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Lady Justice is usually represented as blindfolded and holding a set of scales The Lady Justice statue which now stands tall in the judges’ library has shed its blindfold and its sword - it now ...
Lady Justice has long been a symbol of the law, typically holding a scale to represent the weighing of evidence and a sword for the power to enforce justice. However, most images of Lady Justice ...
Lady Justice is thought to represent the allegorical embodiment of law and the moral principles that guide society. In ancient Greece, the Hellenic deity Themis was commonly portrayed with scales ...
Unlike the other statues of Lady Justice that boast a blindfold holding a scale and sword in each hand, the Lady Justice in the newly unveiled statue wears a saree and does away with the blindfold.
The new saree-clad ‘Nyay Devi’ (Lady of Justice) with eyes wide open dons an Indian avatar, holding scales in one hand and the Constitution of India in the other hand.
It is believed that the origin of the modern-day ‘lady justice’ is Justitia, the goddess of Justice in Roman mythology. ‘Lady justice’ is depicted with a blindfold, scales, and a sword.
'Lady Justice' statue should have been given multiple arms holding weapons: Meenakshi Lekhi Lekhi's remarks came days after the Supreme Court got a new 'Lady Justice' -- a six-foot-tall sculpture in ...
Before this, the Lady Justice was commonly depicted as a woman wearing a blindfold while holding scales and a sword. The blindfold was meant to represent equality before law, implying that justice ...
The Supreme Court of India has a new 'Lady Justice' -- a six-foot-tall sculpture in the judges' library holding scales in one hand and the Constitution in the other sans the sword.
Unlike the other statues of Lady Justice that boast a blindfold holding a scale and sword in each hand, the Lady Justice in the newly unveiled statue wears a saree and does away with the blindfold.