Skanda Purana       (HINDI - 279)

Skanda Purana (HINDI - 279)

Product ID: 12498

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Author: A Composition
Publisher: Gita Press
Year: 2004
Language: Hindi
Pages: 1372
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8129301393

Description

The word purana means old or ancient. Thus the puranas are old and ancient texts that have come down to us through the ages. They have stories about famous people and descriptions of religion and society of those times. The Skanda Purana is supposed to be a tamasika Purana epitomizing the quality of tamas. The word tamas is to be understood in a deep philosophical sense. It in no way suggests that the Skanda Purana is evil or gloomy.

The Skanda Purana is the longest text of all. It has more than eighty-one thousand shlokas. The Skanda Purana is among the major Puranas that Vedavyasa composed. In fact, it is supposed to be his second work, the first being the Mahabharata. That is, it was the first of the Puranas to be composed. It is perhaps because of this immediate succession to the Mahabharata that the Skanda Purana overlaps with several parts of the Mahabharata and has various stories in common.

The definition of a Purana is, in fact, quite precise. To be considered a proper Puranas, a text to has to cover five subjects. These are known as the five characteristics of a Purana. Traditionally, a purana must firstly describe the primary creation of the universe; this is known as sarga. But once the universe is created, it is periodically destroyed and created again. A purana must secondly describe this process of periodic destruction and creation; this is known as pratisarga. A purana must thirdly list out the genealogies of gods and saints, this is known as vamsha. Fourthly, a Purana must catalog the various manvantaras, this is, the many different eras that the earth or the universe has passed through. And finally, a Purana must have a history of the royal dynasties, vamshanucharita.

Around this core skeleton of the five subjects, any Purana normally contains matters of religious concern, customs, ceremonies, sacrifices, festivals, duties of the various castes, different types of donations, details of constructions of temples and images and descriptions of places of pilgrimage.

Eighteen mahapuranas are divided into three groups and each group has six texts. The Hindu Trinity consists of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Brahma is regarded as the creator, Vishnu the preserver and Shiva the destroyer. Since all three are important gods, all these are given due emphasis in any Purana. But the relative emphasis often varies from Purana to Purana.

Texts which talk a lot about the incarnations of Vishnu are regarded as Vishnu Puranas, and are called Sattvika Puranas. Texts which emphasize creation more are regarded as Brahma Puranas and are called rajasika Puranas. Texts which give a lot of importance to norms and rituals are regarded as Shiva Puranas, and are called tamasika Puranas.