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Mahatama Hansraj was an Indian educationist and a follower of Arya Samaj movement founder, Swami Dayanand.He founded, with Gurudatta Vidhyarthi, the Dayanand Anglo-Vedic Schools System (D.A.V.) in Lahore on 1 June 1886, where the first D.A.V. school was set up in memory of Dayanand who had died three years earlier.
Hans Rām Singh Rawat, [1] called Shrī Hans Jī Mahārāj and by various other honorifics (8 November 1900 – 19 July 1966), was an Indian religious leader. He was born in Gadh-ki-Sedhia, north-east of Haridwar in present-day Uttarakhand, India. His parents were Ranjit Singh Rawat and Kalindi Devi. [2]
Dayanand Saraswati is recorded to have been active since he was 14, which time he was able to recite religious verses and teach about them. He was respected at the time for taking part in religious debates. His debates were attended by large crowds. On 22 October 1869 in Varanasi he lost a debate against 27 scholars and 12 expert pandits. The ...
Hansraj Gangaram Ahir (born 1954), member of the 14th Lok Sabha of India; Hansraj Gupta (1902–1988), Indian mathematician specialising in number theory; Hans Raj Hans (born 1964), Indian singer; Hans Raj Khanna (1912–2008), judge at the Supreme Court of India (1971–1977) Jugal Hansraj (born 1972), Indian actor and director presently based ...
Swami Dayananda has promoted the preservation of ancient cultures, religious and spiritual practices of India that have survived several millennia yet struggle in modern times due to lack of support. He has started several Veda Pathashalas (Centers of Learning of Vedas) for the preservation of Vedas and Agamas to prevent their extinction due to ...
A portrait of Shraddhanand. He was born on 22 February 1856 in the village of Talwan in the Jalandhar District of the Punjab Province of India.He was the youngest child in the family of Lala Nanak Chand, who was a Police Inspector in the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh), then administered by the East India Company.
Aside from assisting in Lavoisier's laboratory research, she was responsible for translating a number of English texts into French for her husband's work on the new chemistry. Paulze also illustrated many of her husband's publications, such as his Treatise on Chemistry (1789). Many other women became illustrators or translators of scientific texts.
The book was also reviewed by Philip Blosser in Research in Phenomenology, [7] the theologian Thomas J. J. Altizer in Journal of the American Academy of Religion, [8] the Buddhist studies scholar Bernard Faure in The Journal of Asian Studies, [9] Thomas P. Kasulis in The Journal of Religion, [10] and Richard H. Drummond in Journal of Ecumenical ...