76 results
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Panjabi Manuscript 255
- Digital Images
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Panjabi Manuscript 255
- Digital Images
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Panjabi Manuscript 255
- Digital Images
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Panjabi Manuscript 255
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Visnu. Panjabi Manuscript 255
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Panjabi manuscript no 255
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Varaha avatara of Visnu. Panjabi manuscript 255
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Kalki avatar of Visnu. Panjabi manuscript 255
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Laksmi and Visnu. Panjabi manuscript 255
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Shiva and Parvati riding on Nandi. Panjabi manuscript 255
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Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
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Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
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Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
Chris Carter photographing Panjabi Mss 255 in studio, 215
- Digital Images
- Online
The mahatmya of the 13th adhyaya. An adulterous woman from the city of Harinam goes to the forest with her husband and is attacked by a tiger who only eats those who commit immoral acts. Reborn as a low-caste Chandala, the woman hears the 13th adhyaya of the Bhagvadgita from the holy man and asks him to recite it to the tiger as well. Both the woman and the tiger receive divine bodies and are taken to Visnu's heaven
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The mahatmya of the second adhyaya. The bottom third of the painting depicts the frame story of Devasusara of Purana. The top two-thirds illustrate the embedded story of Gadia the goatherd: one of his goats chases away a lion, the ascetic Bala explains the meaning of the events, and Gadia and his animals ascend to Visnu's celestial dwelling Vaikuntha in their divine bodies
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Krsna enchants the natural and human worlds with his flute. Standing in the tribhangi or 'three bends' posture, Krsna plays the flute as enchanted gopis, cattle, and birds look on. A clump of trees act as a sheltering umbrella, the symbol of gods and kings in Indic iconography.
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The mahatmya of the fifth adhyaya. The bottom half of the painting depicts Pingala's life as a Brahman, his argument with his wife and his death by poisoning. The upper half illustrates the narrative of their subsequent births as birds: they fight in an ascetic's skull in a cremation ground and are given new divine bodies. In the new form they are taken to the court of Dharmaraja, the judge of the actions of mortals
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The mahatmya of the tenth adhyaya. The servants of Shiva find a dead Brahman in the city of Kasi on the auspicious day of Ekadasi. Shiva explains that by reciting the tenth aghyaya of the Bhagvadgita, the Brahman had once saved a swan and an apsara (fairy) who had been turned into a lotus. Shiva's attendants take the Brahman to Shiva's heaven
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The sixth avatara if Visnu. The warrior Brahman Parasurama slays the evil king Anjuna with an axe.
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The story of the Bhagvadgita. Seated on the throne and served by an attendant waving a whisk made of peacock feathers, the blind king Dhrtarastra listens as the visionary narrator Sanjaya relates the events of the battle between the Kaurava and the Pandava clans