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Vahana

Vahana (Sanskrit: वाहन, romanizedvāhana, lit.'that which carries') or vahanam (Sanskrit: वाहनम्, romanizedvāhanam) denotes the being, typically an animal or mythical entity, a particular Hindu deity is said to use as a vehicle. In this capacity, the vahana is often called the deity's "mount". Upon the partnership between the deity and his vahana is woven much iconography and Hindu theology. Deities are often depicted riding (or simply mounted upon) the vahana. Other times, the vahana is depicted at the deity's side or symbolically represented as a divine attribute. The vahana may be considered an accoutrement[1] of the deity: though the vahana may act independently, they are still functionally emblematic or even syntagmatic of their "rider". The deity may be seen sitting or standing on the vahana. They may be sitting on a small platform, or riding on a saddle or bareback.[2]

The eight Matrikas riding different vahanas like (top row, second from left to right) Garuda, a peacock, Nandi bull, a hamsa (goose/swan); (bottom row, from left) buffalo, elephant and lion

Etymology edit

Vah in Sanskrit means to carry, or transport.[3]

Symbolism edit

In Hindu iconography, positive aspects of the vehicle are often emblematic of the deity that it carries. Nandi the bull, vehicle of Shiva, represents strength and virility. Dinka the mouse, vehicle of Ganesha, represents speed and sharpness. Parvani the peacock, vehicle of Kartikeya, represents splendor and majesty. The hamsa, vehicle of Saraswati, represents wisdom, grace, and beauty.

However, the vehicle animal also symbolizes the evil forces over which the deity dominates. Mounted on Parvani, Kartikeya reins in the peacock's vanity. Seated on Dinka the rat (Mushika), Ganesha crushes useless thoughts, which multiply like rats in the dark. Shani, protector of property, has a vulture, raven, or crow within whom he represses thieving tendencies. Under Shani's influence, the vahana can make even malevolent events bring hope.

Examples edit

Garuda edit

Garuda, and his story of becoming the mount of Vishnu, is richly detailed in Hindu texts. Born to Vinata and bearing the power of Kashyapa's penance, the demigod is anguished to find that his mother is enslaved by the cruel Kadru. When he pleaded with Kadru to free his mother, the latter demanded the nectar of immortality as the price of her liberty. His legend of securing amrita, the nectar of immortality, is described in the episode known as Amṛtakalaśāpaharaṇam[4]:

Garuḍa approached the pot of nectar, and Viśvakarmā who attacked him first was felled to the ground. The dust storm raised by the waving of Garuḍa’s wings blinded everybody. The Devas and Indra, nay, even the sun and the Moon lined up against Garuḍa, but he defeated them all, and entered the particular place where the pot of nectar was kept. Two terrific wheels were rotating round the pot and they would cut into mince-meat anybody who tried to lay hands on the pot and a machine circled the wheels. Below the wheels were two monstrous serpents with glowing eyes and protruding tongues like flashes of fire, and the serpents never closed their eyes. The very look with those eyes was enough to poison anyone to death. Garuḍa blinded those eyes by raising a torrent of dust, pierced them in the middle with his beak and through the hole, his body reduced to such a tiny shape, went nearer to the pot. He destroyed the wheels and the machine, and carrying the pot of nectar in his beaks rose to the sky shielding the light of the sun by his outspread wings. Mahāviṣṇu, who became so much pleased with the tremendous achievements of Garuḍa asked him to choose any boon. Garuḍa requested Viṣṇu that he should be made his (Viṣṇu's) vehicle and rendered immortal without his tasting amṛta. Both the boons were granted.

Mushika edit

While the god Ganesha was still a child, a giant mouse began to terrorize all his friends. Ganesha trapped him with his lasso and made him his mount. Mushika was originally a gandharva, or celestial musician. After absent mindedly walking over the feet of a rishi (sage) named Vamadeva, Mushika was cursed and transformed into a mouse. However, after the rishi recovered his temper, he promised Mushika that one day, the gods themselves would bow down before him. The prophecy was fulfilled when the mouse became the vahana of Ganesha.

Nandi edit

Before becoming the vehicle of Shiva, Nandi was a deity called Nandikeshvara, lord of joy and master of music and dance. Then, without warning, his name and his functions were transferred to the aspect of Shiva known as the deity Nataraja. From half-man, half-bull, he became simply a bull. Since that time, he has watched over each of Shiva's temples, always looking towards him.

Paravani edit

Kartikeya, the war-god known as Murugan in Southern India, is mounted on a peacock named Paravani. This peacock was originally a demon called Surapadma, while the rooster was called the angel Krichi. After provoking Murugan in combat, the demon repented at the moment his lance descended upon him. He took the form of a tree and began to pray. The tree was cut in two. From one half, Murugan pulled a rooster, which he made his emblem, and from the other, a peacock, which he made his mount. In another version, Karthikeya was born to kill the demon, Tarakasura. He was raised by the Krittikas and led the divine armies when he was 6 days old. It is said that after defeating Tarakasura, the god forgave him and transformed him into his ride, the peacock.

Compared to other belief systems edit

The animal correspondences of Hindu vehicles are not consistent with Greek and Roman mythology, or other belief systems which may tie a particular animal to a particular deity. For example, the goddess Lakshmi of the Hindus has elephants, or an owl, or (a rare instance of a non-animal vehicle) the lotus blossom as her vehicle. The goddess Athena of ancient Greece also had an owl as her emblematic familiar, but the meanings invested in the owls by the two different belief systems are not the same, nor are the two goddesses themselves similar, despite their mutual identification with owls.

Lakshmi is, among other things, primarily the goddess of wealth, and her owl is a warning against distrust and isolationism, even selfishness. Athena, though also a goddess of prosperity, is primarily the goddess of wisdom, and her owl symbolizes secret knowledge and scholarship. Perhaps due to their shared geography, the Greco-Roman interpretation is paralleled in Roman Catholic iconography, in which St. Jerome, most famed for editing the New Testament, is often (though not always) depicted with an owl as a symbol of wisdom and scholarship.[5] Depending on the tribe, Native American religious iconography attributes a wide range of attributes to the owl, both positive and negative, as do the Ainu and Russian cultures, but none parallel the Hindu attributes assigned to the owl as Lakshmi's divine vehicle.[6]

Some hold that similar analyses could be performed cross-culturally for any of the other Hindu divine vehicles, and in each case, any parallels with the values assigned to animal totems in other cultures are likely to be either coincidence, or inevitable (as in linking bulls to virility), rather than evidence of parallel development. In dialectic, this is countered by the retort that each totem or vahana, as an aspect of ishta-devata (or an ishta-devata or asura in its own right), has innumerable ineffable teachings, insights and spiritual wisdom; comparative analysis yields benefit, though knowledge and understanding is not served by collapsing their qualities into homogenous signification.

List of Vahanas edit

Vahana Deities associated Image
Mouse Ganesha (pictured)
Vinayaki
Karni Mata[7]
 
Horse Kalki, Revanta, Chandra, Surya (pictured), Khandoba, Ayyappan
Ushas
Mhalsa
Garuda (pictured) Vishnu, Krishna, Rama, Vaishnavi  
Nandi (pictured) Shiva, Maheshvari, Ishana
Ishvari
 
Ram Agni (pictured), Mangala
Svaha
Dhavdi Mata
 
Peacock Kartikeya (pictured), Kaumari
Saraswati
 
Dog Bhairava (pictured)
Hadkai mata
 
Hamsa (pictured) Brahma[2] Brahmani, Saraswati, Gayatri, Vishvakarma  
Makara Ganga (pictured), Varuna, Akhilandeshwari, Khodiyar
Kaveri
Tapati
Various river goddesses
 
Tiger Chandraghanta, Kushmanda, Durga, Rahu, Ayyappan (pictured)
Vaishno Devi
 
Lion Skandamata, Katyayani, Parvati (pictured), Budha, Chandika, Mariamman, Kamakhya, Narasimhi, Kaushiki, Jagaddhatri, Durga  
Elephant Indra (pictured), Lakshmi, Shachi, Brihaspati  
Parrot Meenakshi, Kama (pictured), Rati  
Antelope Chandra, Vayu (pictured)  
Water buffalo Yama (pictured), Varahi, Dhandai Devi
Chamunda[8]
 
Cat[9] Shashthi (pictured)  
Donkey Kalaratri, Shitala (pictured), Kali, Alakshmi  
Owl Lakshmi (pictured)[2][10]
Chamunda
Kāla
 
Vulture Ketu (pictured), Shani
Alakshmi
Nirṛti
 
Crow Shani, Dhumavati (pictured)
Jyestha
 
Tortoise Yamuna (pictured)  
Cockerel Bahuchara Mata (pictured)  
Cow Dattatreya (pictured), Shailaputri, Mahagauri, Bhumi
Umiya Maa
Gatrad maa
 
Snake Manasa (pictured)
naagbai mata
Nageswari mata
 
Corpse (Betāl) Chamunda (pictured), Smashana Kali  
Mongoose Kubera (pictured)
Bhadra
 
Man Nirrti (pictured), Kubera, Bhadrā Devi  
Duck Manasa (pictured)

 
Ilish Jhulelal
 
Camel Momai mata[11]
Jackal Shivadooti
Dhole Chamunda[12]
Goat Meldi Mata[13][14] and Gel maa
Gaur Paplaj Mata
Verai Maa
 
A Bhagavata Purana manuscript page depicting the story of Atri and Anasuya meeting the Trimurti riding on their respective vahanas. (PhP 4.1.21-25). (Paper, late 18th century, Jaipur)

These correspondences are not always consistent. Ganesha, for example, is sometimes shown with a peacock as his vehicle. Even more rarely, the elephant-headed Ganesh may be seen riding an elephant, or a lion, or a many-headed serpent (See Ganesha's Vahanas).[15]

The vahana, the mount or vehicle of a deity, serves the function of doubling a deity's powers. The vahana also represents the devotee's mind which allows the deity to guide the devotee. Durga the warrioress could not have destroyed the demon Mahishasura without the aid of her vehicle, lion, which was given by her father Himalaya, for the stated purpose. Lakshmi, goddess of fortune, dispenses both material and spiritual riches from her mount, Uluka the owl. Ganesha, remover of obstacles, cannot go everywhere despite his elephant-like strength. However, his vehicle, Mushika the mouse, who can crawl into the smallest crevice or Akhuketana the rat, who can survive just about anywhere, can assist Ganesha to overcome the greatest obstacles.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Accoutrement = "that which accompanies".
  2. ^ a b c Glossary: Vahana 2009-02-05 at the Wayback Machine. Undated. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  3. ^ www.wisdomlib.org (2021-08-12). "Animals as vehicles of Gods [Chapter 2.7]". www.wisdomlib.org. from the original on 2022-08-11. Retrieved 2022-08-11.
  4. ^ www.wisdomlib.org (2019-01-28). "Story of Garuḍa". www.wisdomlib.org. from the original on 2022-08-11. Retrieved 2022-08-11.
  5. ^ The Collection: St. Jerome 2012-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, gallery of the religious art collection of New Mexico State University, with explanations. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  6. ^ Owl and Mythology 2006-05-22 at the Wayback Machine, p. 3. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  7. ^ "Folk Deity: Lok Devta & Devis of Rajasthan". from the original on 2022-07-13. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  8. ^ "Goddess Chamundi". from the original on 2022-07-12. Retrieved 2022-07-12.
  9. ^ Margaret Stutley's The Illustrated Dictionary of Hindu Iconography , p. 127
  10. ^ Hindu Devotion: Lakshmi 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  11. ^ "19. Mithapur,Shivarjpur, Nageshwar". 31 August 2016. from the original on 13 July 2022. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Sapta Matrika | 7 Matara - Seven Forms of Goddess Shakti". from the original on 2022-07-12. Retrieved 2022-07-12.
  13. ^ "Gods outside temples". Mumbai Mirror. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  14. ^ Joshi, Om Prakash (1994). Gods of Heaven, Home of Gods: A Study of Popular Prints. Illustrated Book Publishers. ISBN 978-81-85683-05-8.
  15. ^ Forms of Ganesh: The Mouse Mount and Other Ganesh Mounts 2007-03-02 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed August 10, 2007.

External links edit

  • Holy Vehicles, an illustrated list. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  • Hindu Deities and Their Vehicles, a partial list at About.Com. Accessed August 10, 2007.
  • Symbolism of the Vehicles of Gods and Goddesses. Accessed August 10, 2007.

vahana, this, article, about, mounts, hindu, deities, aircraft, prototype, airbus, animal, vehicle, redirects, here, album, axis, awesome, animal, vehicle, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding,. This article is about the mounts of Hindu deities For the aircraft prototype see Airbus A Vahana Animal vehicle redirects here For the album by The Axis of Awesome see Animal Vehicle This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Vahana news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vahana Sanskrit व हन romanized vahana lit that which carries or vahanam Sanskrit व हनम romanized vahanam denotes the being typically an animal or mythical entity a particular Hindu deity is said to use as a vehicle In this capacity the vahana is often called the deity s mount Upon the partnership between the deity and his vahana is woven much iconography and Hindu theology Deities are often depicted riding or simply mounted upon the vahana Other times the vahana is depicted at the deity s side or symbolically represented as a divine attribute The vahana may be considered an accoutrement 1 of the deity though the vahana may act independently they are still functionally emblematic or even syntagmatic of their rider The deity may be seen sitting or standing on the vahana They may be sitting on a small platform or riding on a saddle or bareback 2 The eight Matrikas riding different vahanas like top row second from left to right Garuda a peacock Nandi bull a hamsa goose swan bottom row from left buffalo elephant and lion Contents 1 Etymology 2 Symbolism 3 Examples 3 1 Garuda 3 2 Mushika 3 3 Nandi 3 4 Paravani 4 Compared to other belief systems 5 List of Vahanas 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksEtymology editVah in Sanskrit means to carry or transport 3 Symbolism editIn Hindu iconography positive aspects of the vehicle are often emblematic of the deity that it carries Nandi the bull vehicle of Shiva represents strength and virility Dinka the mouse vehicle of Ganesha represents speed and sharpness Parvani the peacock vehicle of Kartikeya represents splendor and majesty The hamsa vehicle of Saraswati represents wisdom grace and beauty However the vehicle animal also symbolizes the evil forces over which the deity dominates Mounted on Parvani Kartikeya reins in the peacock s vanity Seated on Dinka the rat Mushika Ganesha crushes useless thoughts which multiply like rats in the dark Shani protector of property has a vulture raven or crow within whom he represses thieving tendencies Under Shani s influence the vahana can make even malevolent events bring hope Examples editGaruda edit Garuda and his story of becoming the mount of Vishnu is richly detailed in Hindu texts Born to Vinata and bearing the power of Kashyapa s penance the demigod is anguished to find that his mother is enslaved by the cruel Kadru When he pleaded with Kadru to free his mother the latter demanded the nectar of immortality as the price of her liberty His legend of securing amrita the nectar of immortality is described in the episode known as Amṛtakalasapaharaṇam 4 Garuḍa approached the pot of nectar and Visvakarma who attacked him first was felled to the ground The dust storm raised by the waving of Garuḍa s wings blinded everybody The Devas and Indra nay even the sun and the Moon lined up against Garuḍa but he defeated them all and entered the particular place where the pot of nectar was kept Two terrific wheels were rotating round the pot and they would cut into mince meat anybody who tried to lay hands on the pot and a machine circled the wheels Below the wheels were two monstrous serpents with glowing eyes and protruding tongues like flashes of fire and the serpents never closed their eyes The very look with those eyes was enough to poison anyone to death Garuḍa blinded those eyes by raising a torrent of dust pierced them in the middle with his beak and through the hole his body reduced to such a tiny shape went nearer to the pot He destroyed the wheels and the machine and carrying the pot of nectar in his beaks rose to the sky shielding the light of the sun by his outspread wings Mahaviṣṇu who became so much pleased with the tremendous achievements of Garuḍa asked him to choose any boon Garuḍa requested Viṣṇu that he should be made his Viṣṇu s vehicle and rendered immortal without his tasting amṛta Both the boons were granted Mushika edit While the god Ganesha was still a child a giant mouse began to terrorize all his friends Ganesha trapped him with his lasso and made him his mount Mushika was originally a gandharva or celestial musician After absent mindedly walking over the feet of a rishi sage named Vamadeva Mushika was cursed and transformed into a mouse However after the rishi recovered his temper he promised Mushika that one day the gods themselves would bow down before him The prophecy was fulfilled when the mouse became the vahana of Ganesha Nandi edit Before becoming the vehicle of Shiva Nandi was a deity called Nandikeshvara lord of joy and master of music and dance Then without warning his name and his functions were transferred to the aspect of Shiva known as the deity Nataraja From half man half bull he became simply a bull Since that time he has watched over each of Shiva s temples always looking towards him Paravani edit Kartikeya the war god known as Murugan in Southern India is mounted on a peacock named Paravani This peacock was originally a demon called Surapadma while the rooster was called the angel Krichi After provoking Murugan in combat the demon repented at the moment his lance descended upon him He took the form of a tree and began to pray The tree was cut in two From one half Murugan pulled a rooster which he made his emblem and from the other a peacock which he made his mount In another version Karthikeya was born to kill the demon Tarakasura He was raised by the Krittikas and led the divine armies when he was 6 days old It is said that after defeating Tarakasura the god forgave him and transformed him into his ride the peacock Compared to other belief systems editThe animal correspondences of Hindu vehicles are not consistent with Greek and Roman mythology or other belief systems which may tie a particular animal to a particular deity For example the goddess Lakshmi of the Hindus has elephants or an owl or a rare instance of a non animal vehicle the lotus blossom as her vehicle The goddess Athena of ancient Greece also had an owl as her emblematic familiar but the meanings invested in the owls by the two different belief systems are not the same nor are the two goddesses themselves similar despite their mutual identification with owls Lakshmi is among other things primarily the goddess of wealth and her owl is a warning against distrust and isolationism even selfishness Athena though also a goddess of prosperity is primarily the goddess of wisdom and her owl symbolizes secret knowledge and scholarship Perhaps due to their shared geography the Greco Roman interpretation is paralleled in Roman Catholic iconography in which St Jerome most famed for editing the New Testament is often though not always depicted with an owl as a symbol of wisdom and scholarship 5 Depending on the tribe Native American religious iconography attributes a wide range of attributes to the owl both positive and negative as do the Ainu and Russian cultures but none parallel the Hindu attributes assigned to the owl as Lakshmi s divine vehicle 6 Some hold that similar analyses could be performed cross culturally for any of the other Hindu divine vehicles and in each case any parallels with the values assigned to animal totems in other cultures are likely to be either coincidence or inevitable as in linking bulls to virility rather than evidence of parallel development In dialectic this is countered by the retort that each totem or vahana as an aspect of ishta devata or an ishta devata or asura in its own right has innumerable ineffable teachings insights and spiritual wisdom comparative analysis yields benefit though knowledge and understanding is not served by collapsing their qualities into homogenous signification List of Vahanas editVahana Deities associated ImageMouse Ganesha pictured VinayakiKarni Mata 7 nbsp Horse Kalki Revanta Chandra Surya pictured Khandoba AyyappanUshasMhalsaGaruda pictured Vishnu Krishna Rama Vaishnavi nbsp Nandi pictured Shiva Maheshvari IshanaIshvari nbsp Ram Agni pictured MangalaSvahaDhavdi Mata nbsp Peacock Kartikeya pictured KaumariSaraswati nbsp Dog Bhairava pictured Hadkai mata nbsp Hamsa pictured Brahma 2 Brahmani Saraswati Gayatri Vishvakarma nbsp Makara Ganga pictured Varuna Akhilandeshwari KhodiyarKaveriTapatiVarious river goddesses nbsp Tiger Chandraghanta Kushmanda Durga Rahu Ayyappan pictured Vaishno Devi nbsp Lion Skandamata Katyayani Parvati pictured Budha Chandika Mariamman Kamakhya Narasimhi Kaushiki Jagaddhatri Durga nbsp Elephant Indra pictured Lakshmi Shachi Brihaspati nbsp Parrot Meenakshi Kama pictured Rati nbsp Antelope Chandra Vayu pictured nbsp Water buffalo Yama pictured Varahi Dhandai DeviChamunda 8 nbsp Cat 9 Shashthi pictured nbsp Donkey Kalaratri Shitala pictured Kali Alakshmi nbsp Owl Lakshmi pictured 2 10 ChamundaKala nbsp Vulture Ketu pictured ShaniAlakshmiNirṛti nbsp Crow Shani Dhumavati pictured Jyestha nbsp Tortoise Yamuna pictured nbsp Cockerel Bahuchara Mata pictured nbsp Cow Dattatreya pictured Shailaputri Mahagauri BhumiUmiya Maa Gatrad maa nbsp Snake Manasa pictured naagbai mataNageswari mata nbsp Corpse Betal Chamunda pictured Smashana Kali nbsp Mongoose Kubera pictured Bhadra nbsp Man Nirrti pictured Kubera Bhadra Devi nbsp Duck Manasa pictured nbsp Ilish Jhulelal nbsp Camel Momai mata 11 Jackal ShivadootiDhole Chamunda 12 Goat Meldi Mata 13 14 and Gel maaGaur Paplaj MataVerai Maa nbsp A Bhagavata Purana manuscript page depicting the story of Atri and Anasuya meeting the Trimurti riding on their respective vahanas PhP 4 1 21 25 Paper late 18th century Jaipur These correspondences are not always consistent Ganesha for example is sometimes shown with a peacock as his vehicle Even more rarely the elephant headed Ganesh may be seen riding an elephant or a lion or a many headed serpent See Ganesha s Vahanas 15 The vahana the mount or vehicle of a deity serves the function of doubling a deity s powers The vahana also represents the devotee s mind which allows the deity to guide the devotee Durga the warrioress could not have destroyed the demon Mahishasura without the aid of her vehicle lion which was given by her father Himalaya for the stated purpose Lakshmi goddess of fortune dispenses both material and spiritual riches from her mount Uluka the owl Ganesha remover of obstacles cannot go everywhere despite his elephant like strength However his vehicle Mushika the mouse who can crawl into the smallest crevice or Akhuketana the rat who can survive just about anywhere can assist Ganesha to overcome the greatest obstacles See also editHindu deities Hindu iconography Hindu mythology List of Hindu deitiesNotes edit Accoutrement that which accompanies a b c Glossary Vahana Archived 2009 02 05 at the Wayback Machine Undated Accessed August 10 2007 www wisdomlib org 2021 08 12 Animals as vehicles of Gods Chapter 2 7 www wisdomlib org Archived from the original on 2022 08 11 Retrieved 2022 08 11 www wisdomlib org 2019 01 28 Story of Garuḍa www wisdomlib org Archived from the original on 2022 08 11 Retrieved 2022 08 11 The Collection St Jerome Archived 2012 10 22 at the Wayback Machine gallery of the religious art collection of New Mexico State University with explanations Accessed August 10 2007 Owl and Mythology Archived 2006 05 22 at the Wayback Machine p 3 Accessed August 10 2007 Folk Deity Lok Devta amp Devis of Rajasthan Archived from the original on 2022 07 13 Retrieved 2022 07 13 Goddess Chamundi Archived from the original on 2022 07 12 Retrieved 2022 07 12 Margaret Stutley s The Illustrated Dictionary of Hindu Iconography p 127 Hindu Devotion Lakshmi Archived 2007 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Accessed August 10 2007 19 Mithapur Shivarjpur Nageshwar 31 August 2016 Archived from the original on 13 July 2022 Retrieved 13 July 2022 Sapta Matrika 7 Matara Seven Forms of Goddess Shakti Archived from the original on 2022 07 12 Retrieved 2022 07 12 Gods outside temples Mumbai Mirror Retrieved 2022 10 11 Joshi Om Prakash 1994 Gods of Heaven Home of Gods A Study of Popular Prints Illustrated Book Publishers ISBN 978 81 85683 05 8 Forms of Ganesh The Mouse Mount and Other Ganesh Mounts Archived 2007 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Accessed August 10 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vahana nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Yoga oracle 129 Power Animal Holy Vehicles an illustrated list Accessed August 10 2007 Hindu Deities and Their Vehicles a partial list at About Com Accessed August 10 2007 Symbolism of the Vehicles of Gods and Goddesses Accessed August 10 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vahana amp oldid 1187541422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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