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Brahma

Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva seated on lotuses with their consorts, ca. 1770; unknown artist · Public domain · source ↗

Brahma is the creator in the Trimurti — the one who shapes the world that Vishnu preserves and Shiva dissolves. In the Puranic image he is born on a lotus rising from the navel of the sleeping Vishnu, and from him proceed the sages, the elements, and the generations of beings. His four faces speak the four Vedas; his consort is Saraswati, goddess of speech and learning; his mount is the hamsa, the swan said to separate milk from water as discernment separates truth from appearance.

And yet — strikingly — almost no one builds him temples. The god who made everything receives worship almost nowhere, a fact Hindu tradition itself found remarkable enough to explain with stories: a lie told during a contest with Shiva, or the fury of his own wife Savitri at Pushkar. Both curse-accounts are preserved in this archive, side by side. He remains present in ritual — invoked at every yajna — but as cosmology, not cult.

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Stories

Vishnu Purana

The Day and Night of Brahma

The Vishnu Purana lays out time itself as Brahma’s biography. Four ages — Krita, Treta, Dvapara, Kali — make one mahayuga of 4,320,000 human years, the world coarsening as each age shortens. A thousand mahayugas make a single day of Brahma: a kalpa. Through that day, fourteen Manus rise and pass with their generations of gods, sages, and kings.

Then Brahma’s evening comes. Through a night as long as his day, the three worlds are withdrawn into dissolution and Brahma sleeps; at his waking, creation is poured out again, as it was before. Day after cosmic day this continues, for Brahma too is mortal on his own scale — his life spans a hundred such years, and by the Purana’s reckoning he is now in his second half, the age called Shveta-Varaha Kalpa being the current day. The same arithmetic is echoed across Hindu texts, and Hindu ritual still recites its place in it in the sankalpa spoken before rites.

The teaching under the numbers is steady: even the creator’s life is a day among days, and everything made — however vast — is temporary inside something vaster.

Vishnu Purana, Book 1, chapter 3

Traditions tell this differently — versions shown side by side, none preferred.

Shiva Purana

Why Brahma Is Not Worshipped (Shiva Purana telling)

In the Shiva Purana’s telling, Brahma and Vishnu once quarrelled over which of them was supreme. As they argued, an immeasurable pillar of fire rose between them, without visible top or bottom. They agreed on a test: Vishnu became a boar and burrowed downward to find its base; Brahma became a swan and flew upward to find its summit. Aeons passed. Vishnu returned and admitted he had found no end. Brahma, too, had failed — but on his way down he met a ketaki flower drifting from above, and persuaded it to bear false witness that he had reached the top.

The pillar opened, and Shiva stood revealed within it. The lie stood exposed before the one being who was the pillar. In this Purana’s account Shiva brings forth the terrible Bhairava, who severs the fifth head of Brahma — the head that had spoken the falsehood — and Shiva decrees the lasting sentence: Brahma shall have no temples and no worship among mortals, and the ketaki flower shall never again be offered in rites. The creator kept his work, but lost his cult, for a single lie told at the axis of the world.

Shiva Purana, Vidyeshvara Samhita, chapters 7–9

Padma Purana

Why Brahma Is Not Worshipped (Padma Purana telling)

The Padma Purana explains Brahma’s templelessness with no pillar and no lie — only a wedding gone wrong. Brahma resolved to perform a great yajna at Pushkar, the spot where a lotus fallen from his hand had struck the earth and brought forth water. But a sacrificer cannot sit for the rite without his wife beside him, and as the auspicious hour arrived, Savitri had not come — delayed, the text says, waiting on the other goddesses.

The hour could not be lost. At the gods’ urging, a local girl, Gayatri, was quickly sanctified and married to Brahma, and the yajna proceeded with her in Savitri’s seat. Then Savitri arrived — to find the rite underway and another woman beside her husband. Her curse fell on them all, but on Brahma most heavily: he who had shamed her before the assembly would receive worship in no place on earth but Pushkar alone.

Softened by the gods’ pleading, the curse became Pushkar’s charter. To this day the town’s lake and its Brahma temple remain the one famous seat of his worship — the exception that the curse itself carved out.

Padma Purana, Srishti Khanda (Pushkara-mahatmya chapters)

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Temples

Pushkar, Rajasthan

Jagatpita Brahma Mandir, Pushkar

The famous exception: the one celebrated temple of Brahma in India, standing beside the sacred Pushkar lake that the Padma Purana counts among the greatest of tirthas — the spot where Brahma’s lotus fell to earth and where, the same Purana says, Savitri’s curse confined his worship. The present red-spired structure is largely from the fourteenth century onward. The Kartik Purnima fair fills the town each year with pilgrims who bathe in the lake and stand before the four-faced image.

sources: Temple committee, Pushkar, documented by the Devasthan Department, Government of Rajasthan · Padma Purana, Srishti Khanda (Pushkara-mahatmya)

Uttamarkoil, Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu

Uttamar Kovil (Bhikshandar Kovil)

One of the rare places where Brahma receives regular shrine worship. Uttamar Kovil is formally a Vishnu temple — one of the 108 divya desams, where the Lord is praised as Purushottama — but it is famous for housing all three of the Trimurti with their consorts: Vishnu with Lakshmi, Shiva with Parvati, and Brahma with Saraswati, each in a separate shrine. For devotees seeking to honour the creator in Tamil Nadu, this is the customary place to come.

sources: Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments Department, Government of Tamil Nadu