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  2. Pumsavana Simantonayana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pumsavana_Simantonayana

    The authorities are not unanimous whether this saṃskāra should be performed at each pregnancy or it should be performed only during the first conception. According to Ashvalayana, Baudhayana, Apastamba, Paraskara, Harita and Devala it should be performed only once. But other authorities think that it should performed during every pregnancy. [5]

  3. Simantonnayana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simantonnayana

    [3] [4] The significance of the ritual is to wish a healthy development of the baby and safe delivery to the mother. [ 5 ] Simantonnayana ritual is described in many Gryhasutra texts, but Kane states that there is great divergence in details, which may be because the rite of passage emerged in more a recent era, before it receded into the ...

  4. Fasting and abstinence of the Coptic Orthodox Church

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasting_and_abstinence_of...

    In Coptic Christianity, the Black Fast of the early Church is the normative way of fasting, meaning that the believer goes without water and food from midnight to sunset; after that time, the consumption of water and one vegetarian meal is permitted. [4] Dispensation is however granted under special circumstances, such as pregnancy and sickness.

  5. Taweret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taweret

    Taweret's predatory form allows her to ward away evil from the innocent. Likewise, Taweret's nurturing aspects are also reinforced in her iconography, as she frequently is shown with a pregnant belly, and pendulous human breasts. These breasts are shared by the god of the Nile inundation, Hapi, and signify regenerative powers. Taweret's ...

  6. Pregnancy in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pregnancy_in_art

    There have been nude sculptures of heavily pregnant women by, among others, Damien Hirst, with The Virgin Mother (now at Lever House in New York) [50] and Verity, 2012, [51] and Ron Mueck, whose Pregnant Woman (2002) is a 2.5-metre-tall sculpture of a naked pregnant woman clasping her hands above her head, now in the National Gallery of Australia.

  7. Oomancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oomancy

    The word oomancy is derived from two Greek words, oon (an egg) and Manteia (divination), which literally translates into egg divination. Oomancy was a common form of divination practiced in ancient Greece and Rome, where it was believed that one could tell the future by interpreting the shapes formed when the separated whites from an egg was dropped into hot water.

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  9. Imbolc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imbolc

    This includes the Mound of the Hostages on the Hill of Tara, [23] and Cairn L at Slieve na Calliagh. [24] Frank Prendergast argues that this alignment is so rare that it is a product of chance. [25] Hutton writes that Imbolc must have been "important enough for its date to be dedicated subsequently to Brigid … the Mother Saint of Ireland". [17]