Jainism '' (1450–1500). According to the
Kalpa Sutra, Naigamesha, on the orders of the king of the gods
Indra, transferred the embryo of the
Tirthankara Mahavira from the womb of the
Brahmin (priest class) woman Devananda to the
Kshatriya (ruling caste)
Trishala, who finally delivers Mahavira. According to the
Śvetāmbara text
Neminanathacharita, which recalls the life of the Tirthankara
Neminatha,
Krishna – a cousin of Neminatha and generally venerated as Hindu deity – worships Naigamesha to beget a son from his second wife
Satyabhama; a son who equals his first-born
Pradyumna, from his first wife
Rukmini. Other texts portray Satyabhama praying to the deity.
Hinduism In Hinduism, Naigamesha is associated with
Kartikeya, the god of war and is frequently mentioned as Naigameya. Naigamesha is an epithet and a form of Kartikeya, where he is generally depicted goat-headed. In other instances, Naigamesha is described as the son or brother of the war god. Hindu texts like the
Brahmanas, the
Grihya sutras and medicinal texts mention a similar deity with a
ram's head. As a fearsome follower of Kartikeya, Naigamesha was feared and worshipped to ward off evil. Later, he evolved into the patron of childbirth. ==Iconography==