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thumb|Double amalaka at the top of the Devi Jagadambi Temple at [[Khajuraho]] thumb|Prominent amalakas at the Siddheshwar Mukteshwar Group Temple, Bhubaneswar An amalaka (), is a segmented or notched stone disk, usually with ridges on the rim, that sits on the top of a Hindu temple's shikhara or main tower. According to one interpretation, the amalaka represents a lotus, and thus the symbolic seat for the deity below. Another interpretation is that it symbolizes the sun, and is thus the gateway to the heavenly world.
thumb|Double amalaka at the top of the Devi Jagadambi Temple at [[Khajuraho]] thumb|Prominent amalakas at the Siddheshwar Mukteshwar Group Temple, Bhubaneswar An amalaka (), is a segmented or notched stone disk, usually with ridges on the rim, that sits on the top of a Hindu temple's shikhara or main tower. According to one interpretation, the amalaka represents a lotus, and thus the symbolic seat for the deity below. Another interpretation is that it symbolizes the sun, and is thus the gateway to the heavenly world.
The name and, according to some sources the shape, of the amalaka comes from the fruit of Phyllanthus emblica (or Mirobalanus embilica), the Indian gooseberry, or myrobolan fig tree. This is called āmalaki in Sanskrit, and the fruit has a slightly segmented shape, though this is much less marked than in the architectural shape.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).