i think the answer is "pilgrim"
I think it is Mahabharata
Because they wanted freedom in their life.
Eating Kosher. Kosher is eating according to the laws of the Jewish religios book, I think that is called the Tora.
The Gilgamesh Epic, the Mahabharata, and the Ramayana are all very old and undated. I think which is oldest might be debatable.
i think it will end as soon the story ends. May be till 2020 or 2018 at the soonest.
Originally the stage play was performed in early 1980's and by the end of the year the same, I think was made as a film.
it was the first people on earth. does that answer your questions. I don't think they have names so yeah. but in some religios adam was the first. honestly I don't believe in god so I'm not exactly sure.
-Beowulf (from roughly pre-medieval Europe, I think?) -The Odyssey (from Ancient Greece) -The Ramayana (from India, can't seem to recall the time period) -The Mahabharata(from India) -Iliad(from Ancient Greece)
Many celestial weapons in the Mahabharata had names, but I don't think the bow at the Swayamvara of Draupadi has one. The reason I say this is that Arjuna, who won the bow, didn't use it; the name of his bow was the Gandiva ("that which cannot be taken away") which was given to Arjuna by the god Agni after helping him consume a forest. At the end of the Mahabharata, when the five Pandavas trekked up the Himalayas to ascend to heaven, Arjuna returned Gandiva to Agni but throwing it into a lake occupied by the water god Varuna. I didn't really answer your question though :-/
Gita is sacred because it is the depository of ancient Hindu wisdom. Most people think that Gita is divine and the record of what Lord Krishna said to Arjuna, the chief of Pandava army in the battle of Mahabharata at Kurukshetra, when Arjuna wavered in his duty to fight.
The only one I can think of is the Bible; search the fiction section at your local library and it shouldn't be too difficult to find. It's usually the one caked in dust. Others include: Adi Granth, Apocrypha, Atharveda, Ayurveda, Bhagavad-Gita, Book of Mormon, Granth, I Ching, Koran, Li Chi, Lu, Mahabharata, Ramayana, Rigveda, Samaveda, Shi Ching, Siddhanta, Su Ching, Talmud, Tipitaka, Torah, Tripitaka, Veda, Yajurveda