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Stone figure of Brahma

1001/1050

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

It is often said that there is a trinity of Hindu gods: Brahma the creator, Vishnu the preserver and Shiva the destroyer. But while Vishnu and Shiva have followers and temples all over India, Brahma is not worshipped as a major deity. Brahma is the personified form of an indefinable and unknowable divine principle called by Hindus brahman. In the myth of Shiva as Lingodbhava, when Brahma searches for the top of the linga of fire, Brahma falsely claimed that he had found flowers on its summit, when in fact the Shiva linga was without end. For this lie he was punished by having no devotees. There are very few temples dedicated to Brahma alone in India. The only one of renown is at Pushkar, in Rajasthan.Brahma can be recognized by his four heads, only three of which are visible in this sculpture. In two of his four hands he holds a water pot and a rosary. Brahma originally had five heads but Shiva, in a fit of rage, cut one off. Shiva as Bhairava is depicted as a wandering ascetic with Brahma's fifth head stuck to his hand as a reminder of his crime. Brahma is commonly placed in a niche on the north side of Shaiva temples in Tamil Nadu together with sculptures of Dakshinamurti and Lingodbhava.

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  • Title: Stone figure of Brahma
  • Date Created: 1001/1050
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 51.50in
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: carved
  • Subject: hindu deity
  • Registration number: 1963,0217.1
  • Production place: Made in India. Made in Tamil Nadu
  • Place: Found/Acquired India
  • Period/culture: Chola
  • Peoples: Made by Tamil
  • Material: stone; granite
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Funded by Brooke Sewell Permanent Fund. Purchased from Batliwala, S S
British Museum

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