enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mahakali - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahakali

    Mahakali (Sanskrit: महाकाली, romanized: Mahākālī) is the Hindu goddess of time and death in the goddess-centric tradition of Shaktism. She is also known as the supreme being in various tantras and Puranas. Similar to Kali, Mahakali is a fierce goddess associated with universal power, time, life, death, and both rebirth and ...

  3. Kali - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kali

    Mahakali is known as the origin of all things, her consort is Mahakala. [9]: 257 The Skanda Purana mentions that Kali took the form of Mahakali at the instruction of Shiva who wanted her to destroy the world during the time of universal destruction. [9]: 242 In the ten-armed form of Mahakali, she is depicted as shining like a blue stone.

  4. Mahakala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahakala

    Mahākāla (Sanskrit: महाकाल, pronounced [mɐɦaːˈkaːlɐ]) is a deity common to Hinduism and Buddhism. [1]In Buddhism, Mahākāla is regarded as a Dharmapāla ("Protector of the Dharma") and a wrathful manifestation of a Buddha, while in Hinduism, Mahākāla is a fierce manifestation of the Hindu god Shiva and the consort of the goddess Mahākālī; [1] he most prominently ...

  5. Shaktism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaktism

    The Kaula or Kaulachara, first appeared as a coherent ritual system in the 8th century in central India, [84] and its most revered theorist is the 18th-century philosopher Bhaskararaya, widely considered "the best exponent of Shakta philosophy." [85]

  6. Mahavidya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahavidya

    Mahakali is of a pitch black complexion, darker than the dark of the dead of the night. She has three eyes, representing the past, present and future. She has shining white, fang-like teeth, a gaping mouth, and her red, bloody tongue hanging from there. She has unbound, disheveled hairs.

  7. Tridevi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tridevi

    Mahakali represents darkness, pure tamas personified. Mahakali is one of the three primary forms of Devi. She is stated to be a powerful cosmic aspect (vyaṣṭi) of Devi, and represents the guna (universal energy) named tamas, and is the personification of the universal power of transformation, the transcendent power of time. [9]

  8. Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahakaleshwar_Jyotirlinga

    Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga (IAST: mahākāleśvara) is a Hindu temple dedicated to Shiva and is one of the twelve Jyotirlingas, shrines which are said to be the most sacred abodes of Shiva.

  9. Kaula (Hinduism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaula_(Hinduism)

    Kaula, also known as Kula, Kulamārga ("the Kula path") and Kaulācāra ("the Kaula tradition"), is a Tantric tradition which is characterised by distinctive rituals and symbolism connected with the worship of Shakti and Shiva [1] that is associated with cremation-ground or charnel ground sceticism, found in Shaktism and Shaivism.