Agnipani

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"Agnipani" Yaksha
Mathura, 100 BCE
"Agnipani" Yaksha ("Fire-holder"), 100 BCE[1] Mathura Museum, GMM 87.146

Agnipani was a Yaksha deity in ancient India. His name means "Agni-holder", "Agni" being the fire, for which the later god Agni is well known.[2] The Mathura Museum describes his statue as "Agnipani Yaksha",[3] but Sonya Rhie Quintanilla simply identifies the statue as that of the Vedic God Agni.[2]

Yakshas seem to have been the object of an important cult in the early periods of Indian history, many of them being known such as Kubera, king of the Yakshas, Manibhadra or Mudgarpani.[4] The Yakshas are a broad class of nature-spirits, usually benevolent, but sometimes mischievous or capricious, connected with water, fertility, trees, the forest, treasure and wilderness,[5][6] and were the object of popular worship.[7] Many of them were later incorporated into Buddhism, Jainism or Hinduism.[4]

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