Langala — The Plough of Balarama: Agrarian Sanctity in Stone, Bronze, and Sacred Text The Langala: Form and Iconographic Identity Among the sacred implements enshrined in Hindu iconography, the Langala — also known as Hala — stands apart as an emblem of the earth's fertility and the divine warrior's unassuming strength. Unlike the ornate weapons of war that typically adorn the hands of celestial beings, this simple agricultural plough is rendered in sculpture and bronze with deliberate restraint. Its form mirrors precisely the tool that generations of Indian farmers have driven through the soil: a long wooden shaft, robust at the grip and tapering toward a sharply curved metal share known as the phala. This inward-curving, crescent-like or hook-shaped blade is the defining visual feature of the Langala in sacred art, instantly recognisable whether carved in the sandstone temples of north India or cast in the Panchaloha bronzes of the south. The handle of the plough in sculp...