Yaksha - définition. Qu'est-ce que Yaksha
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Yaksha - définition

TAMIL OBORINGE
夜叉; Yakshas; Yaksas; Yakkha people (Lanka); Yakkha people of Lanka; Yakkha people of Sri Lanka; Yak (Thailand); Yakṣa; Yakṣas
  • Thotsakhirithon]] (ทศคีรีธร) at [[Wat Phra Kaew]], [[Bangkok]]
  • Kubera, the God of Riches, [[LACMA]]
  • Yaksha and yakshini couple Sarvānubhūti and Kuṣmāṇḍinī, with the [[Tirthankaras]].
  • A yaksha as a gate guardian (''dvarapala'') at [[Plaosan]] temple in Indonesia
  • Painting of [[Āṭavaka]], a yaksha who challenged the Buddha

Yaksha         
·noun A kind of demigod attendant on Kuvera, the god of wealth.
Yaksha         
The Mudgarpani Yaksha holds a mudgar mace in the right hand, and the left hand used to support a small standing devotee or child joining hands in prayer.Art of Mathura, Mathura Museum
Yaksha, Komi Republic         
HUMAN SETTLEMENT IN YAKSHA, TROITSKO-PECHORSKY DISTRICT, KOMI REPUBLIC, RUSSIA
Yaksha () is a settlement in Troitsko-Pechorsky District of the Komi Republic, Russia, located in the upper streams of the Pechora River.

Wikipédia

Yaksha

The yakshas (Sanskrit: यक्ष yakṣa; Pali: yakkha) are a broad class of nature-spirits, usually benevolent, but sometimes mischievous or capricious, connected with water, fertility, trees, the forest, treasure and wilderness. They appear in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist texts, as well as ancient and medieval era temples of South Asia and Southeast Asia as guardian deities. The feminine form of the word is yakṣī or yakshini (Sanskrit: यक्षिणी yakṣiṇī; Pali:Yakkhini).

In Hindu, Jain and Buddhist texts, the yakṣa has a dual personality. On the one hand, a yakṣa may be an inoffensive nature-fairy, associated with woods and mountains; but there is also a darker version of the yakṣa, which is a kind of ghost (bhuta) that haunts the wilderness and waylays and devours travellers, similar to the rakṣasas.