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  2. Thirty-two forms of Ganesha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirty-two_forms_of_Ganesha

    Thirty-two forms of Ganesha are mentioned frequently in devotional literature related to the Hindu god Ganesha. [1] [2] [3] The Ganesha-centric scripture Mudgala Purana is the first to list them. [4] Detailed descriptions are included in the Shivanidhi portion of the 19th-century Kannada Sritattvanidhi.

  3. Ganesha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganesha

    The name Ganesha is a Sanskrit compound, joining the words gana (gaṇa), meaning a 'group, multitude, or categorical system' and isha (īśa), meaning 'lord or master'. [18] The word gaṇa when associated with Ganesha is often taken to refer to the gaṇas, a troop of semi-divine beings that form part of the retinue of Shiva, Ganesha's father ...

  4. Mahaganapati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahaganapati

    Mahaganapati (Sanskrit: महागणपति, mahā-gaṇapati), literally "Ganesha, the Great" [1]), also spelled as Maha Ganapati, and frequently called Mahaganadhipati, is an aspect of the Hindu god Ganesha. He is the representation of Ganesha as the Supreme Being Paramatman and is the most important deity of the Ganesha-centric ...

  5. Uchchhishta Ganapati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uchchhishta_Ganapati

    Rao classifies Uchchhishta Ganapati as one of the five Shakti-Ganesha icons, where Ganesha is depicted with a shakti, that is, a female consort. [4] The large figure of Ganesha is accompanied with smaller figure of the consort. [1] The nude devi (goddess) sits on his left lap. She has two arms and wears various ornaments.

  6. Haridra Ganapati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haridra_Ganapati

    These sectarians used to brand by iron the head of Ganesha and his tusk on their palms. [5] Haridra Ganapati is a Tantric form of Ganesha. Special mantras and yantras are used in his worship. Rituals involving his worship generally are performed to fulfill material objectives, especially gaining boons related to sexuality.

  7. Ganesha Temple, Morgaon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganesha_Temple,_Morgaon

    Pleased by her penance, Ganesha blessed her by the boon that he would be born as her son. In due course, Ganesha was born to Parvati at Lenyadri and named as Gunesha by Shiva. Little Gunesha once knocked an egg from a mango tree, from which emerged a peacock. Gunesha mounted the peacock and assumed the name Mayuresvara. [6]

  8. Hindu iconography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_iconography

    [12] [13] Such multiple body parts represent the divine omnipresence and immanence (ability to be in many places at once and simultaneously exist in all places at once), and thereby the ability to influence many things at once. [12] The specific meanings attributed to the multiple body parts of an image are symbolic, not literal in context. [14]

  9. Panchamukha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panchamukha

    Panchamukha Ganesha, the San Diego Museum of Art The deity Ganesha is sometimes represented with five faces in his iconography, called Heramba or Panchamukha Ganesha. Each head of the deity is said to represent the five koshas , the sheaths of annamaya, pranamaya, manomaya, vijñānamaya, and anandamaya.