Kankala Murti — The Bone-Staff Bearer: Shiva as the Supreme Wanderer Beyond Death The Form and Its Place Among Shiva's Many Aspects Among the numerous iconographic forms of Shiva celebrated in the Shaiva Agamas and the Puranic tradition, Kankala Murti occupies a place of singular power and profundity. At first glance, this form bears a close resemblance to Bhikshatana — Shiva as the wandering mendicant who moves through the worlds seeking alms. Both forms are depicted as a beautiful, unencumbered wanderer, moving freely beyond all social boundaries, drawing devotees and cosmic beings alike with the force of his luminous presence. Yet Kankala Murti is not merely a variation of Bhikshatana. It is a distinct and independently significant form, separated from Bhikshatana by one defining element: the kankala danda, the staff of bones, which the deity carries upon his shoulder. While Bhikshatana prominently bears the kapala — the skull cup — and often the trishula, the three-pronged spe...