| Hariti Perhaps a relic of ancient agricultural ritual, she may have been brought 
        to India as Isis by the Greeks in the 4th century AD. She is a mother 
        suckling five hundred demons; the wife of Kubera, the god of dark spirits; 
        or of Panchika. She is said to have been converted to Buddhism by the 
        Buddha himself.
 
 
 Himvati
 ('Wife of Mountain God'). A form of Parvati, the wife of Shiva in one 
        of his avatars.
 
 Hulka 
        Devi
 A goddess of cholera.
 
 Ida
 (Adda, Ila) The Hindu goddess of prayer and devotion. She is also an earth 
        goddess representing many other aspects of occult psychology including 
        instruction, speech, divination, devotion, fire, etheric force, the Lunar 
        woman or wife. In Tantric teaching, she is related to vital forces in 
        the medulla oblongata and heart; and in Hatha Yoga to the left 
        nostril, the lunar breath. She is also regarded as one of the three Vital 
        Airs of the Kundalini, the other two being Pingala and Shushumna.
 
 Indrani
 Indrani was Indra's wife and consort; in the early Vedic accounts she 
        was merely a female shadow of him. She is sometimes referred to as the 
        goddess of wrath. She was the daughter of the demon Puloman, whom Indra 
        killed. She was always described as beautiful, but was said to have one 
        thousand eyes. In later Hindu times, she came to personify jealousy and 
        was regarded as of evil intent. In southern India, however, she was ranked 
        as one of the nine astral deities who were the highest of the gods. Her 
        symbolic animal was either the lion or the elephant.
 
 Ikugui-No-Kami
 ("life-integrating") A primeval Hindu goddess, emanating from 
        the Mother and associated with the Earth and the sands. According to H.P. 
        Blavatsky she was "of denser substance" than most of the gods, 
        but "fair and graceful".
 
 Isani
 (Gouri) A godess of abundance and fertility. An earthen image of her, 
        and a smaller one of her husband Ishwara, are placed together, and barley 
        is sown and tended in a small trench. When it sprouts, women dance around 
        it, calling the blessing of Isani on their husbands; they give the young 
        barley shoots to their husbands to wear in their turbans.
 
 
 Jagad-Yoni('universe-yoni') The Womb of the World, the female First Cause. Her 
          symbols include the inverted triangle, the upright oval, the rose and 
          the cauldron.
 
 Jambavati
 The wife of Krishna. She is of the family of Jambavan, the King of the 
        bears.
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