Dawon is either a lion or a tiger that serves as the mount of the goddess Durga in some Hindu traditions. [1] Dawon is rewarded as a battle-mount to the goddess by other deities, though it does not appear in any mainstream Hindu texts. As Durga fights with ten weapons wielded on her arms, Dawon is believed to serve its mistress, attacking her foes with its claws and fangs. [2]
Dawon has often been represented in traditional and ancient Bengali culture and Nepali culture in the form of Ghatokbahini ( Bengali: ঘটকবাহিনী সিংহ), i.e. in the form of a half-lion, half-tiger hybrid, like a liger. It is a sacred tiger in Tibetan lore, and was later known as 'Gdon.
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Dawon is either a lion or a tiger that serves as the mount of the goddess Durga in some Hindu traditions. [1] Dawon is rewarded as a battle-mount to the goddess by other deities, though it does not appear in any mainstream Hindu texts. As Durga fights with ten weapons wielded on her arms, Dawon is believed to serve its mistress, attacking her foes with its claws and fangs. [2]
Dawon has often been represented in traditional and ancient Bengali culture and Nepali culture in the form of Ghatokbahini ( Bengali: ঘটকবাহিনী সিংহ), i.e. in the form of a half-lion, half-tiger hybrid, like a liger. It is a sacred tiger in Tibetan lore, and was later known as 'Gdon.
Part of a series on |
Hindu mythology |
---|
Sources |
Cosmology |
Deities |
Personalities of the Epics |
Hinduism Portal |