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This draft concerns the subject titled "Himalaya" within the cohort of Hinduism. The term carries layered meanings in Indic traditions: it refers to the great mountain range that stretches across the northern frontier of the Indian subcontinent, and it also denotes a personified deity in Hindu mythological literature, often described as the lord of mountains and the father of Parvati. Because the same word is used in geographical, scriptural, devotional, iconographic and cultural senses, editors are advised to treat each register separately and to clarify, in the lead, which sense the article foregrounds.
This editorial draft does not assert specific dates, textual citations, or narrative details that have not been verified by the editor. Instead, it offers neutral context, scaffolding, and review prompts so that a substantive article can be developed from authoritative sources. Editors should consult standard reference works on Hindu mythology, Sanskrit literature, Puranic studies, and the cultural geography of the Himalayan region. The draft assumes that the final article will fall under religious and mythological topics rather than purely physical geography, although a cross-reference to the geographical entry would be appropriate. All assertive content below is framed as editor guidance rather than published fact.
In Hindu literary and devotional traditions, Himalaya (also rendered as Himavat, Himavan, Himavanta, or Parvateshwara, "lord of mountains") is presented in several roles: as a sacred geographical zone associated with ascetics, sages and pilgrimage; as a personified divine being who features in Puranic narratives; and as a cosmological boundary marker in classical Indic geography. The Sanskrit etymology generally given is "him" (snow) and "alaya" (abode), yielding "abode of snow," though editors should verify the exact gloss in a Sanskrit lexicon before citing it.
The personified Himalaya is most frequently encountered in narratives connected with Shiva and Parvati, where he is described as the father of the goddess. He is also associated, in various textual traditions, with other divine daughters and progeny, but the specific genealogies vary across Puranas and recensions. The mountain itself is venerated as the seat or dwelling of numerous deities, sages and tirthas, and is woven into pilgrimage circuits, temple traditions and regional folk practice. The interplay between Himalaya as place and Himalaya as personified figure is central to any encyclopedic treatment of the subject.
The significance of Himalaya within Hinduism is broad and multidimensional. As a sacred landscape, the range is associated with renunciation, tapasya, and meditative retreat; as a mythological figure, it anchors important narratives concerning divine marriage, lineage and cosmic order. The mountain is invoked in hymns, stotras and devotional poetry, and is referenced in classical Sanskrit literature, including in the works traditionally attributed to major poets writing on themes related to Shiva and Parvati.
For practitioners and pilgrims, several sites within the Himalayan region carry deep religious resonance, and many are integrated into long-standing yatra traditions. For scholars, Himalaya offers a case study in how natural features are sacralised and personified in Indic thought. For cultural historians, the figure illustrates the interweaving of geography, theology and narrative. Editors preparing this article should aim to convey this layered significance without privileging any single sectarian or regional interpretation, and should distinguish carefully between scriptural claims, devotional traditions, and modern scholarly analysis. Where possible, multiple traditions should be represented neutrally.
The following items are commonly addressed in articles on this subject. Each requires verification against primary texts, critical editions, and reputable secondary scholarship before inclusion. Editors should not rely on tertiary summaries or popular retellings alone.
Editors should also be alert to potential conflation between the geographical entry on the Himalayas and this religious-mythological entry; appropriate hatnotes and cross-references should be inserted.
A workable outline for the final article, subject to editorial revision, is as follows:
Each section should be drafted only after sources are gathered. Empty or thin sections should be marked with editorial templates rather than padded with speculation.
This draft is intentionally conservative. It does not include specific verse numbers, named episodes with narrative detail, dates, dynastic associations, or claims about iconographic conventions, because those particulars have not been verified within the scope of this draft. Editors taking this forward should:
This draft should be treated as scaffolding only. It is not suitable for public publication in its current form and must be rewritten by qualified editors with access to primary and secondary sources.
No external references are cited in this draft. Editors are expected to compile a full reference list during revision, drawing on critical editions of Sanskrit texts, peer-reviewed scholarship in Indology and religious studies, standard reference works on Hindu mythology, and reliable ethnographic and art-historical sources. Popular websites, devotional retellings without scholarly apparatus, and unverified online compendia should not be used as primary references.