Religious deities
An overview of the deities of the Chola (not complete).
Agni
A Vedic deity; god of (the sacrificial) fire. Forms the Vedic triad of gods with Indra and Vayu.
Alingana Chandrasekhara
Shiva as Chandrasekhara; Embracing Uma.
Andhaka
Demon of darkness who was blind but believed he had sight; embodiment of spiritual blindness, sometimes identified as wayward son of Shiva, slain by Shiva with his trident.
Ardhanari
Shiva as Half-Woman, Half-Man
Bhadrakali
Probably a nature goddess adapted by Shivas into a sometimes wrathful form of Durga who bestows boons on children in return for sacrifice.
Bhairava
‘The horrible’ – fierce (ugraha) or destructive (samhara) incarnation of the Hindu god Shiva.
Bhikshatana
‘Lord as Beggar’ – Shiva taking the form of a wandering ascetic in atonement for cutting of one of god Brahma‘s five heads.
Bhu
The goddess Earth.
Bhu Devi
Earth Goddess, personification of the earth and one of two consorts of Vishnu.
Bhu Lakshmi
Earth Lakshmi, consort of Vishnu.
Bhu Varaha
see description of Varaha
Brahma
A major god in Hinduism, responsible for the creation of the earth.
Chamunda
Chamunda is the fear-inspiring aspect of Devi or Mahadevi and is closely associated with the goddesses Kali, Durga but also with the benevolent Parvati. She helped Shiva in his battle against the demon Andhaka.
Andhaka had the power to create new demons from his blood dripping down to earth.
Chamunda drank Andhaka’s blood, which turned her body a blood-red colour.
Chandrasekhara
‘Lord Crowned with the Moon’ – benign form of Shiva, smiling and with crescent moon prominently displayed in his hair.
Dakini
She is a spirit being in the mythology of Tantra in Hinduism and Buddhism who brings the souls of the dead to heaven.
The Dakinis in Tibetan Buddhism are female beings with a very changeable, sometimes wild temperament. They can appear as peaceful, wrathful and mixed peaceful-wrathful figures.
Dakshinamurti
Shiva as great teacher.
Devi
Goddess who is worshipped in many form, but principally associated with Shiva as Durga or Bhadrakali.
Durga
‘Impassable One’ – the great goddess as warrior, destroyer of demon forces; composite of many local deities who assumed prominence as war-like expression of Uma–Parvati‘s personally.
Ganesha
‘Lord of the ganas’ – elephant-headed elder son of Shiva and Parvati (Uma), venerated as remover of obstacles and god of wisdom; lord of the ganas.
Ganga
The river Ganga (Ganges) personified as a goddess.
Garuda
Mythical eagle, typically represented as half-bird, half-human, who serves as Vishnu‘s mount (vahana).
Hanuman
Monkey chief and ally of Rama, son of the wind god Vayu, and subject of cult following for his martial prowess and loyal friendship.
Hara Vijaya
The missing information will be added soon.
Indra
A Vedic deity; god of war, rain. Forms the Vedic triad of gods with Agni and Vayu.
Jyestha
Jyestha is the goddess of misfortune and embodies all that is inauspicious. As the embodiment of illness and poverty, she is worshipped to prevent such misfortune.
In the south, a major cult developed, as witnessed by her depiction at the early eighth-century Pallava-period Kailashanatha temple in Kanchipuram. Her cult appears to have waned in the post-medieval era.
Kali
Name of the great goddess in her fearsome aspect; the black one; power of time.
Kaliya
Five-headed demon-snake who terrorised villagers along River Yamuna (Jumna) but was subdued by Krishna.
Kalyanasundarar
Shiva as bridegroom with bride Uma.
Kartikeya
Younger son of Shiva and Parvati (Uma); also known by various other names, including Kumara, Skanda and Subrahmanya.
Kaushalya
Mother of Rama.
Krishna
Worshipped as avatar of Vishnu, especially at his birth place near Mathura, originating as local pastoral deity and identified as hero of Mahabharata epic and expounder of Bhagavad Gita.
Kumara
‘young one’, used also for Skanda, younger son of Shiva and Parvati (Uma).
Lokeshvara
Lord of the world.
Laskshmana
Younger brother of Rama.
Lakshmi or Sri Lakshmi or Sri
Goddess of motherhood and fertility; regarded in early times as personification of the earth (Bhu Lakshmi) and later as goddess of wealth and fortune, riches and beauty, consort of Vishnu.
Lokeshvara
Lord of the world.
Mahadeva
‘The Great God’ – form of Shiva, is one of the principal deities of Hinduism.
Mahesha
A form of Shiva who manifests himself in three stages, moving from the abstract to the concrete – symbolised by the unadorned linga (shaft), the linga with one or more faces protruding from it, and finally Mahesha.
Nandi
‘joyful’ – calf-bull associated with Shiva form from earliest period, when he was probably also understood as a form of Shiva; later seen as Shivas mount but still worshipped in own right.
Narashimha
‘Man-lion’ – fourth appearance of Vishnu in wrathful half-man, half-lion form, to overcome tyranny of the demon ruler Hiranyakashipu.
Nataraja
‘Lord of Dance’ – Shiva as cosmological dancer, typically represented in ananda-tandava posture; particularly associated with Chidambaram temple. (Adavallan, Tamil term for Dancing Shiva)
Nilakantha/Srikantha
‘Lord of the Auspicious Neck’ – Shiva as drinker of poison from the primordial ocean that threatened to destroy the universe.
Parameshvari
An aspect of Devi as Uma–Parvati.
Parvati
Wife of Shiva, connected with mountain tribes of Himalayas; referred to as Uma in south India, where she is said to be sister of Vishnu; gracious, friendly and maternal fertility deity.
Pashupati
The missing information will be added soon.
Rama
Seventh avatar of Vishnu, who appeared as king of Ayodhya to counter threat to world order posed by demon Ravana, as recounted in the Ramayana epic.
Ravana
Ten-headed demon king of Lanka (Sri Lanka) and Rama‘s main adversary in the Ramayana epic.
Rishabhavahana
Shiva with his bull vehicle.
Rudra
The missing information will be added soon.
Rukmini
‘wearer of golden ornaments’ – Krishna‘s senior queen, daughter of king of Kundinapura.
Sarasvati
The missing information will be added soon.
Sati
The missing information will be added soon.
Shankara
The missing information will be added soon.
Shiva (Aran)
‘Auspicious One’ – complex, many-faced deity, creator and destroyer, both auspicious and dangerous; along with Vishnu and Devi, principal cult deity of Hindu India. Major Hindu deity, who holds battle ax and trident, carries the crescent moon in his locks, and whose vehicle is the bull.
Sita
Wife of Rama and heroine of the Ramayana epic.
Skanda
Younger son of Shiva and Parvati (Uma); also known by various other names, including Kumara, Kartikeya and Subrahmanya.
Somanatha
The missing information will be added soon.
Somaskanda
Shiva with Uma and infant Skanda (sa-uma-skanda).
Subrahmanya
Younger son of Shiva and Parvati (Uma); also known by various other names, including Kumara, Kartikeya and Skanda.
Surya/Aditya
God of sun. (Aditya, another name of Surya)
Tripura Sundari
Uma as Beauty of the Three Cities/Forts, as consort of Tripura Vijaya.
Tripura Vijaya
‘Victor of the Three Cities’ – Shiva as destroyer of three powerful demons and their three cities, shown with the arrow that he used to slay them.
Uma
Mother aspect of Parvati and preferred terms for this goddess in south India. Consort of Shiva; known in north India as Parvati.
Varaha
Third avatar of Vishnu as giant boar who rescued the Earth Goddess from waters of the cosmic ocean, also known as Bhu Varaha.
Vayu
A Vedic deity; god of wind, air and the breath of life and its personification. Forms the Vedic triad of gods with Agni and Indra. His son is Hanuman.
Vrishabhavana
Shiva as ‘Rider of the Bull’ shown with his mount, Nandi, sometimes accompanied by Uma–Parvati.
Vishnu (Ayan)
Major Hindu god with many avatars, his principal forms being Matsya, Kurma, Varaha, Narashimha, Vamana, Parashurama, Rama, Krishna, Buddha and Kali. He holds conch shell and discus and whose vehicle is the divine eagle Garuda.
Vishwanatha
The missing information will be added soon.
Yama
God of death.