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Agni

Agni — Sacred Messenger of the Flame

Agni (अग्नि) is the fire god and divine messenger between gods and humans in Indian Vedic mythology. The name means 'fire' in Sanskrit, and during the Vedic era (1500-500 BCE) Agni was the second most praised god after Indra, with the first hymn of the Rigveda dedicated to him. Depicted as multi-headed with three heads and seven tongues, riding various sacred mounts including ram, horse, and parrot. His core role is the purifying flame — the cosmic intermediary who burns offerings of cattle, grains, and ghee that humans dedicate to the gods, transmitting them to the heavens. For this reason, Agni's altar stands at the center of every Vedic ritual. Governing both purification and annihilation, anything touched by his flames becomes pure or burns to nothing. In later Hinduism, he is one of the eight Lokapala guardian gods, protecting the southeast direction. Japanese Buddhism's Katen is a direct adaptation of Agni.

Origem

One of the most frequently mentioned deities in Vedic literature alongside Indra. Central to yajña (fire sacrifice) rites, he carries human prayers to the divine realm through flame. Over 200 hymns in the Rigveda are dedicated to him.

Características

  • Three heads, seven tongues, holding a torch and ladle — a sacred humanoid form
  • Purifying flame: emits sacred fire that destroys curses, impurities, and malevolent spirits
  • Controls both lightning and fire; also connected to rain-bearing clouds
  • Can open the boundary between the divine and mortal realms — acts as an intermediary in summoning rituals and spirit contracts

Histórias

Presiding over sacred rites and fire sacrifices; purifying curses and impurities. Serves as witness and mediator in contracts between gods and spirits.

Fraqueza

Cannot be summoned from a corrupted flame (fire lit in an impure place). Will not contract with a summoner who has lost their purity.

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