How far is Brahmaloka from our Earth?Where does Narad muni live?Where are Heaven and Hell?Different Brahmalokas?Time travellingWhat are lokas? Who are their inhabitants? Where do Mount Kailash,Vaikuntha and Brahmaloka fall into?Did our ancestors calculate the distance between Prithvi (Earth) and Surya (Sun) correctly?Want to know about BrahmalokaWhere is the exact location of Patala-Loka?Where are the Vyuha lokas located?What is meant by one Deva day in human terms

Grepping string, but include all non-blank lines following each grep match

Why Shazam when there is already Superman?

If a lithium cell is said to have a capacity of 20 Ah, does that mean all 20 Ah can be used?

Typing CO_2 easily

Assign a specific color to vector layer based on RGB codes in attribute table

Why is the Sun approximated as a black body at ~ 5800 K?

Does the reader need to like the PoV character?

Shouldn’t conservatives embrace universal basic income?

Unable to get dependencies from jcenter with a new project

Logistic function with a slope but no asymptotes?

Does Doodling or Improvising on the Piano Have Any Benefits?

El Dorado Word Puzzle II: Videogame Edition

How to make money from a browser who sees 5 seconds into the future of any web page?

How do I fix the group tension caused by my character stealing and possibly killing without provocation?

What is the English pronunciation of pain au chocolat?

Integral Notations in Quantum Mechanics

Do you waste sorcery points if you try to apply metamagic to a spell from a scroll but fail to cast it?

Why does a 97 / 92 key piano exist by Bösendorfer?

Can I run 125kHz RF circuit on a breadboard?

What (the heck) is a Super Worm Equinox Moon?

Quoting Keynes in a lecture

Has the laser at Magurele, Romania reached a tenth of the Sun's power?

When is "ei" a diphthong?

Is there a distance limit for minecart tracks?



How far is Brahmaloka from our Earth?


Where does Narad muni live?Where are Heaven and Hell?Different Brahmalokas?Time travellingWhat are lokas? Who are their inhabitants? Where do Mount Kailash,Vaikuntha and Brahmaloka fall into?Did our ancestors calculate the distance between Prithvi (Earth) and Surya (Sun) correctly?Want to know about BrahmalokaWhere is the exact location of Patala-Loka?Where are the Vyuha lokas located?What is meant by one Deva day in human terms













4















I mean where does Brahmaloka lie? Is there any scripture that tells it's exact location and time difference between different lokas?










share|improve this question
























  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13











  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13















4















I mean where does Brahmaloka lie? Is there any scripture that tells it's exact location and time difference between different lokas?










share|improve this question
























  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13











  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13













4












4








4








I mean where does Brahmaloka lie? Is there any scripture that tells it's exact location and time difference between different lokas?










share|improve this question
















I mean where does Brahmaloka lie? Is there any scripture that tells it's exact location and time difference between different lokas?







time lokas earth






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Akshay S

1,0601329




1,0601329










asked Mar 17 at 8:57









Soma SekharSoma Sekhar

622




622












  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13











  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13

















  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13











  • The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

    – Swami Vishwananda
    Mar 18 at 4:13
















The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

– Swami Vishwananda
Mar 18 at 4:13





The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

– Swami Vishwananda
Mar 18 at 4:13













The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

– Swami Vishwananda
Mar 18 at 4:13





The different spheres, lokas, are at different levels of vibration. The spiritual realms are not within the sensual universe. The Puranas describe them in material dimensional space as all cannot grasp the concepts of spiritual realms, but can easily understand a vast spatial distance as most think of themselves as material beings

– Swami Vishwananda
Mar 18 at 4:13










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














A partial answer ...



Skanda Purana says that the distance is 8 crore yojanas.



Quoting from the book "Essence of Skanda Purana":




there was no Place like Bharat which happened to be the ‘Karmabhumi’
or the Place where Noble Deeds were rewarded and there was no Tirtha
like Kasi and no Bhagavan like Viswanath Linga in the Universe.’
Having visited Satya Loka, Siva Sharma asked the Vishnu Prashads as to
how far he would have to travel farther and the latter replied that
from Prithvi to Surya Loka the distance was away by a lakh Yojanas
(one Yojana is 13-16 km approx); from Prithvi to Maha Loka is one
Crore Yojanas; from Prithvi to Jana Loka is two crore yojanas, four
crore yojanas to Jana Loka and eight crore yojanas to Satya Loka;
sixteen crore yojanas to Vishnu Loka and sixteen times higher from
Vaikuntha to Kailasa Dham; in other words, the distance from Bhu Loka
to Kailas is a staggering figure of two arab and fifty six crore
yojanas! From Satya Loka Siva Sharma was blessed to travel further to
reside at Vaikuntha.




Note that Brahmaloka is another name for the Satyaloka. And, for understanding the unit of measurement, Yojana, see the wiki article.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – The Destroyer
    yesterday


















5














The answer lies in the Vishnu Purana:




Parasara said: The sphere of the earth (or Bhúr-loka), comprehending its oceans, mountains, and rivers, extends as far as it is illuminated by the rays of the sun and moon; and to the same extent, both in diameter and circumference, the sphere of the sky (Bhuvar-loka) spreads above it (as far upwards as to the planetary sphere, or Swar-loka). The solar orb is situated a hundred thousand yojanas from the earth; and that of the moon an equal distance from the sun. At the same interval above the moon occurs the orbit of all the lunar constellations. The planet Budha (Mercury) is two hundred thousand yojanas above the lunar mansions. Śukra (Venus) is at the same distance from Mercury. Angáraka (Mars) is as far above Venus; and the priest of the gods (Vrihaspati, or Jupiter) as far from Mars: whilst Saturn (Sani) is two hundred and fifty thousand yojanas beyond Jupiter. The sphere of the seven Rishis (Ursa Major) is a hundred thousand yojanas above Saturn; and at a similar height above the seven Rishis is Dhruva (the pole-star), the pivot or axis of the whole planetary circle. Such, Maitreya, is the elevation of the three spheres (Bhúr, Bhuvar, Swar) which form the region of the consequences of works. The region of works is here (or in the land of Bhárata). Above Dhruva, at the distance of ton million yojanas, lies the sphere of saints, or Mahar-loka, the inhabitants of which dwell in it throughout a Kalpa, or day of Brahmá. At twice that distance is situated Janaloka, where Sanandana and other pure-minded sons of Brahmá, reside. At four times the distance, between the two last, lies the Tapo-loka (the sphere of penance), inhabited by the deities called Vaibhrájas, who are unconsumable by fire. At six times the distance (a hundred and twenty millions of yojanas) is situated Satya-loka (Brahma-loka), the sphere of truth, the inhabitants of which never again know death. (Vishnu Purana, Book II, Chapter VII)







share|improve this answer

























  • Why did you delete the answer?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:37











  • So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:56











  • @Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

    – Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
    Mar 18 at 8:29











  • A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 8:59










protected by Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury 2 days ago



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














A partial answer ...



Skanda Purana says that the distance is 8 crore yojanas.



Quoting from the book "Essence of Skanda Purana":




there was no Place like Bharat which happened to be the ‘Karmabhumi’
or the Place where Noble Deeds were rewarded and there was no Tirtha
like Kasi and no Bhagavan like Viswanath Linga in the Universe.’
Having visited Satya Loka, Siva Sharma asked the Vishnu Prashads as to
how far he would have to travel farther and the latter replied that
from Prithvi to Surya Loka the distance was away by a lakh Yojanas
(one Yojana is 13-16 km approx); from Prithvi to Maha Loka is one
Crore Yojanas; from Prithvi to Jana Loka is two crore yojanas, four
crore yojanas to Jana Loka and eight crore yojanas to Satya Loka;
sixteen crore yojanas to Vishnu Loka and sixteen times higher from
Vaikuntha to Kailasa Dham; in other words, the distance from Bhu Loka
to Kailas is a staggering figure of two arab and fifty six crore
yojanas! From Satya Loka Siva Sharma was blessed to travel further to
reside at Vaikuntha.




Note that Brahmaloka is another name for the Satyaloka. And, for understanding the unit of measurement, Yojana, see the wiki article.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – The Destroyer
    yesterday















5














A partial answer ...



Skanda Purana says that the distance is 8 crore yojanas.



Quoting from the book "Essence of Skanda Purana":




there was no Place like Bharat which happened to be the ‘Karmabhumi’
or the Place where Noble Deeds were rewarded and there was no Tirtha
like Kasi and no Bhagavan like Viswanath Linga in the Universe.’
Having visited Satya Loka, Siva Sharma asked the Vishnu Prashads as to
how far he would have to travel farther and the latter replied that
from Prithvi to Surya Loka the distance was away by a lakh Yojanas
(one Yojana is 13-16 km approx); from Prithvi to Maha Loka is one
Crore Yojanas; from Prithvi to Jana Loka is two crore yojanas, four
crore yojanas to Jana Loka and eight crore yojanas to Satya Loka;
sixteen crore yojanas to Vishnu Loka and sixteen times higher from
Vaikuntha to Kailasa Dham; in other words, the distance from Bhu Loka
to Kailas is a staggering figure of two arab and fifty six crore
yojanas! From Satya Loka Siva Sharma was blessed to travel further to
reside at Vaikuntha.




Note that Brahmaloka is another name for the Satyaloka. And, for understanding the unit of measurement, Yojana, see the wiki article.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – The Destroyer
    yesterday













5












5








5







A partial answer ...



Skanda Purana says that the distance is 8 crore yojanas.



Quoting from the book "Essence of Skanda Purana":




there was no Place like Bharat which happened to be the ‘Karmabhumi’
or the Place where Noble Deeds were rewarded and there was no Tirtha
like Kasi and no Bhagavan like Viswanath Linga in the Universe.’
Having visited Satya Loka, Siva Sharma asked the Vishnu Prashads as to
how far he would have to travel farther and the latter replied that
from Prithvi to Surya Loka the distance was away by a lakh Yojanas
(one Yojana is 13-16 km approx); from Prithvi to Maha Loka is one
Crore Yojanas; from Prithvi to Jana Loka is two crore yojanas, four
crore yojanas to Jana Loka and eight crore yojanas to Satya Loka;
sixteen crore yojanas to Vishnu Loka and sixteen times higher from
Vaikuntha to Kailasa Dham; in other words, the distance from Bhu Loka
to Kailas is a staggering figure of two arab and fifty six crore
yojanas! From Satya Loka Siva Sharma was blessed to travel further to
reside at Vaikuntha.




Note that Brahmaloka is another name for the Satyaloka. And, for understanding the unit of measurement, Yojana, see the wiki article.






share|improve this answer















A partial answer ...



Skanda Purana says that the distance is 8 crore yojanas.



Quoting from the book "Essence of Skanda Purana":




there was no Place like Bharat which happened to be the ‘Karmabhumi’
or the Place where Noble Deeds were rewarded and there was no Tirtha
like Kasi and no Bhagavan like Viswanath Linga in the Universe.’
Having visited Satya Loka, Siva Sharma asked the Vishnu Prashads as to
how far he would have to travel farther and the latter replied that
from Prithvi to Surya Loka the distance was away by a lakh Yojanas
(one Yojana is 13-16 km approx); from Prithvi to Maha Loka is one
Crore Yojanas; from Prithvi to Jana Loka is two crore yojanas, four
crore yojanas to Jana Loka and eight crore yojanas to Satya Loka;
sixteen crore yojanas to Vishnu Loka and sixteen times higher from
Vaikuntha to Kailasa Dham; in other words, the distance from Bhu Loka
to Kailas is a staggering figure of two arab and fifty six crore
yojanas! From Satya Loka Siva Sharma was blessed to travel further to
reside at Vaikuntha.




Note that Brahmaloka is another name for the Satyaloka. And, for understanding the unit of measurement, Yojana, see the wiki article.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 17 at 11:58

























answered Mar 17 at 11:49









RickrossRickross

53.8k378191




53.8k378191












  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – The Destroyer
    yesterday

















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – The Destroyer
    yesterday
















Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– The Destroyer
yesterday





Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– The Destroyer
yesterday











5














The answer lies in the Vishnu Purana:




Parasara said: The sphere of the earth (or Bhúr-loka), comprehending its oceans, mountains, and rivers, extends as far as it is illuminated by the rays of the sun and moon; and to the same extent, both in diameter and circumference, the sphere of the sky (Bhuvar-loka) spreads above it (as far upwards as to the planetary sphere, or Swar-loka). The solar orb is situated a hundred thousand yojanas from the earth; and that of the moon an equal distance from the sun. At the same interval above the moon occurs the orbit of all the lunar constellations. The planet Budha (Mercury) is two hundred thousand yojanas above the lunar mansions. Śukra (Venus) is at the same distance from Mercury. Angáraka (Mars) is as far above Venus; and the priest of the gods (Vrihaspati, or Jupiter) as far from Mars: whilst Saturn (Sani) is two hundred and fifty thousand yojanas beyond Jupiter. The sphere of the seven Rishis (Ursa Major) is a hundred thousand yojanas above Saturn; and at a similar height above the seven Rishis is Dhruva (the pole-star), the pivot or axis of the whole planetary circle. Such, Maitreya, is the elevation of the three spheres (Bhúr, Bhuvar, Swar) which form the region of the consequences of works. The region of works is here (or in the land of Bhárata). Above Dhruva, at the distance of ton million yojanas, lies the sphere of saints, or Mahar-loka, the inhabitants of which dwell in it throughout a Kalpa, or day of Brahmá. At twice that distance is situated Janaloka, where Sanandana and other pure-minded sons of Brahmá, reside. At four times the distance, between the two last, lies the Tapo-loka (the sphere of penance), inhabited by the deities called Vaibhrájas, who are unconsumable by fire. At six times the distance (a hundred and twenty millions of yojanas) is situated Satya-loka (Brahma-loka), the sphere of truth, the inhabitants of which never again know death. (Vishnu Purana, Book II, Chapter VII)







share|improve this answer

























  • Why did you delete the answer?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:37











  • So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:56











  • @Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

    – Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
    Mar 18 at 8:29











  • A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 8:59















5














The answer lies in the Vishnu Purana:




Parasara said: The sphere of the earth (or Bhúr-loka), comprehending its oceans, mountains, and rivers, extends as far as it is illuminated by the rays of the sun and moon; and to the same extent, both in diameter and circumference, the sphere of the sky (Bhuvar-loka) spreads above it (as far upwards as to the planetary sphere, or Swar-loka). The solar orb is situated a hundred thousand yojanas from the earth; and that of the moon an equal distance from the sun. At the same interval above the moon occurs the orbit of all the lunar constellations. The planet Budha (Mercury) is two hundred thousand yojanas above the lunar mansions. Śukra (Venus) is at the same distance from Mercury. Angáraka (Mars) is as far above Venus; and the priest of the gods (Vrihaspati, or Jupiter) as far from Mars: whilst Saturn (Sani) is two hundred and fifty thousand yojanas beyond Jupiter. The sphere of the seven Rishis (Ursa Major) is a hundred thousand yojanas above Saturn; and at a similar height above the seven Rishis is Dhruva (the pole-star), the pivot or axis of the whole planetary circle. Such, Maitreya, is the elevation of the three spheres (Bhúr, Bhuvar, Swar) which form the region of the consequences of works. The region of works is here (or in the land of Bhárata). Above Dhruva, at the distance of ton million yojanas, lies the sphere of saints, or Mahar-loka, the inhabitants of which dwell in it throughout a Kalpa, or day of Brahmá. At twice that distance is situated Janaloka, where Sanandana and other pure-minded sons of Brahmá, reside. At four times the distance, between the two last, lies the Tapo-loka (the sphere of penance), inhabited by the deities called Vaibhrájas, who are unconsumable by fire. At six times the distance (a hundred and twenty millions of yojanas) is situated Satya-loka (Brahma-loka), the sphere of truth, the inhabitants of which never again know death. (Vishnu Purana, Book II, Chapter VII)







share|improve this answer

























  • Why did you delete the answer?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:37











  • So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:56











  • @Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

    – Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
    Mar 18 at 8:29











  • A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 8:59













5












5








5







The answer lies in the Vishnu Purana:




Parasara said: The sphere of the earth (or Bhúr-loka), comprehending its oceans, mountains, and rivers, extends as far as it is illuminated by the rays of the sun and moon; and to the same extent, both in diameter and circumference, the sphere of the sky (Bhuvar-loka) spreads above it (as far upwards as to the planetary sphere, or Swar-loka). The solar orb is situated a hundred thousand yojanas from the earth; and that of the moon an equal distance from the sun. At the same interval above the moon occurs the orbit of all the lunar constellations. The planet Budha (Mercury) is two hundred thousand yojanas above the lunar mansions. Śukra (Venus) is at the same distance from Mercury. Angáraka (Mars) is as far above Venus; and the priest of the gods (Vrihaspati, or Jupiter) as far from Mars: whilst Saturn (Sani) is two hundred and fifty thousand yojanas beyond Jupiter. The sphere of the seven Rishis (Ursa Major) is a hundred thousand yojanas above Saturn; and at a similar height above the seven Rishis is Dhruva (the pole-star), the pivot or axis of the whole planetary circle. Such, Maitreya, is the elevation of the three spheres (Bhúr, Bhuvar, Swar) which form the region of the consequences of works. The region of works is here (or in the land of Bhárata). Above Dhruva, at the distance of ton million yojanas, lies the sphere of saints, or Mahar-loka, the inhabitants of which dwell in it throughout a Kalpa, or day of Brahmá. At twice that distance is situated Janaloka, where Sanandana and other pure-minded sons of Brahmá, reside. At four times the distance, between the two last, lies the Tapo-loka (the sphere of penance), inhabited by the deities called Vaibhrájas, who are unconsumable by fire. At six times the distance (a hundred and twenty millions of yojanas) is situated Satya-loka (Brahma-loka), the sphere of truth, the inhabitants of which never again know death. (Vishnu Purana, Book II, Chapter VII)







share|improve this answer















The answer lies in the Vishnu Purana:




Parasara said: The sphere of the earth (or Bhúr-loka), comprehending its oceans, mountains, and rivers, extends as far as it is illuminated by the rays of the sun and moon; and to the same extent, both in diameter and circumference, the sphere of the sky (Bhuvar-loka) spreads above it (as far upwards as to the planetary sphere, or Swar-loka). The solar orb is situated a hundred thousand yojanas from the earth; and that of the moon an equal distance from the sun. At the same interval above the moon occurs the orbit of all the lunar constellations. The planet Budha (Mercury) is two hundred thousand yojanas above the lunar mansions. Śukra (Venus) is at the same distance from Mercury. Angáraka (Mars) is as far above Venus; and the priest of the gods (Vrihaspati, or Jupiter) as far from Mars: whilst Saturn (Sani) is two hundred and fifty thousand yojanas beyond Jupiter. The sphere of the seven Rishis (Ursa Major) is a hundred thousand yojanas above Saturn; and at a similar height above the seven Rishis is Dhruva (the pole-star), the pivot or axis of the whole planetary circle. Such, Maitreya, is the elevation of the three spheres (Bhúr, Bhuvar, Swar) which form the region of the consequences of works. The region of works is here (or in the land of Bhárata). Above Dhruva, at the distance of ton million yojanas, lies the sphere of saints, or Mahar-loka, the inhabitants of which dwell in it throughout a Kalpa, or day of Brahmá. At twice that distance is situated Janaloka, where Sanandana and other pure-minded sons of Brahmá, reside. At four times the distance, between the two last, lies the Tapo-loka (the sphere of penance), inhabited by the deities called Vaibhrájas, who are unconsumable by fire. At six times the distance (a hundred and twenty millions of yojanas) is situated Satya-loka (Brahma-loka), the sphere of truth, the inhabitants of which never again know death. (Vishnu Purana, Book II, Chapter VII)








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 18 at 6:06

























answered Mar 17 at 13:22









Surya Kanta Bose ChowdhurySurya Kanta Bose Chowdhury

8,39831571




8,39831571












  • Why did you delete the answer?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:37











  • So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:56











  • @Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

    – Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
    Mar 18 at 8:29











  • A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 8:59

















  • Why did you delete the answer?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:37











  • So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 7:56











  • @Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

    – Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
    Mar 18 at 8:29











  • A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

    – Wikash_hindu
    Mar 18 at 8:59
















Why did you delete the answer?

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 7:37





Why did you delete the answer?

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 7:37













So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 7:56





So the answer is 120 million yojanas, right?

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 7:56













@Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

– Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
Mar 18 at 8:29





@Wikash_hindu Idk. Not sure if that calculation is correct.

– Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury
Mar 18 at 8:29













A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 8:59





A yojana is about 12-15 km. Thusly the distance is 1440 million km - 1800 million km.

– Wikash_hindu
Mar 18 at 8:59





protected by Surya Kanta Bose Chowdhury 2 days ago



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



Popular posts from this blog

Masuk log Menu navigasi

Identifying “long and narrow” polygons in with PostGISlength and width of polygonWhy postgis st_overlaps reports Qgis' “avoid intersections” generated polygon as overlapping with others?Adjusting polygons to boundary and filling holesDrawing polygons with fixed area?How to remove spikes in Polygons with PostGISDeleting sliver polygons after difference operation in QGIS?Snapping boundaries in PostGISSplit polygon into parts adding attributes based on underlying polygon in QGISSplitting overlap between polygons and assign to nearest polygon using PostGIS?Expanding polygons and clipping at midpoint?Removing Intersection of Buffers in Same Layers

Старые Смолеговицы Содержание История | География | Демография | Достопримечательности | Примечания | НавигацияHGЯOLHGЯOL41 206 832 01641 606 406 141Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области«Переписная оброчная книга Водской пятины 1500 года», С. 793«Карта Ингерманландии: Ивангорода, Яма, Копорья, Нотеборга», по материалам 1676 г.«Генеральная карта провинции Ингерманландии» Э. Белинга и А. Андерсина, 1704 г., составлена по материалам 1678 г.«Географический чертёж над Ижорскою землей со своими городами» Адриана Шонбека 1705 г.Новая и достоверная всей Ингерманландии ланткарта. Грав. А. Ростовцев. СПб., 1727 г.Топографическая карта Санкт-Петербургской губернии. 5-и верстка. Шуберт. 1834 г.Описание Санкт-Петербургской губернии по уездам и станамСпецкарта западной части России Ф. Ф. Шуберта. 1844 г.Алфавитный список селений по уездам и станам С.-Петербургской губернииСписки населённых мест Российской Империи, составленные и издаваемые центральным статистическим комитетом министерства внутренних дел. XXXVII. Санкт-Петербургская губерния. По состоянию на 1862 год. СПб. 1864. С. 203Материалы по статистике народного хозяйства в С.-Петербургской губернии. Вып. IX. Частновладельческое хозяйство в Ямбургском уезде. СПб, 1888, С. 146, С. 2, 7, 54Положение о гербе муниципального образования Курское сельское поселениеСправочник истории административно-территориального деления Ленинградской области.Топографическая карта Ленинградской области, квадрат О-35-23-В (Хотыницы), 1930 г.АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1933, С. 27, 198АрхивированоАдминистративно-экономический справочник по Ленинградской области. — Л., 1936, с. 219АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1966, с. 175АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1973, С. 180АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, С. 38АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб., 2007, с. 60АрхивированоКоряков Юрий База данных «Этно-языковой состав населённых пунктов России». Ленинградская область.Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, С. 41АрхивированоКультовый комплекс Старые Смолеговицы // Электронная энциклопедия ЭрмитажаПроблемы выявления, изучения и сохранения культовых комплексов с каменными крестами: по материалам работ 2016-2017 гг. в Ленинградской области