Pur (Vedic)
The term Pur (Devanagari:पुर) occurs approx. 30 times in the Rig Veda. It is often translated as city, castle or fortress.
In the Rig Veda, there are also purs made of metal (purās ayasīs in 10.101.8). In Aitareya Brahmana, there is copper/bronze, silver, and golden pur.
Pur and Pura
"Pur" and" Pura" are suffixes meaning "city" or "settlement", used in several place names across the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, Afghanistan and Iran. The word Pura is the oldest Sanskrit language word for "city", finds frequent mention in the Rigveda, one of the four canonical sacred texts of Hinduism, most dating between c. 1500–1200 BCE. However in later Vedic literature it also means fortress or rampart. These days pura is often used for a mohalla (neighbourhood).[1]
Pur
- Singapore
- Babar Pur, Delhi
- Bahadur Pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Bharatpur, Rajasthan, India
- Biranarasingh Pur, Orissa
- Dayal Pur Delhi
- Dinajpur, Bangladesh
- Fateh Pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Gokal Pur, Delhi
- Gundeshapur, Iran (Ancient)
- Jaipur, Rajasthan, India
- Jamalpur, Bangladesh
- Hakim Pur, Punjab, India
- Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
- Khanpur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Khanpur, Delhi
- Khanpur, NWFP
- Khanpur, Uttar Pradesh
- Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- Lal Pur Afghanistan
- Libas Pur, Delhi
- Mirza Pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Mithe Pur, Delhi
- Mohri Pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Rangpur, Bangladesh
- Saadat Pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Saghar Pur, Punjab
- Sampur, Trincomalee, Sri Lanka
- Seet pur, Punjab, Pakistan
- Sherpur, Bangladesh
- Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh
- Sultan Pur, Delhi
- Sultanpur, Madhya Pradesh
- Sultanpur, Uttarakhand
- Sultanpur Lodhi, Punjab, India
- Sultanpur, Karnataka,
- Sultanpur, Haryana
- Vijay Pur, Jammu and Kashmir
- Ziauddin Pur, Delhi
- All pages with titles containing Pur
Pura
- Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka
- Azeem Pura, Pakistan
- Dallo Pura, Delhi
- Daulat Pura, Pakistan
- Gobind Pura, Punjab, Pakistan
- Islam Pura, Karachi
- Jangpura, Delhi
- Jayapura, Indonesia
- Madan Pura, Punjab, Pakistan
- Mochi Pura, Punjab, Pakistan
- Narayan Pura, Sindh, Pakistan
- Ranbir pura, Punjab, India
- Roshan Pura, Delhi
- Sikandar Pura, Punjab, Pakistan
- All pages with titles containing Pura
See also
References
- ↑ Tej Ram Sharma (1978). Personal and geographical names in the Gupta inscriptions. Concept Publishing Co., Delhi. p. 224-225.
- Rau Wilhelm 1976 The Meaning of pur in Vedic Literature; Mϋnchen, W Finck.
- Vedic Index (1912), 2 vols 1995 edition, by A. A. Macdonell and A. B. Keith: M Banarsidass, Delhi.