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Lord Krishna spent 125 years on earth: Ascetic

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Lord Krishna spent 125 years on earth: Ascetic

 

It was February 18, 3102 BC Friday at 02 hours, 27 minutes and 30 seconds in

the afternoon when Lod Krishna left his earthly body for his heavenly abode -

or so claims an ascetic after intensive calculations.

 

Swami Gyananand Saraswati of the Varanasi-based Adi Jagadguru Shankaracharya

Vedic Research Institute also claims to have calculated exactly how many hours

Lord Krishna spent on earth and his precise age when the epic battle Mahabharata

ended.

 

He says Lord Krishna spent 125 years on earth and departed precisely 5,106

years ago. The ascetic scholar presented a detailed timeline of the life of the

Lord before a gathering of scholars at Somnath temple in Prabhas Patan, 350 km

from this Gujarat city.

 

He says his calculations are based on the study of various Indian scriptures,

including Skand Purana, Shrimad Bhagawat Purana, Shri Vishnu Mahapurana, Matsya

Parva and the epic Mahabharata.

 

He also referred to the astrological treatise Bhrigu Samhita for dating various

events in Krishna's life. He fed the data into a computer and used a special

software to determine the longitude and latitude of various places mentioned in

the texts.

 

He says Krishna died 36 years after the war of Mahabharata.

 

"His age on the last day of the war was 89 years, two months and seven

days. That tallies with the estimate of 125 years," Saraswati asserts.

 

He claims that Krishna was born the 22nd day of the fourth month of the

863,874th year of Dwapar Yug, which was the eighth day of the second half of the

Hindu calendar month of Shravan, the day Janmashtami, or the birth of Krishna,

is celebrated.

 

 

Saraswati, who is at the Somnath temple complex for a traditional four-month

sojourn of Chaturmas, declared his findings on Tuesday to coincide with

Janmashtami celebrations.

 

He has also worked out a chronology of the temple, one of the Dwadasha

Jyotirlingas or the 12 most important temples of Lord Shiva.

 

The temple has been reconstructed many times in its history.

 

The present temple was constructed in 1951 at the behest of Sardar Vallabhbhai

Patel, the first home minister, and the idols were installed by India's first

president Rajendra Prasad.

 

 

 

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