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Mahadevi (Sanskrit: महादेवी, IAST: Mahādevī), also referred to as the Devi, Adi Parashakti and Mahamaya, [3] is the supreme goddess in Hinduism. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] According to the goddess-centric sect Shaktism , all Hindu gods and goddesses are considered to be manifestations of this great goddess, who is considered as the Para ...
Mahadevi, Lakshmi, Parvati ... Bhrāmarī, lit. 'like a bee') is the Hindu goddess of bees. She is an incarnation of the goddess Mahadevi in Shaktism. [2] [3] [note 1]
She is regarded to be an incarnation of Mahadevi, and identified with Durga in Hinduism. [2] After the malevolent asura Durgamasura deprived the earth of nourishment by causing the sages to forget the Vedas, the goddess appeared to offer human beings and devas sufficient fruits and vegetables to restore their strength. [3]
Lakshmi Sahasranama of Skanda Purana praises Lakshmi as Mahadevi (she who is the great goddess), Mahamaya (she who is a great illusion), Karaveera Nivasini (The Goddess Who lives in Karaveera/Kolhapur) and Maha Astha Dasa Pithagne (she who has 18 great Shakta pithas).
Mahadevi, as mother goddess, is an example of the later, where she subsumes all goddesses, becomes the ultimate goddess, and is sometimes just called Devi. [ 77 ] Theological texts projected Mahadevi as ultimate reality in the universe as a "powerful, creative, active, transcendent female being."
It promotes bhakti (devotion) towards Mahadevi, integrating themes from the Shaktadvaitavada tradition (a syncretism of Samkhya and Advaita Vedanta). While this is generally regarded as a Shakta Purana, some scholars such as Dowson have also interpreted this Purana as a Shaiva Purana. [4] The Purana consists of twelve cantos with 318 chapters. [5]
Her form or incarnation depends on her mood. Bhadrakali is one of the fiercest forms of Ambika, the destroyer of the yajna of Daksha . Chandi is an epithet of Durga, considered to be the power of Ambika; she is black in color and rides on a lion, the slayer of the demon Mahishasura.
Dhumavati (Sanskrit: धूमावती, Dhūmāvatī, literally "the smoky one") is one of the Mahavidyas, a group of ten Hindu Tantric goddesses. Dhumavati represents the fearsome aspect of Mahadevi, the supreme goddess in Hindu traditions such as Shaktism.