The history of Hindu God is very ancient. This tradition is considered before the Vedic period because the period of Vedic and Vedas creation is
considered different. For centuries there has been a tradition of tradition, and the time to make it authored is too long.
When we talk about history, the Vedas have not been created in any one time. Scholars begin the creation of the Vedas in 4500 B.C. Have accepted from
That is, it is slowly formed and it is finally assumed that the first Vedas were compiled in three parts - Rigveda, Yajurveda, and Samaveda which were
called Vedratri. According to the belief, the division of the Vedas occurred in the time of Pururva Rishi before the birth of Ram. Later, Atharva Veda
was compiled by Sage Atharva.
On the other hand, some people believe that Ved Vyas had written and edited the Vedas during Krishna's time. Vedas are very old approx 6508 years old
from today in writing with this value. This fact cannot be denied that the fact that Krishna has been 5300 years old since today has been discovered.
The origins of Hindu god images and Jainism and images are in the concept of earlier Aryans, which are about 4500 BC. Spread from Central Asia to the Himalayas. A branch of
the Aryans also established the Parsi God. After this, Judaism followed two thousand BC, Buddhism five hundred B.C., Christianity just two thousand
years ago, Islam God occurred 14 hundred years before today.
But according to religious literature, there are some other notions of Hinduism. It is also recognized that it started 90 thousand years
ago. In the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and Puranas, there is mention of the tradition of the lineage of Sun and Chandravanshi kings. Apart
from this, the origin and tradition of many dynasties are described. It is very difficult to write all written in the history-bound order,
because in the Puranas the above-mentioned history has been expressed in different ways, due to which the sources seem to have created
scarcity and delusion, but this is not an illusion for the information seekers.