17.5cm Handcrafted Silver Hindu Deity Laxmi
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Size: 17.5cm(Height) x 14cm(Width)
Weight: 0.85 kg
Materials: Copper Body, Silver Plated
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About our Statue
Invite prosperity, wealth, and abundance into your home with this beautifully handcrafted Laxmi wall hanging. Standing at 17.5cm in height and 14cm in width, this intricate piece weighs 0.85kg and is the perfect size to enhance any wall. Laxmi, the Hindu goddess of wealth, fortune, and well-being, is a revered symbol in spiritual and home decor. This wall hanging offers a stunning depiction of her grace and abundance, making it a meaningful addition to your living space.
In her regular form, Ma Laxmi is portrayed, her four hands signifying the four ends of human life: Dharma (righteousness), Kama (desires), Artha (wealth), and Moksha (liberation from the cycle of life and death). Each hand holds symbolic attributes, including the lotus flower, a pot of gold, and her welcoming gesture of Varada Mudra, inviting reflection on the virtues of wisdom, generosity, and the pursuit of spiritual wealth.
One of the primary goddesses in Hinduism, Ma Laxmi, is revered as the goddess of riches and cleanliness. She is thought to bestow good fortune and shield her followers from all forms of adversity, including financial hardships. Laxmi is traditionally invoked to ensure a year full of peace, wealth, and success at the Diwali festival, also known as the festival of lights. Her emblems, the lotus blossom and the owl, stand for innocence, grace, and careful preservation of riches, respectively.
Introduction To Laxmi:
Laxmi is primarily known as a Hindu Deity. But she is also highly revered in Tibetan Buddhism. Laxmi is mainly recognized as a Hindu deity. She is, however, also held in great regard in Tibetan Buddhism. She is also known as Pal Lhamo (Shri Lakshmi). She is said to be a peaceful manifestation of Shri Devi Dudsolma, the primary female guardian of Tibetan Buddhism and Lhasa, Tibet. She is not the same thing as Shri Devi Magzor Gyalmo, the angry manifestation of Sarasvati, who rides a mule and has one face and two arms. The artwork of Shri Lakshmi is often associated with the Gelug Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism and is anticipated to have appeared after the 17th century. Laxmi is known as Lakshmi, Mahalakshmi, Padmavati, Shri, and Bhoodevi, among other titles. She is one of the aspects of feminine cosmic energy, symbolizing the 'rajas' or the phenomenal universe's element of fertility, richness, prosperity, wealth, brilliance, and beauty.