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As per legend, Guliga is a goblin, born out of a stone. The Goddess Parvati discovered this stone in a pile of ash. Guliga was created when Lord Shiva flung this ash into the water and was sent to Lord Vishnu after his birth so that he may serve him. Guliga has extreme hunger, which never ends, he eats even the earth.
The Indian state government of Goa owned bus service is named after the Kadambas Dynasty and is known as Kadamba Transport Corporation (KTCL).The royal lion emblem of the Kadambas is used a logo on its buses. The lion emblem logo became an integral part of KTCL since its inception in 1980 when the corporation was set up to provide better public ...
Guliga Daiva or Gulikan is believed to be a Goblin, whose duty is to protect Scheduled Cast and Tribes from problems, mainly from Environment Issues. Due to the presence of the God Guliga in Benkanakavu, The adjacent Koroth Nair Tharavadu , Kazhakakkar, and Kolakkar organize the Theyyam festival in Benanakavu once every two years.
Devadiga (Sanskrit: देवाडिगः, romanized: Dēvāḍiga) also known as Moily, Sherigar [1] is a Hindu Community or Caste. Devadigas were traditionally temple servants and musicians in Hindu temples.
According to mythology, Tulu Nadu was reclaimed by Parashurama from the sea. [citation needed] According to the 17th-century Malayalam work Keralolpathi, the lands of Kerala and Tulu Nadu were recovered from the Arabian Sea by the axe-wielding warrior sage Parasurama, the sixth avatar of Vishnu (hence, Kerala is also called Parasurama Kshetram 'The Land of Parasurama' [6]).
For example, in the fable The Old Man the Young Wife, the text relates a story wherein an old man marries a young woman from a penniless family. [40] The young woman detests his appearance so much that she refuses to even look at him let alone consummate their marriage. [ 41 ]
The 20 stories are woven over a span of 8000 years and a distance of about 10,000 km. The first story, "Nisha", is about cavemen living in Caucasia (southern Russia) about 6000 BC. The society or its precursor at that time was matriarchal, and so the story is named after the leader of the family 'Nisha'. Here one can find a gradual ...
The film is based on a renowned Hindi short story of the same name written by Chandradhar Sharma Guleri which was published in 1915 in Saraswati. The writing is critically acclaimed for the "perfection of technique, characterization and effect". [2] However, the film itself was a "none too smooth takeoff" and did not do well at the box office. [3]