The Goddess on the Lion
Animal Symbolism in the Representations of the Female Warrior Deity in Kuṣāṇa and Early Gupta India Cover Image

The Goddess on the Lion Animal Symbolism in the Representations of the Female Warrior Deity in Kuṣāṇa and Early Gupta India
The Goddess on the Lion Animal Symbolism in the Representations of the Female Warrior Deity in Kuṣāṇa and Early Gupta India

Author(s): Chiara Policardi
Subject(s): Customs / Folklore, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology
Published by: KSIĘGARNIA AKADEMICKA Sp. z o.o.
Keywords: ion vāhana; warrior goddess; Nanā; Mahiṣāsuramardinī; Vind- hyavāsinī; Kuṣāṇa; early Gupta; Durgā;

Summary/Abstract: This paper focuses on the genesis of the association between the Indian warrior goddess and the lion. As is well-known, this is a goddess with a multifaceted identity, who evokes both imperial grandeur and village cultic practices. This figure cannot be identified as Mahiṣāsuramardinī or Durgā in any Pre-Kuṣāṇan and Kuṣāṇa text or inscription. A considerable influence on her burgeoning representation was probably exercised by Nanā, a Hellenistic goddess, who takes on characteristics of the Mesopota- mian Inanna-Ištar, typically associated with lions. Significantly, in the early centuries CE, this feline was still a widespread species on the Subcontinent and had already become identified as the fiercest wild predator, informing the long-lasting lion-warrior imagery. While the background and the rise of Durgā have been the object of several studies, relatively little attention has been paid to her symbolic association with the lion as a key perspec- tive that may contribute to providing a deeper understanding of both the shaping and the significance of this divine figure. By analysing some of the most significant of the earliest iconographic and textual representations, this paper is an initial attempt to employ the feline attribute as a prism to trace the earliest phase in the historical process of the development of the goddess. It may provide insights regarding both the degree of entanglement between local cults and early Hinduism, and the interrelation between the representation of this warrior goddess and kingship ideology in Kuṣāṇa and early Gupta India.

  • Issue Year: 26/2024
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 175-204
  • Page Count: 30
  • Language: English
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