Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Hinduism, Laxmi is the goddess of wealth. The Star of Lakshmi is the star figure (polygon {8/2}), that is used in Hinduism to symbolize Ashtalakshmi, the eight forms of wealth. Date: 28 March 2006 (original upload date) Source: Symbol reference: Eric W. Weisstein. "Star of Lakshmi." Author
Raja Ravi Varma (Malayalam: [ɾaːdʒaː ɾɐʋi ʋɐrm(ː)ɐ]) (29 April 1848 – 2 October 1906 [3] [4]) was an Indian painter and artist.His works are one of the best examples of the fusion of European academic art with a purely Indian sensibility and iconography.
In South India, Lakshmi is seen in two forms, Sridevi and Bhudevi, both at the sides of Venkateshwara, a form of Vishnu. Bhudevi is the representation and totality of the material world or energy, called the Apara Prakriti , or Mother Earth; Sridevi is the spiritual world or energy called the Prakriti .
Lakshmi Narayana (Sanskrit: लक्ष्मी-नारायण, IAST: Lakṣmīnārāyaṇa) or Lakshmi Narayan is the dual representation of the Hindu deities Vishnu, also known as Narayana, and his consort, Lakshmi, traditionally featured in their abode, Vaikuntha.
Media in category "Indian public domain photographs" ... Tata Air Lines' Airline Timetable Image, 14 August 1938 (exterior).jpg 166 × 400; 16 KB.
Birla Mandir, Jaipur (Lakshmi Narayan Temple) is a Hindu temple located in Jaipur, India [1] and is one of many Birla mandirs. [2] It was built by the B.M. Birla Foundation in 1988 and is constructed solely of white marble. [3]
The statue had first been published in Images of Nepal (1984) by the historian Krishna Deva, and the theft was first documented in Lain Singh Bangdel's Stolen Images of Nepal (1989). [10] On 22 March 1990, it was sold by the international auction house Sotheby's for an undisclosed sum, and the statue was valued at around US$30,000–40,000 in 1999.
"Capt. Lakshmi" from a 1945 newspaper photograph. Captain Lakshmi was born on 24 October 1914 to S. Swaminathan, a lawyer who practiced criminal law at Madras High Court, and A.V. Ammukutty, better known as Ammu Swaminathan, a social worker and independence activist from an aristocratic Nair family known as "Vadakkath" family of Anakkara, Ponnani taluk, Malabar District, British India. [1]