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Deep Ocean Mission (informally known as Samudrayaan [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] program, from Sanskrit: Samudra 'Sea', Yāna 'Craft, Vehicle') is an Indian ...
Boond Aur Samudra (English: Drop and Ocean) is a 1956 Hindi novel by Indian novelist Amritlal Nagar. The novel presents an artistic depiction of the middle-class citizens of Lucknow , the hometown of the author.
The scholar G.V. Davane studied the occurrences of the term samudra in the Rigveda and concluded that the term means "terrestrial ocean". [3] The Rigveda also speaks of a western and eastern Samudra (10.136.5-6). And in RV 7.6.7 there is an upper and a lower Samudra, where the upper Samudra seems to be a heavenly ocean.
On 26 December 2004, at 07:58:53 local time (), a major earthquake with a magnitude of 9.2–9.3 M w struck with an epicentre off the west coast of Aceh in northern Sumatra, Indonesia.
The goddess tricked him into turning into ash by making him hold Vadavagni. She accompanied Vadavagni to a holy site named Prabhāsa, and invoked Samudra, the personification of the sea. She urged the being to devour Samudra, and so he leapt into the ocean. Saraswati transformed herself into a river and flowed into the ocean.
Samudra Raksa ship, a replica of Javanese 8th century double outrigger vessel depicted in Borobudur bas relief, now displayed in Samudra Raksa Museum. In 767, Tonkin coast was hit by Java (Daba) and Kunlun raids, [47] [48] [49] around modern day Hanoi the capital of Tonkin (Annam).
According to one theory, Kacha was an earlier name of Samudragupta and the emperor later adopted the regnal name Samudra ("Ocean"), after extending his empire's dominion as far as the ocean. [16] An alternative theory is that Kacha was a distinct king (possibly a rival claimant to the throne [14] [16]) who flourished before or after ...
Majma-ul-Bahrain (Persian: مجمع البحرین, "The Confluence of the Two Seas" or "The Mingling of the Two Oceans") is a Sufi text on comparative religion authored by Mughal Shahzada Dara Shukoh as a short treatise in Persian, c. 1655.