Naigamesha
Naigamesha (
Associations
Naigamesha is known by a variety of names: Negamesha, Nemesha, Naigameshin, Negamesi, Harinegameshi. The last is translated as "Negamesi, the general of Hari (Indra)". Another interpretation says that it is derived from harina (deer) and mesha (ram).[2]
Naigamesha is the benefactor and protector of children in Jainism. While the Greek satyr Pan is depicted with the lower body of a goat, Naigamesha has a goat head; in both cultures, the goat denotes fertility.[3] He is worshipped to beget children.[2]
Literature
Jainism
According to the
Hinduism
In Hinduism, Naigamesha is associated with
Iconography
Depictions of Naigamesha are rare and are generally confined to North India and the pre-third century era. They are many depictions of the deity found in the region around Mathura, dating from the 1st–3rd century.[5][2] Terracotta figurines of Naigamesha from 2nd century BCE to 4th century CE are also been discovered.[4]
In a 1st–3rd century depiction from Kankali Tila near Mathura (currently in
Besides his goat-head, Naigamesha may also be shown having a deer head and may be depicted transferring the embryo of Mahavira in narrative panels. He is also depicted as seated on a throne, flanked by children on his lap or shoulders. Female attendants or a goat-headed woman sometimes accompany the god.[2]
Notes
- ^ "Naigamesa was a popular deity in the Kushana period and we have at least eight figures of this god from Mathura assignable to c. 1st to 3rd century A.D. (GMM., E. 1, 15.909, 15, 1001, 15. 1046, 15. 1115, 34.2402, 34. 2547, SML., J 626, etc)" in Joshi, Nilakanth Purushottam (1986). Mātr̥kās, Mothers in Kuṣāṇa Art. Kanak Publications. p. 41.
- ^ ISBN 978-81-8475-277-9.
- ^ Van der Geer pp. 170–171
- ^ ISBN 978-0-391-02234-8.
- ^ Van der Geer p. 173
- ^ Van der Geer pp. 172–3, xxxii
References
- Alexandra Anna Enrica van der Geer (2008). Animals in Stone: Indian Mammals Sculptured Through Time. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-16819-0.
External links
Media related to Naigamesha at Wikimedia Commons