Basava Jayanti is celebrated every year on the auspicious day of Akshaya Tritiya, which falls on Wednesday, April 30, 2025, this year. Basava Jayanti is mostly celebrated in Karnataka, Maharashtra, ...
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday paid tribute to Jagadguru Basaveshwara, a revered 12th century poet, philosopher and the founding saint of the Lingayat tradition, on his birth anniversary ...
India has a long tradition of bright minds poking holes in some distinctly un-bright ideas. And one such mind lived over eight centuries ago in the south, blowing a hole so large through that ...
Kalaburagi prepares for the 893rd Basava Jayanti with cultural events, spiritual discourses, and community celebrations from ...
Chief minister Siddaramaiah on Sunday said that he will propose a plan to rename Bengaluru’s Namma Metro as Basava Metro, after the 12th-century philosopher and social reformer Basavanna, to the ...
A colourful procession was taken out through the streets of Mysuru on Sunday as part of the Basava Jayanthi celebrations. The procession comprising tableaus depicting the life and times of 12th ...
At the Basava Culture Campaign-2025 closing event, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah declared his intent to rename the Namma Metro as Basava Metro, after Vishwaguru Basavanna, a spiritual leader ...
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday paid tributes to Basava, a revered 12th-century social reformer, philosopher, and administrator born in present-day Karnataka, on his birth anniversary. In a ...
Belagavi: The Basava Jayanti celebrations got off to a grand start in Belagavi on Sunday. A bike rally was launched as a prelude to the festival. The flyover connecting the railway station road to ...
Basava Jayanti is a festival in India, celebrated to honor the life and teachings of Basavanna. From date to significance, here's all you need to know. Basava Jayanti is celebrated primarily in the ...
at the doors of people. Some will not go if you ask them to go. Worse than dogs, some others. It was not just the gods who “lived off the charity of people” or were, sometimes, “worse than dogs”.