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Devi

 

(South and Central Asian mythology)

The great goddess of the Hindus: Mahadevi. The consort of Shiva, she is worshipped in a variety of forms corresponding to her two aspects—benevolence and fierceness. She is Uma, ‘light’; Gauri, ‘yellow or brilliant’; Parvati, ‘the mountaineer’; and Jaganmata, ‘the mother of the world’ in her milder guise. The terrible emanations are Durga, ‘the inaccessible’; Kali, ‘the black’; Chandi, ‘the fierce’; and Bhairavi, ‘the terrible’.

Shiva and Devi are regarded as the twofold personalization of Brahman, the primeval substance. Like Vishnu, Shiva has no direct contact with the tangible elements in the universe, and is obliged to emanate a manifestation, a putting forth of energy, sakti, which myth has conceived as a wife or daughter. In Hindu iconography the presence of the sakti of a deity, the female companion, is important, not least for the reason that she attracts and helps the devotee. The height of worship for Devi was the period of the Tantras, the seventh century onwards, when release was found possible through mithuna, ‘the state of being a couple’. But the earliest known example of this close embrace of devotees is a carving on one of the Buddhist monuments at Sanchi, which dates from the second century BC. Licentious rites performed for the fertilization of the ground are of course world-wide, just as vestiges of the ritual utterance of licentious language to stimulate the dormant sexual energy of the living power can still be found in the racy jokes and insinuations made by guests at a wedding reception. In the Golden Bough there is an interesting report of a ceremony of rope-pulling, undertaken by certain Indonesian. peoples to produce rain and assure the growth of their crops. Men and women used to take opposite sides in the tug of war, and in pulling against each other they imitated by their movements the union of the sexes. At the end of the Vedic era there were apparently several goddesses acknowledged as the wives of Shiva, or Rudra, while other goddesses were worshipped by different castes in different parts of India. These diverse deities eventually coalesced into one great goddess, Devi, whose ultimate origin may have been the mother goddess of the Indus valley civilization. Supreme, Devi holds ‘the universe in Her womb’: she ‘lights the lamp of wisdom’ and ‘brings joy to the heart of Shiva, Her Lord’. Thus wrote Sankara in the ninth century, and today the Divine Mother remains the greatest power in Hinduism.

The first appearance of the great goddess was as Durga, a beautiful warrior maid of yellow hue, seated on a tiger. The circumstance of her miraculous arrival, a sort of potency welling up from the combined wraths of the gods, was the tyranny of a monster-demon named Mahisha, who through terrific austerities had acquired invincible strength. Of this colossal water-buffalo bull the gods were afraid, for neither Vishnu nor Shiva could prevail against it. Alone, the joint energy, sakti, of all celestial beings seemed capable of vanquishing Mahisha, and so it was that eighteen-armed Durga went out to give battle. After the titanic combat, she overcame both the bull and its weapon, an appalling mace. Thereafter the ascendancy of Devi was guaranteed; the gods in time of need had surrendered to her every weapon and power; she became ‘the All-comprehending One’.

Most shocking is the manifestation of the goddess as Kali. She is represented as standing upon the prostrate body of Shiva, who lies on a lotus bed. Dressed in fetching attire and decorated with precious ornaments, Kali also wears a girdle of severed arms and a necklace of skulls. Her tongue lolls from her mouth, probably savouring the taste of blood. She has four arms. One left hand grasps a bloody sword, the other dangles a head by the hair; one right hand confers blessing, the other bids her devotees to be without fear. She has absorbed the inexorability of Rudra, and Shiva as Bhairava. Yet there is both life and death in the attributes of this form of the Divine Mother. ‘Your hands’, Sankara said, ‘hold delight and pain. The shadow of death and the elixir of immortal life are yours!’

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Dictionary: De·vi   (') pronunciation
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n. Hinduism
A mother goddess having various manifestations and roles, especially that of consort to Shiva.

[Sanskrit devī, feminine of devaḥ, god.]



Term used to designate a goddess in Hinduism. It is sometimes used as an honorific title for women, and it may also refer to local female divinities throughout India. In the 5th – 6th century, Hindu texts first began to identify Devi as the Great Goddess and the embodiment of matter, energy, and illusion. She is represented in a variety of aspects, both good and evil, including the beautiful but menacing Durga, the destructive Kali, and the sexually powerful Shakti (see shakti).

For more information on Devi, visit Britannica.com.

Asian Mythology: Devī
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Devī is the Hindu Goddess. Although we speak of the trimūrti of Brahmā (see Brahmā), Viṣṇu (see Viṣṇu), and Śiva (see Śiva), in fact it is Devī who in practice joins Viṣṇu and Śiva as one of the three most important bhakti (see bhakti) or devotional deities in India. Some would say that she is the most important divinity, the fullest embodiment of the Absolute Brahman. In the Mārkaṇḍeya Purāṇa, in which many of Devī's myths appear, we find the Devīmāhātmya, in which the origin of the goddess is described. It seems that the world was being threatened by a gigantic water buffalo bull monster named Mahisa. He was king of the asuras (see Asuras), who had conquered Heaven. Following Brahmā, the gods take refuge with Viṣṇu and Śiva, and together project their angry energy in the form of sheets of light, which form one light and become the eighteen-armed Goddess, the perfect amalgamated personification, therefore, of the power and energy of godhead. Devī emerges as the ultimate feminine principle, the Life Energy itself, the original śakti (see śakti), the psychic and spiritual energy without which even Śiva is nothing material. Devī can, in fact, be worshipped as śakti (see Śāktism).

In her form as the violent avenging warrior goddess, Śiva's consort Durgā (see Durgā), Devī kills the monster and saves the world. It is the world that concerns Devī; she is the key to a successful existence in this reality. Although as the blood-thirsty Kālī (see Kālī) she brings disease, war, and destruction, it is because death and destruction are necessary to the cycle of life. For those who worship her, Devī is for the most part benevolent. Sometimes she is the wife of Śiva as Pārvatī (see Pārvatī), Daughter of the Mountain. As Satī (see Satī), the daughter of Dakṣa (see Dakṣa) and the wife of Śiva-Rudra (see Rudra), she throws herself into her husband's funeral pyre, setting the example of self-immolation or satī for Hindu widows. But Devī can also take form as Śrī (see Śrī) or Lakṣmi (see Lakṣmi), the wife of Viṣṇu. The name Śrī refers to prosperity and Viṣṇu to the sacrifice, indicating that prosperity cannot be separated from the necessary rituals of sacrifice. In the Mahābhārata (see Mahābhārata), Lakṣmi is incarnated as Draupadī (see Draupadī), the wife of the Pāṇḍava (see Pāṇḍavas) brothers. In the Rāmāyaṇa (see Rāmāyaṇa), she is Sītā (see Sītā), the loyal wife of the Viṣṇu avatar (see Avatars of Viṣṇu) Rāma (see Rāma). Philosophically, Devī is also the yogic sleep within Viṣṇu—that which keeps the world within the god. When she is outside of Viṣṇu she becomes not only Devī herself but Līlā (see Līlā) or “Divine Creativity”, and Māyā (see Māyā) or “Divine Illusion.”

Wikipedia: Devi
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The conjoined image of three especially popular manifestations of the Hindu Divine Mother: Lakshmi (wealth/material fulfillment), Parvati (Power/love/spiritual fulfillment), and Saraswati (learning and arts/cultural fulfillment), left to right.

Devi (Devanagari: देवी) is the Sanskrit word for Goddess, used mostly in Hinduism. Devi is synonymous with Shakti, the female aspect of the divine, as conceptualized by the Shakta tradition of Hinduism. She is the female counterpart without whom the male aspect, which represents consciousness or discrimination, remains impotent and void. Goddess worship is an integral part of Hinduism.

Devi is, quintessentially, the core form of every Hindu Goddess. As the female manifestation of the supreme lord, she is also called Prakriti, as she balances out the male aspect of the divine addressed Purusha.[1]

Devi is the supreme Being in the Shaktism tradition of Hinduism, while in the Smartha tradition, she is one of the five primary forms of God.[2][3] In other Hindu traditions of Shaivism and Vaishnavism, Devi embodies the active energy and power of male deities (Purushas), such as Vishnu in Vaishnavism or Shiva in Shaivism. Vishnu's shakti counterpart is called Lakshmi, with Parvati being the female shakti of Shiva.

Contents

Origins

Indus Valley

The Indus Valley Civilization, with its neighboring cultures of Zhob and Kulli regions in Balochistan, have yielded data on prehistoric religious practices on the Indian subcontinent dating back to 3000 BC. Some scholars suggest that the Indus Valley culture has a cult of the Great Mother or the Divine Mother, similar to such cults in Asia Minor and the Mediterranean; and some have even hazarded a guess that this may be the earliest form of Shaktism.[citation needed]

Vedic period

The Vedic literature describes a number of significant goddesses including Ushas, Prithivi, Aditi, Saraswati, Vac, Nirrti, Ratri, Aranyani; and a number of minor ones, including Puramdhi, Parendi, Raka, Dhisana, – hardly mentioned about a dozen times in the Rig Veda, and they all are associated with bounties and riches. Few others like Ila, Bharati, Mahi, Hotra are invoked and summoned through hymns to take their share during certain rituals.

According to the Vedas, Shakti is claimed to be Maya or illusion that casts a veil over Brahman, the Ultimate reality. Shakti and Brahman are inseparable entities that lie in a single body which reaffirms the claim that Shakti and Shiva coexist.

Manifestations

Devi or the divine feminine is an equal conterpart to the divine masculine, and hence manifests herself as the Trinity herself - the Creator (Durga or the Divine Mother), Preserver (Lakshmi, Parvati & Saraswati) and Destroyer (Mahishasura-Mardini, Kali & Smashanakali ).

Mahadevi

Many texts, myths and rituals concerning goddess subsume them all under one great female being, named generally as Mahadevi or Devi. Earliest Hindu tradition as reflected in the Vedas speak of discrete goddesses like Lakshmi and Parvati. Later, there emerged a tendency to relate all goddesses to one ultimate goddess, the best example of such texts being the Devi Mahatamaya. Another important feature of Mahadevi mythology and theology is the insistence that assumes both benign and terrible aspects of Mahadevi.

Durga

Durga killing the demon..

In Hindu pantheon, Durga is one of the most popular goddesses, and her creation takes place in the context of a cosmic crisis. The asuras were on the ascent, and they had become a threat to cosmic stability. The male gods were unable to contain and subdue them. A number of male gods having failed to subdue the demons led by Mahishasura, assembled into a conclave and emitted their energies upon Uma/Parvati, the wife of Shiva, who became the warrior goddess, Durga, that is, the invincible.

Vedic literature does not have any particular goddess matching the concept of Durga though it has references to certain goddesses as slayers of demons. Taitriya-aranyaka mentions Durga, but not in a manner comparable to Durga of later Hinduism. Around 4th century AD, images of Durga slaying Mahishasura begin to become common in many palaces in the Indian subcontinent.

At a certain point in her history, Durga became associated with Shiva as his wife, and she acquired homely characters in this role. This is often characterized in her iconography in which she is shown flanked by four deities, two of which are identified as her children: Karttikeya, Ganesh.

The theology underlying Durga’s emergence and exploits are revealed in Devi Mahatmyam, the most famous text extolling her exploits, and is described: "Though she is eternal, the goddess becomes manifest over and over again to protect the world". This makes her on par with various avatars of Vishnu.

One of the most famous festivals associate with her is Durga Puja celebrated in the month of Ashvin (September-October), and is also called Navaratri festival.

Saraswati

An image of goddess Saraswati

Saraswati, the flowing one, is one of the most celebrated goddesses from the Vedic period through current times. She has been repeatedly mentioned in the Rig Veda, and has been identified with the Saraswati River. Over a period of time, in later Hinduism, her connection with a river decreased considerably, and she is no longer a goddess who embodies sacrality of a river, but has acquired her independent history and attributes.

She is the goddess of speech and learning, and is the creator of Sanskrit, the language of the Vedas. She is the consort of Brahma , the creator and member of the Hindu Trinity. She is equally revered by Hindus, Jains and the Buddhists. Her iconography depicts her association with art, science and culture, which is dramatically different from some other major goddesses who are identified with fertility, wealth, and battles. She is shown as having four arms, and the most common items held by her in her hands are a book, a vina (lute), a mala, and a water pot. The book signified art, science and learning; the vina associates her with music and performing arts; and the prayer beads and water pot signify her association with religious rites. She is worshipped on the first day of the spring according to Hindu calendar, called the Basant Panchami.

Sri Lakshmi

Lakshmi

Sri, commonly known as Lakshmi and also called Sri Lakshmi, is one of the most popular and widely worshiped Goddesses in Hindu tradition since pre-Buddhist period. She has a considerable body of mythology and history. The earliest legend states that Sri is born as a result of austerities of Prajapati, and she represents ten qualities and objects, namely, food, royal power, universal sovereignty, knowledge, power, holy luster, kingdom, fortune, bounteousness, and beauty.

The earliest Vedic literature does not have any goddess named Sri Lakshmi or Lakshmi, but Sri appears in several Vedic hymns, and Sri is indicative of several positive attributes including beauty, glory, power, capability, and higher rank. In later Vedic literature, Sri signified the ruling power and the majesty of kings. Sri-Sukta, a hymn appended to the Rig Veda, is a famous Vedic chant, extolling Sri, and presents a detailed account of her, both conceptually and visually. The hymn also associates her with lotus and elephant – an association, which has not changed in subsequent history.

By the late epic period (400 AD), Lakshmi became associated with Vishnu, and emerged as his wife or consort, and acquired - in addition to her earlier attributes - characteristics of a model wife.

She is worshipped on Diwali, a new moon night, to symbolize that her presence is enough to dispel all the darkness from the hearts of her devotees.[4]

Parvati

Parvati suckling baby Ganesha. Watercolor on paper (ca. 1820)

Parvati, The Supreme Goddess, the Goddess of Power (Shakti) and regarded as the Primary personification of Shakti herself,She is incarnated as the daughter of the mountains (the Himalayas), is consort of Shiva, and is generally considered a benign goddess in the form of Lalita, Gauri, Durga (both fearful and benign) but from her warth she manifests herself to many other forms ie Durga, Kali, Chandi/Chandika, Bhavani. She is the principal deity of the Hindu Sect Shaktism and regarded as Sagun form of Adi Parashakti or simply Adi Shakti. She has been identified as a reincarnation of Dakshayani, Shiva’s first wife, who destroyed her by self-immolation because her father, Daksha, insulted Shiva. Parvati when depicted alongside Shiva appears with two arms, but when alone, she is shown having four arms, and astride a tiger or lion. She is also known by a number of other names, including Durga (Goddess Beyond reach)Ambika (mother), Gauri (golden), Shyama (dark complexioned), Bhavani (Mother of Universe) Bhairavi (awesome) and Kali (black-colored or Goddess of Time). She is the Goddess of all other Goddess that's why she is called as Mahadevi.

In classical Hindu mythology, the raison d’être of Parvati, and before that of Sati, is to lure Shiva into marriage and thus into a wider circle of worldly affairs. With the plays of Kalidas (5th-6th centuries) and the Puranas (4th through the 13th centuries) the myths of Sati, Parvati and Shiva acquired comprehensive details.

Kali

Goddess Kali

Kali is one of the most significant divinities, and many texts and contexts treat Kali as an independent deity, not directly associated with a male god. In case she is associated with a male god, it is invariably Shiva. In this aspect, she represents the omnipotent Shakti of Shiva. She holds both the creative and destructive power of time.

The earliest reference to Kali in Hindu tradition date back to the 6th century, and locate her in the battle fields fighting asuras. Her temples are recommended to be built away from human habitations. Vana Bhatta's 7th century drama Kadambari features a goddess named Chandi, an epithet of both Kali and Durga.

Kali’s most famous appearance in battle contexts are found in the Devi Mahatmya when during the battle with asuras, Durga becomes angry. Her face turns pitch dark, and suddenly Kali springs forth from Durga’s forehead. She is black, wears a garland of human heads, is clothed in a tiger skin, and wields a staff topped by a human skull. She destroys the asuras. Later, Durga seeks her assistance once more to annihilate Raktabija. Kali’s mythology recounts several such appearances, mostly in terrible aspects.

Mahavidya

Mahavidyas, that is, the supreme knowledge, revelations and manifestations, refer to a group of ten goddesses. They constitute an important aspect of Mahadevi theology, which emphasizes that the Devi has a tendency to manifest and display herself in a variety of forms and aspects. Mahavidyas find no mention in the earliest Hindu texts, but appeared relatively late in Hindu tradition. According to some scholars,[who?] they are actually ten Tantric goddesses and parts of Kali, personifying her different facets. Seven of them represent creative forces embodies in Kali, and the remaining three embody her destructive nature and aspects. In the context of Hindu mythology, the origin of the ten Mahavidyas takes place in the story of Sati and Shiva.

Ten Mahavidyas are: Kali, Tara, Chinnamasta, Bhuvanesvari, Bagla, Dhumavati, Kamla, Matangi, Sodasi, and Bhairavi.

Navadurga

Navadurga (Devanagari: नवदुर्गा), which literally means nine Durgas, constitute, according to Hindu mythology, the manifestation of Durga in nine different forms. Navadurga are famously worshipped during the Autumn Navaratri or the Nine days, initiating the devotees into a period of festivities according to Hindu calendar.

Others aspects

Sita

Sita is one of the most popular divinities of Hinduism. Currently, Sita is associated with Rama (an avatar of Vishnu) as his wife, and she receives worship along with her husband Rama. She is one of the many incarnations of Lakshmi.

A female divinity called Sita was known before the Ramayana of Valmiki. Sita literally means “furrow”, that is, the line made while plowing the land, and in Vedic period, she was one of the goddesses associated with fertility. The Kausik-sutra and the Paraskara-sutra associates her repeatedly as the wife of Parjanya (a god associated with rains) and Indra.

She emerged as a significant divinity with Valmiki’s Ramayana, written sometime between 200 BC and 200 AD, and various vernacular renditions of the same, with slightly modified contents, over next several centuries. These texts extol Rama and Sita as the divine couple, and countless mythology, legend, and folklores revolve around them. Sita is always represented in association with Rama, her husband, and Rama is central to her life and existence. She has the dominant role of all Hindu mythological tradition as far as the portrayal of ideal woman and ideal wife is concerned. She represents wifely devotion, forbearance and chastity. She overshadows several other divine Hindu wives including Parvati and Lakshmi, and other similar devoted wives of Hindu mythology like Savitri and Damayanti.

Her current history states that she emerged from the earth when king Janaka was plowing the field during a ritual to invoke rains. She was married to Rama, was abducted by Ravana, reclaimed by Rama, and then banished out of his kingdom. In the forests, in an ashram of Valmiki, she raised her two sons, Kusha and Lava, who engaged the royal forces of Rama and inflicted heavy damage. Rama himself comes to fight with the, when Valmiki told him that they were his own sons. Rama requests Sita to come back, but remembering the injustices meted out to her, she called her mother Earth to receive her back, the ground opens up and she returned to where she had originally emerged.

Radha

Radha, which means prosperity and success, is one of the Gopis of Vrindavan, and is a central figure of Vaishnava theology. Early literature speaks of a favourite Gopi of Krishna, but her details emerge clearly centuries later. Jayadeva’s Gitagovinda (12th century) presents a full depiction of Radha and her association with Krishna.

In fact, Radha is the original manifestation of Param(Adi) Shakti, which is the supreme energy in the Hindu religion. She is same as mother Sita, who partial incarnations are Lakshmi, Durga and Saraswati. In order to please God, one has to first please Adi Shakti. In Devi Bhagavata, it is mentioned that she is the one who fulfills all the desires of all creatures by simply crying while remembering her. She is the source of all energies.

Traditionally, Radha’s love for Krishna is likened to human soul’s yearning for God, and she is regarded as an ultimate model for devotees. Her role is also to be an intermediary between man and God.

Matrikas

Matrikas, that is, the mothers, are a band of divinities, which always appear in a group.

Shakti Peethas

Another important aspects of the Female divine are the various Shakti Peethas spread all across the nation, where over 51 body parts of Devi Sati, first wife of Lord Shiva fell after being broken apart by the Sudarshana Chakra of Lord Vishnu.

Goddess Sati had earlier performed self-immolation at the ceremonial feast of her father king Daksha and an enraged and inconsolable Lord Shiva was wandering all over the Creation, with her dead body, threatening its very existence. Each point on the earth where her body parts fell is now venerated as a Shakti Peetha - the seat of Shakti or female power.

See also

References

  1. ^ Devi
  2. ^ http://www.himalayanacademy.com/resources/books/dws/dws_mandala-02.html
  3. ^ Flood (1996), p. 17.
  4. ^ Hindu Goddesses

Further reading

External links


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World Mythology Dictionary. A Dictionary of World Mythology. Copyright © Arthur Cotterell 1979, 1986, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Asian Mythology. A Dictionary of Asian Mythology. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by David Leeming. All rights reserved.  Read more
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