The Untamed Lord: Why Shiva Rides the Bull and Never the Horse In the vast and layered cosmos of Sanatana Dharma, no deity is as paradoxical, as primal, or as absolute as Mahadeva Shiva. He is the Adi Deva, the first among gods, existing before creation and persisting beyond dissolution. He is Swayambhu — self-born, self-sustained, and beholden to no order. It is precisely this nature that makes the question of his Vahana — his divine vehicle — deeply significant. Of all the animals associated with gods, the horse stands conspicuously absent from Shiva's true form. This is not a coincidence. It is a theological statement of the highest order. The Horse: Symbol of Civilization and Conquest To understand why Shiva does not ride a horse, one must first understand what the horse represents in the Vedic and Shaiva worldview. The horse entered Indic civilization as an instrument of conquest, mobility, and statecraft. The Ashvamedha Yajna, the great horse sacrifice described in the Yajurv...