Gajasurasamhara in the context of "Hindu god"

Play Trivia Questions online!

or

Skip to study material about Gajasurasamhara in the context of "Hindu god"

Ad spacer

⭐ Core Definition: Gajasurasamhara

Gajasurasamhara (lit. "The Slayer of the elephant demon"), also Gajasamhara, Gajantaka and Gajaha (all three lit. "the Slayer of the elephant") and Matangari ("The Enemy of the elephant"), is a fierce aspect of the Hindu god Shiva as the Destroyer of the elephant demon, Gajasura. The icon is popular in Pallava and Chola art, which portray him dancing vigorously in the flayed elephant hide of Gajasura.

The chief temple of Gajasurasamhara is at Valuvur (Vazhuvur), Tamil Nadu, where the chief icon is an eight-armed bronze Gajasurasamhara. Valuvur is one of the Atta-virattam temples, the eight sites of the heroic acts of Shiva.

↓ Menu

>>>PUT SHARE BUTTONS HERE<<<
In this Dossier

Gajasurasamhara in the context of Gajasura

In Hindu epics, Gajasura (Sanskrit: गजासुर, lit.'elephant demon') is a generic name given to an asura (demon), who assumes the form of an elephant. It may refer to demons:

↑ Return to Menu