Ekaveni: Symbol, Scripture, and Stone — The Single-Braid Tradition in Hindu Art What Is Ekaveni The ekaveni is one of the most recognizable and symbolically resonant hairstyles depicted across Hindu sculpture, bronze casting, and temple iconography. Derived from the Sanskrit roots eka meaning one and veni meaning braid or plait, the term refers to a single continuous strand of hair gathered from the crown or nape and woven into a clean, segmented plait that falls along the center of the back. Unlike the elaborately structured coiffures known as dhammilla, which involve coiling, pinning, and ornamentation in layered arrangements, or the deliberately loose and unbound hair called muktakesha, the ekaveni occupies a precise middle ground — it is neither untamed nor overly ornate. It speaks of a particular inner state: composed, youthful, and purposeful. Scriptural Recognition and Classification Hindu sculptural canons are not arbitrary in their prescriptions. The classical texts tha...