The Religions of India / Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume 1, Edited by Morris Jastrow
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Professor of Semitic Languages in the University of Pennsylvania
Ph.D. (LEIPSIC)
This holy mystery I declare unto you: There is nothing nobler than humanity.
1896
(All rights reserved)
Such has been the scholarly activity displayed and the fertility resulting, that it seems both desirable and timely to focus, as it were, the array of facts connected with the religions of the ancient world in such a manner that the summary resulting may serve as the point of departure for further investigations.
This has been the leading thought which has suggested the series of Handbooks on the History of Religions. The treatment of the religions included in the series differs from previous attempts in the aim to bring together the ascertained results of scholarship rather than to make an additional contribution, though the character of the scholars whose coöperation has beep secured justifies the hope that their productions will also mark an advance in the interpretation of the subject assigned to each. In accord with this general aim, mere discussion has been limited to a minimum, while the chief stress has been laid upon the clear and full presentation of the data connected with each religion.
A uniform plan has been drawn up by the editor for the order of treatment in the various volumes, by following which it is hoped that the continuous character of the series will be secured.
In this plan the needs of the general reader, as well as those of the student, for whom, in the first place, the series is designed, have been kept in view. After the introduction, which in the case of each volume is to be devoted to a setting forth of the sources and the method of study, a chapter follows on the land and the people, presenting those ethnographical and geographical considerations, together with a brief historical sketch of the people in question, so essential to an understanding of intellectual and religious life everywhere.
Edward Washburn Hopkins
---
LONDON
COPYRIGHT, 1895, BY
TO THE MEMORY OF
PREFATORY NOTE
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER I.—INTRODUCTION.
DATES.
METHODS OF INTERPRETATION.
DIVISIONS OF THE SUBJECT.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER II.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER III.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IV.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER V.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VI.
YAMA
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IX.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER X.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XI.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIV.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XV.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XVI.
EARLY SECTS.
RELIGIOUS FESTIVALS.
HISTORY OF THE HINDU TRINITY.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XVII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XVIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIX.
FOOTNOTES:
ADDENDA.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.[1]
FOOTNOTES:
INDEX.