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Source Description

The figures on this fragmentary sculptural relief are three of the nine planetary deities, or "navagrahas," of Indian astrology. Believed to influence one's wellbeing ("graha" means "seizing" as well as "planet" and "eclipse"), the navagrahas are worshiped to prevent danger or disease. They also serve a protective function and are sometimes placed above the doorways to temples; this fragment once belonged to such a lintel. Though considered planetary deities, the navagrahas constitute a range of celestial bodies. Included in the nine ("nava") are the sun, the moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, and the two positions in the sky where the moon and the sun cross paths, causing an eclipse. The figures seen here represent the last three, considered to be the least auspicious. On the left is Shani, Saturn, holding a club. Rahu, in the middle, and Ketu, on the right, are both associated with eclipses. According to some traditions, they were both once part of the body of a demon that was cut in half as punishment for troubling the gods. The upper half became Rahu, who has a particularly large head and holds the portion of the sun that is visible during an eclipse. The lower half became Ketu, who is represented with the body of a snake. Below the deities are their vehicles: Shani's buffalo, Rahu's chariot wheels, and what appears to be a bird for Ketu. To the left of the buffalo is a frog, vehicle of the deity Shukra (Venus).

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
22262
label
Planetary Deities Shani, Rahu, and Ketu
core
obj
dtoType
sculpture
pageCount
7
Source metadata
id
22262
contentType
sculpture
stage
normalized
title
Planetary Deities Shani, Rahu, and Ketu
description
The figures on this fragmentary sculptural relief are three of the nine planetary deities, or "navagrahas," of Indian astrology. Believed to influence one's wellbeing ("graha" means "seizing" as well as "planet" and "eclipse"), the navagrahas are worshiped to prevent danger or disease. They also serve a protective function and are sometimes placed above the doorways to temples; this fragment once belonged to such a lintel. Though considered planetary deities, the navagrahas constitute a range of celestial bodies. Included in the nine ("nava") are the sun, the moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, and the two positions in the sky where the moon and the sun cross paths, causing an eclipse. The figures seen here represent the last three, considered to be the least auspicious. On the left is Shani, Saturn, holding a club. Rahu, in the middle, and Ketu, on the right, are both associated with eclipses. According to some traditions, they were both once part of the body of a demon that was cut in half as punishment for troubling the gods. The upper half became Rahu, who has a particularly large head and holds the portion of the sun that is visible during an eclipse. The lower half became Ketu, who is represented with the body of a snake. Below the deities are their vehicles: Shani's buffalo, Rahu's chariot wheels, and what appears to be a bird for Ketu. To the left of the buffalo is a frog, vehicle of the deity Shukra (Venus).
provenance
Baroness Helen Giskra, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1949, by gift.
date
10th-12th century
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Sculpture
reliefs
fragments
imageCount
7
pageCount
7
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
19
height
16.5
depth
7.3
dimensionsRaw
H: 7 1/2 x W: 6 1/2 x D: 2 7/8 in. (19 x 16.5 x 7.3 cm)
style
Pala School
Source extras
med
stone
creator_ids
2191
collection_ids
INT
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
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photo
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photo
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seq
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type
photo
mediaId
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