Sita: the wife and Spiritual Mate of Rama, the great Spiritual Master of India talked about in the book The Ramayana
(see-tha): Rama's wife, an reincarnation of goddess Laxmi, represents the ideal Hindu wife. Born to mother earth, she is a key figure in the Hindu mythology of Ramayana.
The eternal consort of Lord Ramachandra. She appeared as the daughter of King Janaka of Videha.
The wife of Rama. Often seen as the epitome of faithfulness. In the Ramayana, she is captured by a the king of the demons, Ravanna, and her husband must rescue her.
A furrow. In the Veda, Sita is the furrow or husbandary personified, and worshipped as a deity presiding over agriculture and fruits. In the Ramaya... more
Seeta The divine consort of Rama.
wife of the Hindu god Rama; regarded as an ideal of womanhood
Wife of Rama (embodiment of virtue and chastity).
The wife of Rama, she accompanies Rama to the forest exile for fourteen years. The ideal of Hindu women.
The heroine of the great Indian epic, the Ramayana; the lovely and loving wife of Rama. lit. the word signifies 'a furrow,' as she personifies the goddess of agriculture and fruit-culture for she is supposed to have sprung from a furrow and ultimately disappeared into a furrow.
The daughter of king Janaka of Videha, and the heroine of Ramayana, she is the Hindu model of the faithful wife.
Sita (Sanskrit: सीता; "SÄ«tÄ", also spelled Seeta) is the wife of Rama, the seventh avatÄra of Vishnu, and is esteemed an exemplar of womanly and wifely virtue. According to Hindu belief, Sita was herself an avatÄra of Lakshmi, Vishnu's eternal consort, who chose to reincarnate herself on Earth as Sita, and endure an arduous life, in order to provide humankind an example of such virtues.