kapala (कपाल)
Sanskrit.
‘Skull’, ‘cranium’, ‘cup’, or ‘alms
bowl’.
Name for a ritual bowl
made from a human skull, and in
iconography
used as an
attribute
of several
Hindu
and
Mahayana
Buddhist deities, especially in
Lamaism,
Tantrism
and
Vajrayana
Buddhism,
typically in their wrathful and ferocious appearances, including
Mahakala (fig.),
the Red
Dakini
(fig.), Vajrayogini,
Magzor Gyalmo (fig.),
with whom it is
usually
filled with human
blood. This
ritual implements were often carved or elaborately mounted with
precious metals and jewels, and used especially in Tibet.
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