Kalash Riddhi Siddhi
₹2,680.00
Material: Brass
size : 6.3
Weight: 1.340 kg
A kalasha, likewise spelled kalash or kalasa (Sanskrit: कलश kalaśa; truly “pitcher, pot”), is a (metal, copper, silver or gold) pot with a huge base and little mouth, sufficiently enormous to hold a coconut.
In some cases “kalasha” likewise alludes to such a pot loaded up with water and finished off with a coronet of mango leaves and a coconut. This mix is regularly utilized in Hindu rituals and delineated in Hindu iconography. The whole course of action is called Purna-Kalasha (पूर्णकलश), Purna-Kumbha (पूर्णकुम्भ), or Purna-ghata (पूर्णघट). Every one of these names truly signifies “full or complete vessel” when the pot is alluded to as the Kalasha (to dodge disarray, this article will allude to the pot as Kalasha and the whole course of action as Purna-Kalasha).
At times the Kalasha is loaded up with coins, grain, jewels, gold, or a blend of these things rather than water. The coronet of 5, 7, or 11 mango leaves is put with the end goal that the tips of the leaves contact water in the Kalasha. The coconut is once in a while wrapped with a red fabric and red string; the head of the coconut (called Shira – truly “head”) is kept revealed. A sacrosanct string is tied around the metal pot. The Shira is continued confronting the sky.
Based on 0 reviews
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
You must be logged in to post a review.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.