Sacred Ritual Trishul | Brass Spiritual Trident
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Size: 30.5cm(Height) x 2cm(Length) x 2cm(Width)
Weight: 0.36 kg
Materials: Brass
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About Our Product
This Sacred Ritual Trishul is a meaningful brass spiritual piece created for altar display, prayer practice, meditation, and sacred decor. Its slender ceremonial form is crowned with a three pronged trident, followed by expressive skull and face motifs that symbolize protection, impermanence, transformation, and the journey toward enlightenment. With its warm brass tone and detailed devotional design, this ritual trishul brings a powerful yet peaceful presence to any meditation room, temple space, or spiritual collection.
The stacked motifs along the upper handle reflect deep ritual symbolism, inviting awareness of life’s changing nature while encouraging strength, focus, and inner clarity. In Hindu and tantric traditions, the trishul is often associated with divine protection, the clearing of negative energy, and the balance of body, mind, and spirit. Each carved element adds visual depth and sacred meaning, making this brass trident a thoughtful focus for prayer, mantra practice, and mindful reflection.
Created for practitioners, collectors, healers, and lovers of spiritual decor, this Sacred Ritual Trishul serves as both an altar object and a symbolic reminder of courage, wisdom, and inner peace. Whether placed in a home shrine, displayed in a yoga room, or offered as a spiritual gift, it supports a calm atmosphere and inspires a deeper connection to devotion, protection, enlightenment, and personal awakening.
Introduction To The Buddhist Ritual Dragger :
Ritual tools are vital equipment of Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism practice, meant to dispel misconceptions that obstruct enlightenment. The phurba (Sanskrit: Kila) blade seen here was created to symbolically swallow the three poisons that obstruct spiritual progress: ignorance, greed, and illusion. The Phurba is the physical manifestation of the Vajrakila Buddha, who has the ability to destroy all evil on the earth. Its ceremonial usage is first recorded in the Vajrakilaya Tantra, an eighth-century or older Vajrayana work.