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BHRIGU-BHUTAVAT
64-9; 34, 199; his son Brihaspati more accomplished than he, 19, 10; 49 (i), 8; the Manu-smriti the Sam hitâ of Bh., 25, xi-xiii, xvii, xcii, xcv sq., cvi, cvi n., cx, 19; 33, xii-xiv, 2 sq. n., 3, 272, 274, 334; quoted in Manu-smriti, 25, xxvi sq., 78; a sage and a Pragâpati, 25, 14; Somapas (manes), sons of Bh., 25, 112; the offspring of fire, son of Manu, 25, 169 sq., 169 n.; cursed the fire, 25, 398 n.; sprung from Manu, proclaims the law, 25, 483; Sumati, son of Bh., 33, xi, xiii sq., 3, 3 n.; Bh. and other sons of Brahman's mind were again born at the sacrifice of Varuna, 38, 235; connected with the Atharva-veda, 42, xxiii, xxvi sq. (Bhrigvangirasab); connected with the production of fire, 42, xxvii, xxx; Atharvan, Angiras, and Bh., 42, xxxii sq., xxxiv, lvii sq.; oblations to Bh. and Angiras, 42, lvii; when they infringed upon Bh., the Sringaya Vaitahavyas perished, 42, 171, 433; Bh.-Angiras, authors of hymns of the Atharva-veda, 42, 416, 444; myth of Bh., son of Varuna, instructed by his father, 44, xiv, 108-12; Mâtaris van brought Agni to Bh., 46, 52; Agni called Bhrigavâna or Bh.-like, 46, 74, 78; Râma, son of Bh., 49 (i), 95. Bhrigu, Buddha in the hermitage of Bhargava, i. e. Bh.'s son, 19, 59; 49 (i), 62, 92. Bhrigu, a Purohita, converted by his sons, became a monk and reached perfection, 45, 61-9. Bhrigus, i. e. descendants of Bhrigu, n. of an ancient family; the light of the Bh. and Angiras is the brightest, 12, 37 sq., 38 n.; kindled or established Agni among men, 12, 350; 46, 45, 130, 157, 202, 228, 343; Bh. or Angiras, attained the heavenly world, 26, 272; peculiar sacrificial rites of the Bh., 29, 390 sq., 416; 30, 34 sq., 93; worshipped at the Tarpana, 30, 243; Bh., Atharvans, and Angiras, 42, 433; sacrificing together with the Bh., 43, 200; sacrifice offered up by the Bh., 43, 262; Mâtarisvan kindled Agni for the Bh., 46, 241. Bhrigu-valli, i. e. the third Adhyâya
of the Taittirîyaka-Upanishad, 15, xxviii.
Bhrûnahatyâ, Sk., the killing of an embryo, 44, 341n. See also Abortion. Bhugyu Lâhyâyani, questions Yâgñavalkya, 15, 127 sq.; 34, cv. Bhuman, Sk., t.t., the Infinite, 1, 123 n.; where one sees nothing else, hears nothing else, understands nothing else, that is the Bh., 1, 123; is bliss, 1, 123; 34, 163; is immortal, or immortality, 1, 123; 34, 163, 168; rests in its own greatness, 1, 123; explained as the Infinite, 1, 123 sq.; is all this, 1, 123; explained as the Self, 1, 124; 48, 678 sq.; is Brahman, 34, xxxv, 162-9; 48, 299308; in it the ordinary activities of seeing, &c., are absent, 34, 168 sq.; knowledge of Bh., 38, 412. Bhummagaka, one of the Khabbaggiya Bhikkhus, 20, 9-17, 118. Bhûtâ, female disciple of Sambhûtavigaya, 22, 289. Bhûtadattâ, female disciple of Sambhûtavigaya, 22, 289. Bhûtas, Beings,' or goblins, daily offerings to them, one of the 'five great sacrifices,' 2, 47 sq., 109, 109 n., 195, 201; 7, 214; 14, 256; 25, 87 n., 88-92, 88 n., 95, 132; 29, 199, 217; 44, 95; food eaten at a Srâddha by persons related to the giver, reaches not the Manes nor the gods, but the Bh., 2, 143 sq.; those who worship the Bh. go to the Bh., 8, 85; worship of Bh., of the quality of darkness, 8, 118; actions for gods, Pitris, Bh., and guests, 8, 306; the bands of Bh. extol the emancipated saint, 8, 345; Isvara, the lord of gods, Bh., Pisâkas, &c., 8, 354; are liable to destruction, 15, 289; space the resort of Bh., 36, 316, 316 n.; gods, demons, Bh., &c., assemble to see Kêsî and Gautama, 45, 121 sq.; injury done to living beings for the sake of Bh., 45, 357. See also Beings. Bhûtas, t.t., entities, or elements. See Elements. Bhûtâtman, Sk.,the elemental Self in the bodies, 15, 295-7, 295 n., 299 sq. Bhûtavat, i. e. Rudra, punishes Pragâpati for his incest, 12, 209 n., 284 n.
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