Lingam
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- | [[yoni]] and [[lingam]] from [[Cambodia]] | ||
- | <hr> | + | The '''lingam''' (meaning "mark", "sign", "gender", "[[phallus]]", "inference" or "eternal procreative germ") is a representation of the [[Hinduism|Hindu]] deity [[Shiva]] used for worship in [[Hindu temple|temples]]. Whether the lingam symbolizes the physical body of the god or something purely spiritual is the topic of many a century-old debate within Hinduism. |
- | ''[[Dada's Women]]'' by [[Ruth Hemus]] published by [[Yale University Press]], [[New Haven]] | + | |
- | [[2009]] | + | ==See also== |
+ | * [[Axis mundi]] | ||
+ | * [[Danda]] | ||
+ | * [[Hindu iconography]] | ||
+ | * [[Lingayatism]] | ||
+ | * [[Pancharamas]] | ||
+ | * [[Sila (murti)|Saligram]], a non-anthropmorphic image of [[Vishnu]] | ||
+ | * [[Yoni]] | ||
- | <hr> | ||
- | ''[[Californication]]'' is ''[[Sex and the City]]'' for men. | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
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The lingam (meaning "mark", "sign", "gender", "phallus", "inference" or "eternal procreative germ") is a representation of the Hindu deity Shiva used for worship in temples. Whether the lingam symbolizes the physical body of the god or something purely spiritual is the topic of many a century-old debate within Hinduism.
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See also
- Axis mundi
- Danda
- Hindu iconography
- Lingayatism
- Pancharamas
- Saligram, a non-anthropmorphic image of Vishnu
- Yoni
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