Sipai Gyalmo (Bon Protector) - 100 Faces, 1000 Hands (ugya chagtong)
(item no. 70122)

Eastern Tibet

1960 -

Ground Mineral Pigment

Collection of Private


 
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Ugya Chagtong, Sipai Gyalmo (English: Queen of the World, Having a Thousand Heads and A Thousand Hands): principal female protector deity in the Bon Religion.

Typically there are two common forms of the deity Sipai Gyalmo, Riding a Black Mule and Riding a Red Mule. These two forms are identified by their three heads and six hands. The mules are black or red. The hand objects are different between the two forms. Four celestial beings hold up the hooves of the red mule.

In the Bon religion the Queen of the World is the most wrathful manifestation of the peaceful deity Loving Mother of Wisdom (T. Sherab Chamma). Fierce in appearance, black in color, she has three faces and six arms holding weapons and implements of power and control. The three right hands hold a victory banner, flaming sword and a peg. The left hands hold a trident, svastika wand, and a skullcup filled with blood. Each of these symbolically represents cutting the knots of illusion and rooting out the three poisons of greed, anger and delusion. Riding on a red mule, she sits atop a flayed human skin symbolizing impermanence while the brightly burning flames of wisdom fire surround her.

The Queen of the World is both a meditational deity and a protector. She is one of the most frequently propitiated figures in the Bon religion, and extends her protection to both religious practitioners and common people. Though horrific and wrathful in form she embodies the qualities of wisdom and compassion.

Jeff Watt 5-2005


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Bon: Murals
Bon Religion: Protector Deities
Buddhist Protectors: Enlightened (Female)
Bon Deity: Sipa Gyalmo Main Page
Bon Deity: Female
Tibet (East): Bongya Monastery Collection



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