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Free
Shop Online Preview : Thai
Fabric Arts
Two kinaree,
(half bird half women in thai fairy tale)
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Price
:: $15
Shipping
fee :: $7
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Product
type: Hand made arts for home decorating.
Materials : Thai fabric.Glue.Paper.
Dimension:10"x12" with
background, No Frame.
Status:
On sale
Order:
mail to gemstone@gemstonesindesigns.com
For the social group or caste amongst the Sinhalese Buddhists
of Sri Lanka, see Kinnaraya
In Buddhist mythology and Hindu mythology, a kinnara are
paradigmatic lovers, a celestial musician, half-human
and half-bird. Their character is clarified in the Adi
parva of the Mahabharata, where they say:
We are everlasting lover and beloved.
We never separate. We are eternally husband and wife;
never do we become mother and father. No offspring is
seen in our lap. We are lover and beloved ever-embracing.
In between us we do not permit any third creature demanding
affection. Our life is a life of perpetual pleasure.[1]
They are also featured in a number of Buddhist texts,
including the Lotus Sutra. An ancient Indian string
instrument is known as the Kinnari Veena.
In Southeast
Asian mythology, Kinnaris, the female counterpart of
Kinnaras, are depicted as half-bird, half-woman creatures.
One of the many creatures that inhabit the mythical
Himavanta. Kinnaris have the head, torso, and arms of
a woman and the wings, tail and feet of a swan. She
is renowned for her dance, song and poetry, and is a
traditional symbol of feminine beauty, grace and accomplishment.
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