-40%

Antique Burmese wood carved Nat spirit angle statue

$ 924

Availability: 13 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
  • Type: Statue
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Primary Material: Wood
  • Age: Post-1940
  • Region of Origin: Burma
  • Maker: Handmade
  • Condition: Condition from 19th Century
  • Color: White
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days

    Description

    Antique Burmese wood carved Nat spirit angle statue
    This Burmese wood carved Nat spirit angle is standing on the lotus statue
    was estimates found in 19th Century Burmese period. It was made of one piece of log and hand carved of full stand figure and white color pigment painting.
    It is size 36 inches High and weight 10 Kgs. or 22 Lbs.
    It is in a condition as seen in pictures , re-painting , rare piece, and somewhere having natural wood cracks.
    It will be shipped by Thailand Post which it may takes 3-4 weeks or depending in postage to arrive to a buyer. Any question please email to my message to contact me. Thank you.
    Nat
    , in Burmese folk
    religion
    , any of a group of spirits that are the objects of an extensive, probably pre-Buddhist cult; in Thailand a similar spirit is called
    phi
    . Most important of the
    nat
    s are a group collectively called the “
    thirty-seven,” made up of spirits of human beings who have died violent deaths. They are capable of protecting the believer when kept properly propitiated and of causing harm when offended or ignored.
    Other types of
    nat
    s are nature spirits; hereditary
    nat
    s, whose annual tribute is an inherited obligation; and village
    nat
    s, who protect a
    community
    from wild animals, bandits, and illness and whose shrine is attached to a tree or pole near the entrance to the village. Most households also hang a coconut from the southeast pillar of the house in honour of Min Mahagir, the house
    nat
    .
    Nat
    s are appeased by offerings of food or flowers, given on all important occasions. Among the special
    nat
    festivals are those honouring the Taungbyon brothers—a prominent, rather rowdy pair of
    nat
    s said to have been executed in the 11th century—and the king of the “thirty-seven,”
    Thagya Min
    , associated by scholars with the Indian god Indra (known in Myanmar [Burma] as Sakka).