History, asked by abdwar6333, 7 months ago

define the sabha and the samiti​

Answers

Answered by neerchaudhary9
2

Explanation:

term sabha occurred eight times in the Rig Veda and seventeen times in the Atharva Veda. In one instance, sabha referred to a meeting hall. In other instances, sabha referred to a "body of men shining together." The term sabha was often linked with the term samiti (meeting together), both words referring to a gathering, assembly, or council of people. The Atharva Veda identified sabha and samiti as two daughters of the high Vedic god Prajāpati. Whenever the terms appeared together, sabha preceded samiti, leading some scholars to infer that sabhas might have existed before samitis. No ancient texts, however, have identified clear differences between sabhas and samitis, their sequence in appearance, or their relationships to each other.

Answered by tamanna3935
1

Answer:

first one sabha and second one samiti

Attachments:
Similar questions