- ཆུ་བདག
- ཆུ་ཡི་ལྷ།
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- ཆུ།
- ཆུའི་ལྷ།
- པ་རུ་ཎ།
- བ་རུ་ཎ།
- chu lha
- chu yi lha
- chu’i lha
- chu bdag
- ba ru Na
- pa ru Na
- chu
- varuṇa
- varuṇadeva
- Note: this data is still being sorted
- Term
- Person
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
A god.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུའི་ལྷ།
- ཆུ་ཡི་ལྷ།
- chu’i lha
- chu yi lha
- varuṇa
The name of the deity of water, whose weapon is a noose. In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition he is the deity of the water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name but instead has “god of water.” The Sanskrit name has ancient pre-Sanskrit origins, and, as he was originally the god of the sky, is related to the root vṛ, meaning “enveloping” or “covering.” He has the same ancient origins as the ancient Greek sky deity Uranus and the Zoroastrian supreme deity Mazda.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The name of the deity of water, whose weapon is a noose. In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition he is the deity of water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name but instead has “god of water.” The Sanskrit name has ancient pre-Sanskrit origins, and, as he was originally the god of the sky, is related to the root vṛ, meaning “enveloping” or “covering.” He has the same ancient origins as the ancient Greek sky deity Uranus and the Zoroastrian supreme deity Mazda.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
A god.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ཡི་ལྷ།
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu yi lha
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The name of one of the oldest of the Vedic gods, associated with the waters.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ཡི་ལྷ།
- chu yi lha
- varuṇa
In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition only of the water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name but instead says “god of water.” The Sanskrit name has ancient pre-Sanskrit origins, and as he was originally the god of the sky is related to the root vṛ, meaning “enveloping” or “covering.” He has the same ancient origins as the ancient Greek sky deity Uranus and the Zoroastrian supreme deity Mazda.
The name in Tibetan literally means “God of Water”; a nāga who comes to pay respects at the Buddha’s parinirvāṇa.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུའི་ལྷ།
- chu’i lha
- varuṇa
The Vedic deity understood in later periods to be the lord of waters; thus the Tibetans translate his name as “God of Water” (chu’i lha). In The Question of Mañjuśrī his image is the fiftieth of the eighty designs on the palms of the hand and feet of the Tathāgata.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
One of the guardian deities.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
Vedic deity of the sky, water, and ocean.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
A nāga king. Varuṇa is also the name of one of the oldest of the Vedic gods and associated with the water and the ocean.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The name of one of the oldest of the Vedic gods, associated with the waters.
A major Vedic deity associated with rain and water. The Tibetan translation simply means “water god.”
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
One of the oldest deities of the Vedic pantheon and one of the first to be considered a supreme deity or “king of the gods.” Varuṇa eventually came to occupy a lesser status in the Vedic pantheon as a god of the waters.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The god of waters.
The name of the deity of water. In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition he is the god of only the water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name, but instead has “god of water.”
The name of the deity of water. In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition he is the god of only the water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name but instead has “god of water.”
The name of the deity of water. In the Vedas, Varuṇa is an important deity and in particular the deity of the sky, but in later Indian tradition he is the god of only the water and the underworld. The Tibetan does not attempt to translate his name, but instead has “god of water.”
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The name of one of the oldest of the Vedic gods, associated with the waters.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The Vedic deity understood in later periods to be the lord of waters.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The Vedic deity understood in later periods to be the lord of waters; thus the Tibetans translate his name as “God of Water” (chu’i lha).
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The name of one of the oldest of the Vedic gods, associated with the waters.
The name of the god of the waters.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- བ་རུ་ཎ།
- པ་རུ་ཎ།
- chu lha
- ba ru Na
- pa ru Na
- varuṇa
Apart from the god of water, Varuṇa can be the name of several other figures, including a nāga king.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The Vedic god of the waters, he presides over the western direction.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
Vedic deity of the waters (and sometimes the sky) who is also regarded as a protector of cosmic order.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ།
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu
- chu lha
- varuṇa
The god of water.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་བདག
- chu bdag
- varuṇa
The Vedic god of the waters; also the deity who governs the western direction.
- Varuṇa
- ཆུ་ལྷ།
- chu lha
- varuṇa
One of the eight guardians of the directions, Varuṇa guards the northeast quarter.