Skip to product information
1 of 5

Seawolf Shop

Citipati pendant / bead

Citipati pendant / bead

Regular price €20,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €20,00 EUR
Sale Sold out
Tax included.

The legend of the Citipati speaks about two austere monks who were once meditating on a charnel ground. In their deep state of meditation, they didn’t notice a group of robbers approaching them. Looking for expensive items (which the monks of course did not have), the robbers killed them and left their bodies on the charnel grounds.

Because of their great spiritual development, the spirits from the monks were freed from the wheel of samsara. They decided to stay on the charnel grounds and eventually changed into the Citipati, the Lords of the Cemetery. They are seen as guardians and protectors of the graveyards, crematoriums and charnel grounds, ensuring the peace for the deceased and keeping the area’s hallowed places for spiritual and meditative practices.

The Citipati are an intricate part of the iconography of (especially) Vajrayana Buddhism. Often they are depicted as a pair of dancing skeletons (one male, one female), dancing wildly in a halo of flames which symbolizes the transformational power of fire and the constantly shifting character of reality. Their dance represents the dance of life and death, the dynamic interaction between creation and destruction and the  everlasting flow of life. And the happiness that comes from the ultimate liberation of breaking free from the cycle of reincarnation.

The Citipati are thus looked upon in a two-fold (but connected) way; on the one hand they are invoked as wrathful deities, for their fierce protective qualities. On the other hand, the symbol of the Citipati serves as a reminder of the transience of existence, the value of distancing oneself from the physical world, and the potential for enlightenment. It teaches that absolute freedom is gained by accepting the impermanence of life, seeing the cyclic nature of it and overcoming the worries that keep us trapped in samsaric existence.

This bronze Citipati skull comes from Nepal and is from vintage origin. A small hole has been drilled into it both at the top- and at the bottom side, making it possible to use it both as a pendant and as a bead.

Sizesl approximately 5 centimeters high, 4 centimeters wide and 2 centimeters deep. Weight; approximately 59 grams.

Only one available.

View full details