Kharavela: The Lion of Kalinga Who Rewrote Power, Piety and Prestige in Ancient India
In the windswept hills of present-day Odisha, carved into living rock, survives the voice of
In the windswept hills of present-day Odisha, carved into living rock, survives the voice of
t speaks directly to the kind of fear modern people experience every day — fear of failure, fear of judgment, fear of loss, and fear of the unknown.
According to an official press release issued by the Press Information Bureau, the Committee was briefed on the February 28 air strikes in Iran and the ripple effects that have led to heightened tensions, including reported attacks in several Gulf countries. The developments have raised concerns about regional stability, commercial activity, and civilian safety.
A robust digital health ecosystem under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) supports this infrastructure, with more than 863 million ABHA health IDs issued to date. These unique digital records allow efficient storage, retrieval and secure teleconsultation — transforming health access and record-keeping across the nation.
INSV Kaundinya is no ordinary naval vessel. She is a traditionally constructed stitched ship, built entirely using ancient Indian methods. Instead of modern welding and metal fastenings, wooden planks have been hand-stitched together using coir rope and sealed with natural resins — a technique once used by Indian shipwrights who sailed confidently across vast oceans centuries ago.
On March 1, 2026, Prime Minister Narendra Modi marked a significant milestone in Tamil Nadu’s
Ullal, though small, was strategically located near the mouth of the Netravati River, close to modern Mangaluru. It was a trading hub with commercial connections to Arabia and beyond. When Portuguese authorities demanded tribute and exclusive trading rights, Abbakka refused. Her resistance was not symbolic; it was economic and strategic.
Krishna’s message is not rigid fatalism; it is clarity. Every leader occupies a defined space of responsibility. A judge must judge. A soldier must protect. A leader must decide.
India has embarked on what many health experts are calling a defining moment in public health — the nationwide rollout of the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine to protect young girls from cervical cancer. This campaign marks a major leap toward preventing a disease that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and long been considered largely avoidable.
New Delhi: With a fresh allocation of ₹3,000 crore in the Union Budget 2026–27 to