Utpala


Utpala in Sanskrit is a neuter noun with two meanings, both given by Amarakosha|. The first meaning is nymphaea caerulea, the "blue lotus", also known as kuvalaya in Sanskrit. The second meaning of utpala is a variety of medicinal plant known as in Hindi and ', vyādhi, paribhavyam or pāribhavyam, vāpyam, pākalam' according to.
In Buddhist art the
utpala flower is an attribute of the goddess Tara, who very often holds one in her hand, as other Buddhist and Hindu figures may also do. Later, the utpala becomes specific to the Green Tara form, while the White Tara holds a white lotus flower. In Tibet, where none of the tender acquatic plants that may be known as lotus can grow, utpala became a general term for all of them.
Monier-Williams gives the following meanings of
utpala: the blossom of the blue lotus nymphaea caerulea, a seed of Nymphaea caerulea, the plant Costus speciosus, any water-lily, any flower, a particular hell, name of a Nāga, names of several persons, including an astronomer, its feminine form utpalā meant a river, its feminine form utpalā also meant a kind of cake made of unwinnowed corn ;
An unrelated homonym, compounded from
ud "apart" + pala'' "flesh" means 'fleshless, emaciated' and is the name of a particular hell.