Friday, 9 March 2012

Tanjavur

Thanjavur is a municipality and the headquarters of the Thanjavur district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The name Thanjavur is derived from "Tanjan", a legendary asura in Hindu mythology.
Thanjavur is one of the ancient cities in India and has a long and varied history dating back to the Sangam period. The town was founded by Mutharayar king Swaran Maran and rose to prominence during the rule of the Later Cholas when it served as the capital of the Chola empire.
After the fall of the Cholas, the city was ruled by various dynasties like Pandyas, Vijayanagar Empire, Madurai Nayaks, Thanjavur Nayaks, Thanjavur Marathas and British. It has been a part of independent India since 1947.
Thanjavur is an important center of South Indian art and architecture. Most of the Great Living Chola Temples which are UNESCO World Heritage Monuments are located in and around Thanjavur.
The foremost among the Great Living Chola temples, the Brihadeeswara Temple, is located in the center of the city.

                                    
Thanjavur is also the home of the Tanjore painting, a painting style unique to the region. The city is an important agricultural center located at the heart of the region, known as the Rice bowl of Tamil Nadu.
South Zone Culture Centre in Thanjavur is one of many regional cultural centres established by Indian Government to preserve and promote traditional cultural heritage of India.
Thanjavur is well-connected by roads and railways with other parts of India and with cities and towns in Tamil Nadu. The nearest airport is Tiruchirapalli International Airport located at a distance of 56 kilometres. The nearest seaport is Nagapattinam which is 84 kilometres from Thanjavur.
                                                                                 

Mango

The mango is known as the 'king of fruit' throughout the world.

The Mango is a member of the cashew family of flowering plants; other species include the pistachio tree and poison ivy.

The name 'mango' is derived from the Tamil word 'mangkay' or 'man-gay'. When the Portuguese traders settled in Western India they adopted the name as 'manga'.

Mangos originated in East India, Burma and the Andaman Islands bordering the Bay of Bengal. Persian traders took the mango into the middle east and Africa, from there the Portuguese brought it to Brazil and the West Indies. Mango cultivars arrived in Florida in the 1830's and in California in the 1880's.

The Mango tree is a symbol of love.

Mango leaves are used at weddings to ensure the couple bear plenty of children (though it is only the birth of the male child that is celebrated - again by hanging mango leaves outside the house).

Many Southeast Asian kings and nobles had their own mango groves; with private cultivars being sources of great pride and social standing, hence began the custom of sending gifts of the choicest mangoes.

Burning of mango wood, leaves and debris is not advised - toxic fumes can cause serious irritation to eyes and lungs.

Mango leaves are considered toxic and can kill cattle or other grazing livestock.

Mangos are bursting with protective nutrients. The vitamin content depends upon the variety and maturity of the fruit, when the mango is green the amount of vitamin C is higher, as it ripens the amount of beta carotene (vitamin A) increases.        
                    
                                                            
                                               
There are over 20 million metric tons of mangos grown throughout the tropical and sub-tropical world. The leading mango producer is India, with very little export as most are consumed within the country. Mexico and China compete for second place, followed by Pakistan and Indonesia. Thailand, Nigeria, Brazil, Philippines and Haiti follow in order.

The fruit of the mango is called a Drupe - consisting of the mesocarp (edible fleshy part) and endocarp (large woody, flattened pit).

The mango is a member of the Anachardiaceae family. Other distant relatives include the cashew, pistachio, Jamaica plum, poison ivy and poison oak.

The over 1,000 known mango cultivars are derived from two strains of mango seed - monoembryonic (single embryo) and polyembryonic (multiple embryo). Monoembryonic hails from the Indian (original) strain of mango, polyembryonic from the Indochinese.

Dermatitis can result from contact with the resinous latex sap that drips from the stem end when mangos are harvested. The mango fruit skin is not considered edible.

Mangiferin - rich in splenocytes, found in the stem bark of the mango tree has purported potent immunomodulatory characteristics - believed to inhibit tumor growth in early and late stages.

Mangoes contain as much vitamin C as an orange.

To choose a Mango gently squeeze the 'nose' of the fruit. If there is slight give then the mango is ripe. Color is not the best indicator of ripeness.

A Mango stored at 55 degrees will last for up to two weeks. Do not refrigerate.

Mangoes are some of the best sources of beta carotene; they contain 20 percent more than cantaloupe and 50 percent more than apricots.

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

China

China is the most populous nation on earth. With more than 1.2 billion people, it contains one-fifth of the world's population.
Approximately 93 percent of the people are Han Chinese; the remainder is made up of 350 minority groups -- 55 of them are commonly recognized -- which have their own language, culture, and religion.
China has the third largest landmass of any nation. Only Russia and Canada are larger. China is slightly larger than the United States.
There are 31 provinces, autonomous regions and special municipalities. Hong Kong, which reverted to China in 1997, is referred to as a special administrative region.
The four largest cities, Chongqing, Shanghai, Beijing, and Tianjin are administered directly by the central government. 

                                                                     
Approximately half the land is occupied by minority people groups such as Mongols, Tibetans, Yugur, and Bai. Only about 15 percent of China's land is farmable, so there is a great strain on the land to feed so many people.
Mandarin Chinese (also known as Putonghua) is the primary language, and is spoken by more than 70 percent of the population. Cantonese prevails in Hong Kong and in parts of the Guangdong Province. Many other dialects abound.
With its first recorded history dating back to 1500 BC, China claims the world's oldest existing civilization.
During most of its history, China was ruled by a series of dynasties. The last dynasty ended in 1911 with the establishment of a republic by Dr. Sun Yat-sen.
From 1911 until 1949 there was great turmoil in China as various factions fought for supremacy, ending with the establishment of the People’s Republic of China on October 1, 1949.
Since 1949, the country has been under communist rule. China's governments claims that during that time there has been an eradication of opium, an increased life expectancy, and a reduction of the infant mortality rate.
But, there have also been periods of great turmoil, the worst of which was the Cultural Revolution, officially lasting from 1966-1970, though many historians extend its effects until the death of Mao Ze-dong in 1976.
The Cultural Revolution was a period of unprecedented turmoil in which society was virtually turned upside down.
Students, in the form of Red Guard, went on a rampage. Schools and universities were closed, intellectuals and artists of all kinds were dismissed, persecuted, sent to labor in the countryside, or killed.
Temples, monuments, and works of art were defaced and destroyed. All religious institutions were closed and religious workers were sent to prison or to work in factories or in the countryside. This was a time of suffering for all the Chinese people. Its effects are still felt in society.
Except for a few minority groups and some rural dwellers, families are strongly discouraged from having more than one child.
Those who ignore the admonitions can be severely penalized. The government takes pride in this intrusive manner of population control.
China's economy has been improving rapidly since 1979 when China opened the doors to foreign investment and opened the economy to more private initiative.
This has resulted in a vast increase of consumer activity, so that upper middle class families have many symbols of middle class affluence: refrigerators, telephones, color televisions, video CD players, and more.
Commercialism and materialism are increasingly popular in China. However, there is still terrible poverty as well.
Even though the Communist government encourages atheism, there are five recognized religions in China today: Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicism, and Protestant Christianity.
Ancestor worship is a daily practice for many. Confucianism is not officially a religion, though through the centuries, there have periodically been temples devoted to the worship of Confucius.
In any case, Confucianism remains a major element of the Chinese value system. The government cracked down on a very popular Falunggung religious practice in 1999, terming it a dangerous cult.
Robert Morrison was the first Protestant to introduce Christianity in China. He arrived in Canton in 1807.
From that time until 1949, hundreds of sending agencies sent thousands of missionaries to serve in China. China was a difficult mission field; converts came slowly. In 1949 there were no more than 750,000 Protestant Christians in China. 

                                                                                
After all the foreign missionaries left China in the early 1950s and all religious institutions were closed from about 1966 because of the Cultural Revolution, it was feared that Christianity might have died out once again.
But, when the churches began to open up in 1979 it was discovered, even to the Chinese Christians’ amazement, that there were at least 6 million Christians.
No longer foreign, all Chinese churches are just that: indigenous Chinese churches, and thousands of Chinese, young and old, are turning to Christ every day.
Nobody really knows how many Christians there are in China. Accurate statistics are hard to come by because there is no systematic or standard reporting system and the numbers change rapidly.
Estimates for members of registered (government sanctioned) congregations range up to 15-20 million, with more than 37,000 congregations meeting in church buildings referred to as churches and 25,000 meeting in other locations, referred to as meeting points.
But there are also many millions of believers, perhaps 45-80 million of them, who meet in house churches that are not government approved.
Even by placing the estimate at the high end of 100 million total Christians, one is reminded that there are still more than one billion Chinese who don't know Christ!

Monday, 5 March 2012

Facts about Bill Gates

William Henry Gates was born on October 28, 1955, in Seattle, Washington.
His  SAT score was 1590. The top score for the test is 1600.
By the age of 17, Gates had sold his first computer program, a time-tabling system for his high school, for $4,200.
Gates told his university teachers he would be a millionaire by age 30. He became a billionaire at age 31.

                                                             
While at Harvard, Gates co-wrote Altair BASIC, which became Microsoft’s first product.
He met his wife, Melinda French, in 1987 at a Microsoft press event in Manhattan while she was a worker for the company. They would go on to get married on New Years Day in 1994.
In 2002, Bill Gates was considered more idolized than Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-tungin a poll of teenagers in Hong Kong and China. The survey was conducted by the City University of Hong Kong.
He is currently having a building named after him at Carnegie Mellon University, called the Gates Building of Computer Science.
Bill Gates earns $250 every second; that’s about $20 million a day and $7.8 billion a year!
If he drops a thousand-dollar bill, he needn’t even bother to pick it up because in the four seconds it would take him to pick it up, he would’ve already earned it back.

குறுக்குவழி உதவாது!

நினைத்தவுடன் எல்லாம் நடக்க வேண்டும். நொடியில் சமையல் முடிய வேண்டும், மந்திரத்தில் மாங்காய் காய்க்க வேண்டும், குறுக்கு வழியிலாவது உடனடியாகப் பணக்காரர் ஆகவேண்டும் என்று அவசரகதியில் உலகம் இயங்கிக் கொண்டிருப்பதைப் பார்க்கிறோம்.

இத்தகைய சூழலில், திபெத்தைச் சேர்ந்த புத்தமதத் துறவி மிலரேபாவைப் பற்றி அறிந்துகொள்வது பொருத்தமாகவும், பயனளிப்பதாகவும் அமையும்.
 மிலரேபா மிகவும் வசதியான குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்தவர். மிலரேபாவின் தந்தை இறந்தவுடன் அவரது சித்தப்பாவும், சித்தியும் குடும்ப சொத்துக்கள் அனைத்தையும் சுருட்டிக் கொண்டனர். எனவே மிலரேபா தனது தாயின் வேண்டுகோளின்படி மாந்திரீகம் பயின்றார், அதன் மூலம் இயற்கைச் சீற்றத்தைத் தூண்டி சித்தப்பாவின் வீடு இடியும்படி செய்தார். அந்தச் சம்பவத்தில் முப்பதுக்கும் மேற்பட்டவர்கள் உயிரிழக்கவும் நேர்ந்தது. இவ்வாறு தனது இளமைக் காலத்தில் மிலரேபா தனது மாந்திரீகத்தின் மூலம் பல்வேறு தீயசெயல்களைச் செய்தார்.

                                                        



ஆனால் அவர் பக்குவமடைந்தபின் தனது இழிவான செயல்களுக்கு வருந்தி அமைதியைத் தேடி அலைந்தார். பழிக்குப் பழி என்பது தவறு என்பதை அவர் உணர்ந்தார். அவர் நாடிச் சென்ற குரு மார்பா, தன்னுடைய சீடர்கள் கடுமையாக உழைக்கவேண்டும் என்று எதிர்பார்ப்பார். அன்பாக இருக்கவேண்டும் என்பதில் கண்டிப்பாக நடந்து கொள்வார். பார்ப்பதற்கு இது சற்று முரண்பாடாக தோன்றும். ஆனால் நன்மை விளைவிப்பதே மார்பாவின் நோக்கம்.

இவர் தன்னிடம் பயிலவந்த மிலரேபாவை பல அடுக்குகளைக் கொண்ட கோபுரங்களை மூன்றுமுறை கட்டச் சொன்னார். அதனால் விரக்தியின் எல்லைக்குச் சென்று விட்டார் மிலரேபா. குருவின் ஆசியையும், வழிகாட்டுதலையும் பெறமுடியவில்லையே என்று மனம் வருந்தினார். உடனே குரு மார்பாவின் துணைவியாரிடம் பரிந்துரைக் கடிதம் பெற்று மற்றொரு குருவை நாடி தியானப் பயிற்சியை மேற்கொண்டார். ஆனால் அவரால் எந்தவித முன்னேற்றத்தையும் காணமுடியவில்லை.
தான் முதலில் நாடிச் சென்ற குரு மார்பாவின் ஆசி இருந்தால்தான் தன்னால் அமைதிப் பயணத்தை தொடங்க முடியும் என்று மிலரேபா உளமார உணர்ந்தார்.

மீண்டும் தனது குரு மார்பாவிடம் சென்று 12 ஆண்டுகள் கடுமையாகப் பயிற்சி பெற்று 'வஜ்ரதாரா' என்று சொல்லப்படும் பரிபூரண நிலையை மிலரேபா அடைந்தார். மிலரேபாவின் குரு அவரிடம் கடுமையாக நடந்து கொண்டது அவரைப் புடம் போட்ட தங்கமாக மாற்றுவதற்குத்தான். தனது குரு பலமுறை தன்னிடம் கடுமையாக நடந்து கொண்டு வருத்தம் அடையவைத்த போதும் மிலரேபா குருவை ஒருபோதும் வெறுக்கவில்லை. இதை குரு மார்பாவும் நன்கு உணர்ந்திருந்தார்.

அதற்குக் காரணம், முன்னேற்றத்தின் பாதை என்பது ரோஜா மலர்கள் தூவியது கிடையாது. கல்லும், முள்ளும் நிறைந்த ஒன்றுதான். உன்னத நிலையை அடைவது என்பது சாதாரண முயற்சிகளின் விளைவாக இருக்க முடியாது. நெருப்பிலிட்டு உருக்கும்போதுதான் அணிகலன் என்ற கவுரவத்தைப் பெறுகிறது தங்கம்.

எந்தக் கல் தன்னைச் சிற்பி செதுக்கும்போது பொறுமையாக இருக்கிறதோ அதுவே சிலையாக உருவம் பெற்று, மக்கள் வழிபடும் பெருமை பெறுகிறது. பொறுமையில்லாமல் உடையும் கல், தேங்காய் உடைக்கத்தான் பயன்படும். மிலரேபா எப்படி மார்பாவின் ஆசியைப்பெற கடுமையாக உழைக்க வேண்டி இருந்ததோ அதையே அவரது சீடர்களும் செய்ய வேண்டும் என்பதே இயற்கையின் விதி.

கடுமையான சவால்களை எதிர்கொண்டாலே நிர்வாகத் திறனுக்கான மனப்பக்குவம் ஏற்படும் என்று ஹெட்பிட்ஸ், லாரி என்ற இரு வல்லுனர்கள் ஹார்வர்டு மேலாண்மை ஆய்வு இதழில் தெரிவிக்கிறார்கள்.

இளம்வயதிலேயே மேலாண்மைப் படிப்பை பயில்பவர்களை சவால்களை எதிர்கொள்ளும்படி பழக்க வேண்டும். அப்போதுதான் அவர்கள் தமது பணிக்களத்தில் வெற்றியாளர்களாக வலம்வருவது சாத்தியமாகும். இதை மனதில் கொண்டுதான் மேலாண்மைப் படிப்பைப் பயில அனுமதிக்க நேர்முகத்தேர்வு நடத்தும்போதும் சரி, எம்.பி.ஏ படிப்பை முடித்துப் பணிக்கு அமர்த்தத் தேர்வு செய்யும் போதும் சரி, மூத்த வல்லுனர்கள் கடினமான கேள்விகளை கேட்டு ஒவ்வொருவரின் திறமையையும் சோதிக்கிறார்கள். ஆன்மிக குருக்கள் வழி நடத்தும்போது அவர்களுக்குச் சரியான கேள்வியும் கேட்கத் தெரியும். சரியான பதிலும் தெரியும். ஆனால் மேலாண்மைத் துறையில் வழிநடத்தும் தலைவர்கள் எல்லோருக்கும் எல்லா கேள்விகளுக்கும் விடை தெரிந்திருக்கும் என்று கூற முடியாது. ஆனாலும் அவர்கள் சரியான கேள்விகளை கேட்கத் தெரிந்திருக்கிறார்கள்.


ஹெட்பிட்ஸும், லாரியும், சிறந்த தலைமைப் பண்புக்கு ஆறு அம்சங்கள் அவசியம் என்று கருதுகிறார்கள். தம்மைத் தாமே விட்டு விலகி, பால்கனியில் நின்று பார்ப்பது போல் சூழலை கவனிக்கும்போதுதான் சவால்களை இனங்கண்டு எதிர்கொள்ள தயாராக முடியும் என்கிறார்கள் இவர்கள். சவால்களை எதிர்கொள்ள ஏற்புடைய மாற்றம் தேவை என்பதை சம்பந்தப்பட்ட அனைவரும் அறிந்திருக்க வேண்டும். அப்போதுதான் உணர்ச்சிவசப்படாமல் திட்டமிட்டுச் சரியான முடிவெடுத்துச் செயல்பட முடியும். குழப்பங்களைத் தவிர்த்து, பலரது கருத்துகளையும் கேட்டு கவனத்துடன் கூடிய ஒழுங்கையும், கட்டுப்பாட்டையும் மேற்கொள்ள வேண்டும். அப்போதுதான் சிறந்த தலைவர்களாக மேலாண்மை பண்புகளுடன் செயல்பட முடியும் என்கிறார்கள் மேற்கண்ட வல்லுநர்கள்.

மேலும் பொறுப்புகளையும், வேலைகளையும் சக பணியாளர்களுக்குப் பகிர்ந்தளித்து அவர்களின் கருத்தே குழுத்தலைவரின் கருத்து என்ற நிலையை உருவாக்கும்போதுதான் சிறந்த நிர்வாகத் திறமை வெளிப்படும். இளைஞர்களுக்குக் கடுமையான பயிற்சி அளித்தால்தான் சவால்களை எதிர்கொண்டு வெற்றி கொள்ளும் அனுபவம் அவர்களுக்குக் கிடைக்கும் என்றும் ஹெர்பிட்ஸும் லாரியும் தமது கட்டுரையில் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்கள்.

விலை மதிக்க முடியாத முத்து ஆழ்கடலில்தான் கிடைக்கிறது. பல்லாயிரக்கணக்கான ஆண்டுகள் பூமிக்கடியில் புதையுண்டு கிடந்த நிலக்கரிதான் பக்குவமாகி, வைரமாகச் ஜொலிக்கிறது. வாழ்க்கையில் ஆன்மிகம் என்றாலும் சரி, உயர் நிலை, பதவிகளைப் பெற வேண்டுமென்றாலும் சரி, குறுக்கு வழி ஒரு போதும் உதவாது. திட்டமிட்டு, விடாமுயற்சியுடன் கடுமையாக உழைக்கப் பழகிக் கொண்டால் எல்லோரும் தாம் எண்ணிய இலக்கை அடைவது சாத்தியமே.
 

Janus- Roman God

Janus - Two-headed Roman God of Gates, Doors and New Beginnings

In Roman mythology, Janus was the god of gates, doors, doorways, beginnings, and endings. His most apparent remnant in modern culture is his namesake, the month of January.
Though he was usually depicted with two faces looking in opposite directions (Janus Geminus (twin Janus) or Bifrons), in some places he was Janus Quadrifrons (the four-faced). The Romans associated Janus with the Etruscan deity Ani.
Janus was frequently used to symbolize change and transitions such as the progression of past to future, of one condition to another, of one vision to another, and of one universe to another.
Hence, Janus was worshipped at the beginnings of the harvest and planting times, as well as marriages, births and other beginnings. 

                                                    
He was representative of the middle ground between barbarity and civilization, rural country and urban cities, and youth and adulthood.

Janus was supposed to have come from Thessaly in Greece and shared a kingdom with Camese in Latium.
They had many children, including Tiberinus. Janus and his later wife, Juturna, were the parents of Fontus. Another wife was named Jana. Historically, however, he was one of the few Roman gods who had no ready-made Greek counterpart, or analogous mythology.
As the sole ruler of Latium, Janus heralded the Golden Age, introducing money, laws and agriculture (making him a culture hero).

When Romulus  and his men kidnapped the women of the Sabines, Janus caused a hot spring to erupt, causing the would-be attackers to flee. In honor of this, the doors to his temples were kept open during war so that he could easily intervene. The doors and gates were closed during peace.
The bust depicts Janus with two faces. Originally one face was always bearded, the ther one clean-shaven; later both bearded) originally represented the sun and the moon.

He was usually depicted with a key.

One suggested origin of the name of the Italian city of Genoa is a derivation of Janus.

The temple of Janus in Rome was situated in a street named Argiletum, an important road that connected the Roman Forum and the residential areas in the northeast. It was a small, wooden temple, and the building material suggests that the cult of Janus was of a venerable old age. This is confirmed by several facts. The oldest lists of gods usually began with his name; he was surnamed divom deus, a very ancient form of Latin meaning "the god's god"; and his portrait can be found on the oldest Roman coins. 
Before every sacrifice, he was invoked and received a libation. But this does not mean that modern scholars really understand the cult of the god of doors (ianuae) and beginnings. Neither did the Romans themselves. During the reign of the emperor Augustus (27 BCE - 14 CE), they started to connect things with the cult of Janus that originally had nothing to do with it. Unfortunately, we have hardly any texts that antedate this period, which makes it impossible to reconstruct the original cult. The only thing we know about it, is that the god was also venerated in several other towns in the Tiber valley.

The temple in the Argiletum consisted of two gates; the cult statue was between them. It was a very ancient statue; the author Pliny the Elder mentions it as proof that the sculptor's art existed in Italy in times most ancient (Natural History 36.58). The fingers of janus' hands were placed in strange positions, which Pliny interpreted as an indication of the number 355, which he thought was a reference to the number of days of the oldest Roman calendar.

Janus also has a temple at Rome with double doors, which they call the gates of war; for the temple always stands open in time of war, but is closed when peace has come. The latter was a difficult matter, and it rarely happened, since the realm was always engaged in some war, as its increasing size brought it into collision with the barbarous nations which encompassed it round about. But in the time of Augustus it was closed, after he had overthrown Marc Antony; and before that, when Marcus Atilius and Titus Manlius were consuls, it was closed a short time; then war broke out again at once, and it was opened. - Plutarch, Life of king Numa 20.1-2

The temple of the Argiletum with the Gates of War was not the only place where the Romans worshipped Janus. On the other side of the Tiber, an altar was dedicated to this god on the 'hill of Janus' (Ianiculum). A second altar was erected on the hill Oppius, which played a role in the ceremonies when a boy became a man. Consul Marcus Duillius built a temple on the Vegetable's Market (Forum Holitorium), after his naval victory off Mylae (260 BCE). It was rebuilt by the emperor Tiberius. In this temple, twelve altars were erected, dedicated to the twelve months (one of them, January, was perhaps called after the god). Finally, there was the Arch of the four-faced Janus, Janus Quadrifons, at the Velabrum.

                                             
Janus is the god of beginnings and transitions, thence also of gates, doors, doorways, endings and time. He is usually a two-faced god since he looks to the future and the past. The concepts of January and janitor are both based on aspects of Janus.




 

 

Thursday, 1 March 2012

My Favorite Photos