Also read Kisshōten. Also called Kichijōtennyo 吉祥天女 or Kudokuten 功徳天 (Sk: Sri Laksmi, Mahasri, Mahadevi). Originally an Indian (Brahman) goddess of fertility, wealth, and beauty, who was linked to Kubera, the Hindu god of the North, and Vishnu the Lord of Creation. As Vishnu's chief consort, Kichijōten was absorbed later into popular Buddhism in China and Japan. In the Konkōmyō Saishōōkyō 金光明最勝王経 (The Sutra of the Sovereign Kings of the Golden light), she is associated with wealth and virtue. Japanese belief in Kichijōten was widespread in the Nara period, and her images, such as the sculptures at Tōdaiji 東大寺 (746), Saidaiji 西大寺, Hōryūji 法隆寺 (748), and the painted portrait at Yakushiji 薬師寺 (ca. 771), were worshipped as a principal image at the kisshō keka 吉祥悔過, or New Year's ceremony for welcoming good luck and sweeping out bad. In the Matrix mandala *Taizōkai mandara 胎蔵界曼荼羅, Kichijōten appears as an attendant of *Senju Kannon 千手観音 and the Darani Shūkyō 陀羅尼集経 (Sutra describes a *Kichijōten mandara 吉祥天曼荼羅) which was used in an Esoteric Buddhist ritual to promote earthly happiness and welfare. Kichijōten is usually represented as a beautiful Tang period court lady, wearing a richly embroidered gown and an elaborately jeweled head-dress. She is distinguished from *Benzaiten 弁才天, with whom she is often confused, by the wish-granting jewel *nyoi hōju 如意宝珠 held in her left hand, and the lotus in her right. She also makes the gesture (mudra) of charity *yogan-in 与願印 with her palm open and facing downward. The 12th-century sculpture at Jōruriji 浄瑠璃寺 in Kyoto is typical of this latter type. Kichijōten was occasionally regarded as a sister of *Kariteimo 訶梨帝母, the wife of *Bishamonten 毘沙門天, and the mother of Zennishi dōji 善膩師童子, and was represented together with the latter two deities.