Aupmanyav
Be your own guru
The same thing happened every time the calendar was changed. First, about 2,000 BC when an Orion (Mrigashiras) beginning was changed to Pleiadas (Krittika), and then, when Pleiadas was changed to Arietis (Ashwini). It caused us to slip one asterism in between. In the first case, Aldebaran (Rohini) and in the second case 35, 39, and 41 Arietis (Bharani).
In the second case the sage who advocated the change (Vishwamitra), was accused of trying to make a new universe. His children were deprived of their 'varna' (from Kshatriyas to Shudras). The king who supported him (Trishanku), supposed to have been sent by Vishvamitra to heaven with his body was supposed to have been denied entry in heaven by Indra and other lesser Gods and made to hang midway between the earth and heaven, in the process becoming a proverb for indecision. That is the power of orthodoxy.
Trishanku - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, Vishvamitra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If we go by precedents, I suppose by the time Hindus will wake up to the problem, we would have missed Piscium and would accept γPegasi and αAndromedae (Uttara Bhadrapada) as the beginning of the year in another 500 years.
Nakshatra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the second case the sage who advocated the change (Vishwamitra), was accused of trying to make a new universe. His children were deprived of their 'varna' (from Kshatriyas to Shudras). The king who supported him (Trishanku), supposed to have been sent by Vishvamitra to heaven with his body was supposed to have been denied entry in heaven by Indra and other lesser Gods and made to hang midway between the earth and heaven, in the process becoming a proverb for indecision. That is the power of orthodoxy.
Trishanku - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, Vishvamitra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If we go by precedents, I suppose by the time Hindus will wake up to the problem, we would have missed Piscium and would accept γPegasi and αAndromedae (Uttara Bhadrapada) as the beginning of the year in another 500 years.
Nakshatra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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