Temple Illustration
Photo gallery coming soon — curated images of Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga and its surroundings.
About
Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga stands 28 kilometres west of Nashik in Maharashtra, at the foot of Brahmagiri mountain — one of the ranges of the Western Ghats — where the Godavari river originates. The Godavari, the longest river entirely within peninsular India, begins as a spring near the Trimbakeshwar temple complex and flows 1,465 kilometres eastward to the Bay of Bengal. This origin point consecrates the entire Godavari basin as Shiva's domain.
The Jyotirlinga at Trimbakeshwar is distinctive in Indian temple tradition: the linga contains three faces (mukhas) representing Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva — a Trimurti form found in very few Shiva temples. The linga is small and partially recessed into the ground; a gold mask (Trinetra) covers the top. The Shiva Purana's account of the Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga connects it to the sage Gautama, who is said to have inadvertently caused the death of a cow, then performed severe penance on Brahmagiri to bring the Ganga (in the form of the Godavari) to this site for purification. Shiva appeared as Trimbakeshwar — the lord of three peaks, or of the three eyes — to grant the boon.
The Nashik-Trimbak Kumbh Mela, held every twelve years when Jupiter enters Leo (Simha rashi), draws among the largest pilgrim gatherings in the world. The main bathing ghat is at Kushavarta kund in the temple complex itself, considered the most sacred point of the Godavari's origin. Nashik's Panchavati — where Rama, Sita, and Lakshmana are said to have stayed during their forest exile — is connected to the Trimbakeshwar circuit, linking Shaiva and Vaishnava pilgrimage in the same geographic region. Devotees may offer Shiva Seva inspired by this sacred kshetra.