Indo-Russian proximities have been like the flowing waters of River Ganga and River Neva Indian items have been excavated from the 8-9th century layers of Kiev. Chess figures from the 11th century Novgorod are near to the Indian Brahmanas are referred to from the 11th century onwards in Russian chronicles. The Kiev Chronicle speaks of Perun (Skt. Parjanya) as one of the seven gods. Tempics of the Slavs were usually triangular at the confluence of two rivers. In India, a triangle is dharmoday. The Russian version of "The Tale of the Indian Kingdom" narrates the wonders of India and remained popular in the remotest villages till the 20th century. Buddhist images have been found in the burials of Southern Russia. Indian gold coins of the 14th century come from the Volga area. Fables of the Palicatantra appear from the 15th century, Afanasy Nikitin spent three years in India (1471-74). An Indian colony was established in Astrakhan in the Volga in 1615. In 1716 the Rossians came in contact with Buddhism in Buryatia. The first reference to Sanskrit is in the novel of Prince Scherbatov written in 1784 that a noble man was sent to India to learn Sanskrit. In 1785 Gerasim Lebedev came to India, founded the Bengali theatre, and on return cast Devanagari types in 1797 by Imperial command. When Count Uvarov became the President of the Academy of Sciences, he started the teaching of Sanskrit by sending Lenz, to learn it at Berlin.
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Art (276)
Biography (245)
Buddha (1959)
Children (75)
Deities (50)
Healing (33)
Hinduism (58)
History (534)
Language & Literature (448)
Mahayana (420)
Mythology (73)
Philosophy (427)
Sacred Sites (109)
Tantric Buddhism (94)
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