religion on Earth. Its many sacred texts in Sanskrit and vernacular languages served as a vehicle for spreading the religion to other parts of the world, though ritual and the visual and performing arts also played a significant role in its transmission. From about the 4th century ce, Hinduism had a dominant presence in Southeast Asia, one that would last for more than 1,000 years.
In the early 21st century, Hinduism had nearly one billion adherents worldwide and was the religion of about 80 percent of India’s population. Despite its global presence, however, it is best understood through its many distinctive regional manifestations.
Thursday Significance In Hinduism History
Overview
Thursday Significance In Hinduism History
The term Hinduism
The term Hinduism became familiar as a designator of religious ideas and practices distinctive to India with the publication of books such as Hinduism (1877) by Sir Monier Monier-Williams, the notable Oxford scholar and author of an influential Sanskrit dictionary. Initially it was an outsiders’ term, building on centuries-old usages of the word Hindu. Early travelers to the Indus valley, beginning with the Greeks and Persians, spoke of its inhabitants as “Hindu” (Greek: ‘indoi), and, in the 16th century, residents of India themselves began very slowly to employ the term to distinguish themselves from the Turks. Gradually the distinction became primarily religious rather than ethnic, geographic, or cultural.
Since the late 19th century, Hindus have reacted to the term Hinduism in several ways. Some have rejected it in favour of indigenous formulations. Others have preferred “Vedic religion,” using the term Vedic to refer not only to the ancient religious texts known as the Vedas but also to a fluid corpus of sacred works in multiple languages and an orthoprax (traditionally sanctioned) way of life. Still others have chosen to call the religion sanatana dharma (“eternal law”), a formulation made popular in the 19th century and emphasizing the timeless elements of the tradition that are perceived to transcend local interpretations and practice. Finally, others, perhaps the majority, have simply accepted the term Hinduism or its analogues, especially hindu dharma (Hindu moral and religious law), in various Indic languages.
Since the early 20th century, textbooks on Hinduism have been written by Hindus themselves, often under the rubric of sanatana dharma. These efforts at self-explanation add a new layer to an elaborate tradition of explaining practice and doctrine that dates to the 1st millennium bce. The roots of Hinduism can be traced back much farther—both textually, to the schools of commentary and debate preserved in epic and Vedic writings from the 2nd millennium bce, and visually, through artistic representations of yakshas (luminous spirits associated with specific locales and natural phenomena) and nagas (cobralike divinities), which were worshipped from about 400 bce. The roots of the tradition are also sometimes traced back to the female terra-cotta figurines found ubiquitously in excavations of sites associated with the Indus valley civilization and sometimes interpreted as goddesses.
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