Composing…
Composing…
उन्मत्त भैरव
Ashta BhairavaDirection
West
Drunken pose; horse-vahana
Madness — for liberating ascetics from worldly bonds
Unmatta Bhairava is one of 8 deities in the Ashta Bhairava tradition. Reading Unmatta Bhairava alone gives the iconographic outline; reading the full grouping reveals what kind of cosmic principle the tradition is working with. The Ashta Bhairava as a whole describes a coherent set of relationships — between forms of the divine, between cosmic functions, or between stages of spiritual realisation.
Eight forms of Bhairava, each presiding over one of the eight directions; guardians of dharma; especially worshipped at kshetras as kotwals.
In daily worship, devotees may invoke Unmatta Bhairava alone — through their specific mantra and iconographic form — or invoke the full Ashta Bhairava grouping in sequence (especially during festivals like Navarātri for the Navadurgā, or daily archana for the Aṣṭalakṣmī). Both modes are traditional and authoritative; the choice depends on the family’s sampradāya and the kuldevtā tradition.