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Hatsadiling (Thai: หัสดีลิงค์; Burmese: ဟတ္ထီလိင်္ဂ; Pali: hatthīliṅga; Sanskrit: hastilinga) is a mythical bird commonly featured in Northern Thai art. The hatsadiling is considered to be the size of a house, with the head and body of a lion, trunk and tusks of an elephant, the comb of a cock, and the wings of a bird. According to an oral myth in northeastern Thailand, the bird once inhabited the legendary forest of Himavanta. The bird is often featured as a motif on funerary hearses of prominent Buddhist monks in Northern Thailand during phongyibyan cremation ceremonies. The hatsadiling (hathi linga) has also been used by the Marma people as a primary motif for funerary hearses.

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  • Hatsadiling (es)
  • Hatsadiling (en)
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  • Hatsadiling (Thai: หัสดีลิงค์; Burmese: ဟတ္ထီလိင်္ဂ; Pali: hatthīliṅga; Sanskrit: hastilinga) is a mythical bird commonly featured in Northern Thai art. The hatsadiling is considered to be the size of a house, with the head and body of a lion, trunk and tusks of an elephant, the comb of a cock, and the wings of a bird. According to an oral myth in northeastern Thailand, the bird once inhabited the legendary forest of Himavanta. The bird is often featured as a motif on funerary hearses of prominent Buddhist monks in Northern Thailand during phongyibyan cremation ceremonies. The hatsadiling (hathi linga) has also been used by the Marma people as a primary motif for funerary hearses. (en)
  • Hatsadiling (en tailandés, หัสดีลิงค์; en birmano, ဟတ္ထီလိင်္ဂ; en pali: hatthīliṅga; en sánscrito, hastilinga) es un ave mitológica comúnmente representada en el arte de Tailandia. Se considera que el hatsadiling tiene el tamaño de una casa, con la cabeza y cuerpo de un león, la trompa y colmillos de un elefante, la cresta de un gallo, y las alas de un ave.​ Según la tradición oral del noreste de Tailandia, el ave antiguamente habitó el bosque legendario de .​ A menudo el ave es representada como un motivo destacado en carrozas fúnebres de monjes budistas importantes en el norte de Tailandia durante las ceremonias de cremación .​ El hatsadiling (hathi linga) también ha sido utilizado por el como un motivo destacado en cortejos fúnebres.​ (es)
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  • Hatsadiling (Thai: หัสดีลิงค์; Burmese: ဟတ္ထီလိင်္ဂ; Pali: hatthīliṅga; Sanskrit: hastilinga) is a mythical bird commonly featured in Northern Thai art. The hatsadiling is considered to be the size of a house, with the head and body of a lion, trunk and tusks of an elephant, the comb of a cock, and the wings of a bird. According to an oral myth in northeastern Thailand, the bird once inhabited the legendary forest of Himavanta. The bird is often featured as a motif on funerary hearses of prominent Buddhist monks in Northern Thailand during phongyibyan cremation ceremonies. The hatsadiling (hathi linga) has also been used by the Marma people as a primary motif for funerary hearses. The bird was considered instrumental in the founding of Hariphunchai, a Mon kingdom in modern-day Thailand. It is featured in Cāmadevivaṃsa, a Pali chronicle that recounts the founding of the Hariphunchai kingdom by Queen Camadevi. The Dhammapada-aṭṭhakathā mentions the hastilinga. Buddhaghoṣa mentions it as an animal which possesses the strength of five elephants. (en)
  • Hatsadiling (en tailandés, หัสดีลิงค์; en birmano, ဟတ္ထီလိင်္ဂ; en pali: hatthīliṅga; en sánscrito, hastilinga) es un ave mitológica comúnmente representada en el arte de Tailandia. Se considera que el hatsadiling tiene el tamaño de una casa, con la cabeza y cuerpo de un león, la trompa y colmillos de un elefante, la cresta de un gallo, y las alas de un ave.​ Según la tradición oral del noreste de Tailandia, el ave antiguamente habitó el bosque legendario de .​ A menudo el ave es representada como un motivo destacado en carrozas fúnebres de monjes budistas importantes en el norte de Tailandia durante las ceremonias de cremación .​ El hatsadiling (hathi linga) también ha sido utilizado por el como un motivo destacado en cortejos fúnebres.​ El ave es considerada un elemento instrumental en la creación de Hariphunchai, un reino en la Tailandia moderna.​ Se le menciona en , una crónica Pali que relata la fundación del reino Hariphunchai por la reina .​ El Dhammapada-aṭṭhakathā menciona el hastilinga.​ lo menciona como un animal que posee la fuerza de cinco elefantes.​ (es)
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