Ancient Domain
Lakṣmī is the goddess who turns possibility into prosperity. She is wealth in all its forms — gold grain, good children, royal power, moral merit, and the beauty that makes life worth living. In the Sanskrit imagination she is not mere money; she is śrī, the radiant splendor that surrounds any flourishing person, household, or kingdom. Where she dwells, there is abundance; where she departs, even palaces become deserts.
She is most often invoked as the consort of Viṣṇu, the preserving god, and she accompanies him in each of his earthly descents. But her origins are older and more independent, rooted in Vedic hymns to royal fortune and in the goddess Śrī celebrated for her loveliness and power.

