Log in or Sign up
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Tribal Art
>
Help identifying this item
>
Reply to Thread
Message:
<p>[QUOTE="Any Jewelry, post: 245155, member: 2844"]You're right, and she does<img src="styles/default/xenforo/smilies/wink.png" class="mceSmilie" alt=";)" unselectable="on" />.</p><p><br /></p><p>I love your silver shrine.</p><p>It is a portable shrine, either Hindu or Jain. If it is Jain, it is even more valuable than if it is Hindu.</p><p>These portable shrines are always shaped like little temples, but the rest is up to the owner or artist. Yours is a very unusual one because it already has the oil or ghee (clarified butter, used as oil) lamps incorporated into the shrine. That is why I think this shrine is made for travel, not for home worship.</p><p>Hindus and Jains do puja, often several times a day. A puja ceremony is to pay respect to a deity or dieties. It involves light, and if possible other sacred elements like water, scented oil, and incense.</p><p>You would take a portable shrine with you on your travels with a statuette of the deity of your choice wrapped up separately, and other paraphernalia for worship. All items would go in a designated brass or silver box separate from other luggage.</p><p>On your stops or when you reached your destination, you could put the statuette inside, fill and light the lamps, and start your puja ceremony to pay respect, and thank for a safe journey.</p><p>The swastika evolved from a sun symbol. It is the most sacred of Hindu, etc. symbols. The vertical lines stand for cosmic consciousness and the horizontal lines for the creative principle, together these two are the root of all creation.</p><p>The swastikas on yours turn counter-clockwise, which originally signified immediate action. That gives strength to the mantras, or prayer formulas, spoken during puja, and to the whole ritual.</p><p>The text is in Devanagari script, probably Sanskrit. Devanagari script is the script for several Asian languages. Sanskrit is an old Indian language used for Hindu, Buddhist and Jain sacred texts and rituals.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Any Jewelry, post: 245155, member: 2844"]You're right, and she does;). I love your silver shrine. It is a portable shrine, either Hindu or Jain. If it is Jain, it is even more valuable than if it is Hindu. These portable shrines are always shaped like little temples, but the rest is up to the owner or artist. Yours is a very unusual one because it already has the oil or ghee (clarified butter, used as oil) lamps incorporated into the shrine. That is why I think this shrine is made for travel, not for home worship. Hindus and Jains do puja, often several times a day. A puja ceremony is to pay respect to a deity or dieties. It involves light, and if possible other sacred elements like water, scented oil, and incense. You would take a portable shrine with you on your travels with a statuette of the deity of your choice wrapped up separately, and other paraphernalia for worship. All items would go in a designated brass or silver box separate from other luggage. On your stops or when you reached your destination, you could put the statuette inside, fill and light the lamps, and start your puja ceremony to pay respect, and thank for a safe journey. The swastika evolved from a sun symbol. It is the most sacred of Hindu, etc. symbols. The vertical lines stand for cosmic consciousness and the horizontal lines for the creative principle, together these two are the root of all creation. The swastikas on yours turn counter-clockwise, which originally signified immediate action. That gives strength to the mantras, or prayer formulas, spoken during puja, and to the whole ritual. The text is in Devanagari script, probably Sanskrit. Devanagari script is the script for several Asian languages. Sanskrit is an old Indian language used for Hindu, Buddhist and Jain sacred texts and rituals.[/QUOTE]
Your name or email address:
Do you already have an account?
No, create an account now.
Yes, my password is:
Forgot your password?
Stay logged in
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Tribal Art
>
Help identifying this item
>
Home
Home
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Activity
Recent Posts
Forums
Forums
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Posts
Gallery
Gallery
Quick Links
Search Media
New Media
Members
Members
Quick Links
Notable Members
Registered Members
Current Visitors
Recent Activity
New Profile Posts
Menu
Search
Search titles only
Posted by Member:
Separate names with a comma.
Newer Than:
Search this thread only
Search this forum only
Display results as threads
Useful Searches
Recent Posts
More...