Black Narmada Shivlingam With Trishul & Abhishek Tripod

Key Features:

Dimensions:
Shivling set: 6.5 inches (H) x 6 inches (W) x 11.75 inches (L) approx
Lingam: 5.25 inches (H) x 2.5 inches (diameter) approx
Yonibase: 6.5 inches (H) x 6 inches (W) x 11.75 inches (L) (4.5 x 15 x 23 cm) approx
Lota: 5.25 inches (H) x 5.25 inches (diameter) approx
Tripot Pot: 13.5 inches (H) x 4.5 inches (Top diameter) x 10.75 inches (Distance of bottom legs) (approx
Trishul: 8.5 inches (H) x 3 inches (W)
Rudraksha mala: 108+1
Total Weight: 8.7 kgs approx

Natural black narmada banalingam / Shivalingam with 11 small shivling surround seated on a black stone handmade yonibase with Abhishek set (Tripot Pot & Lota) and Trishul / Trident.

The Narmada is one of the five holy rivers of India. The Ramayana, the Mahabharat, and the Puranas refer to it frequently. The Rewa Khand of Vayu Purana and the Rewa Khand of Skanda Purana are entirely devoted to the story of the birth and the importance of the river, and hence Narmada is also called the Rewa. Another legend says, once Lord Shiva, meditated so hard that he started perspiring. Shiva's sweat accumulated in a tank and started flowing in the form of a river the Narmada.

Legends also say that for Lord Shiva, the Hindu God, this river is especially sacred on account of its origin, and it is often called Shankari, i.e., daughter of Shankar (Lord Shiva). All the pebbles rolling on its bed are said to take the shape of his emblem with the saying, "Narmada Ke Kanker utte Sankar" (a popular saying in the Hindi belt of India), which means that 'pebble stones of Narmada get a personified form of Shiva'. These lingam shaped stones (cryptocrytalline quartz), called Banalinga also called (Banashivalingas) are much sought after for daily worship.

Worshipping one bana-linga gets the benefits that can be obtain by worshipping a carore of other lingas. The Lingam is considered to be the form of the formless. These Banlingas are considered to be alive even without Pranapratishta (process of installation).

The stone represents the blending of male and female energy, with the shape of the stone representing the male (knowledge), and the markings representing the female (wisdom). Narmadeshawara Lingam stones are sacred in both Hindu and Buddhist beliefs.

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