Shiva바카라™s first wife, Daksha바카라™s daughter, Sati, married him against her father바카라™s will. Exhausted by her father바카라™s need to control, and her husband바카라™s total indifference, she killed herself on a Vedic fire altar. This ignited rage in the compassionate Shiva. He disrupted the Vedic ceremony and beheaded Daksha. Later, feeling sorry for the hungry devas, he restored the yagna, and resurrected Daksha. He then wandered the earth carrying Sati바카라™s corpse. The corpse was cut by the gods to stop Shiva바카라™s mourning. Wherever a body part fell, a sacred spot emerged바카라”the Shakti Peetha (seat of the Goddess). These sacred spots connected by pilgrim routes expanded Aryavarta from its Gangetic confines to the entire subcontinent, from the Himalayas to the ocean. The body parts of Sati thus established a new Hindu world, much as Buddha바카라™s relics established the old Buddhist world. Buddha바카라™s relics would migÂrate with travelling merchants. Sati바카라™s body, however, would merge with the soil, anchor Shiva바카라™s fiery linga, and bind Hinduism to the land, to mountains and to rivers and farms.