Trimurti
- Sanskrit:
- “three forms”
What is the trimurti in Hinduism?
What roles do Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva play in the Trimurti?
Why are there few temples dedicated to Brahma?
What is the significance of the god Dattatreya in relation to the Trimurti?
What is the purpose of the Trimurti doctrine?
Trimurti, in Hinduism, triad of the three gods Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. The concept was known at least by the time of Kalidasa’s poem Kumarasambhava (“Birth of the War God”; c. 4th–5th century ce).
The Trimurti collapses the three gods into a single form with three faces. Each god is in charge of one aspect of creation, with Brahma as creator, Vishnu as preserver, and Shiva as destroyer. In combining the three deities in this way, however, the doctrine elides the fact that Vishnu is not merely a preserver and Shiva is not merely a destroyer. Moreover, while Vishnu and Shiva are widely worshipped in India, very few temples are dedicated to Brahma, who is expressly said to have lost his worshippers as the result of telling a lie and is merely entrusted with the task of creation under the direction of one of the other two gods. Scholars consider the doctrine of the Trimurti to be an attempt to reconcile different approaches to the divine with each other and with the philosophical doctrine of ultimate reality (brahman). Since the 16th century the god Dattatreya—a deity who has historically been associated with yoga practice—has been considered to be an avatar of the Trimurti and is often depicted with three heads representing Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva.