The Fierce Protector: Bhairava, Sacred Space, and the Doctrine of Kshetrapala The Sacred Field and Its Protector In the Agamic and Tantric traditions of Shaiva Hinduism, consecrated space is never merely architectural. Every temple, from its innermost sanctum to the outermost boundary wall, is a living ritual universe — a carefully demarcated sacred field charged with divine energy. This field is called the Kshetra, and its guardian is known as the Kshetrapala, literally the protector of the field. The role is not ceremonial. It is cosmological. The Kshetrapala stands at every threshold, gate, and corner of the sacred precinct, ensuring that the boundary between the pure inner world of the deity and the potentially polluted or hostile outer world remains inviolate. Of all the deities who assume this guardian function, none is more naturally suited to it than Bhairava — the fierce, uncompromising, boundary-dwelling form of Shiva. Who Is Bhairava Bhairava, whose name derives from th...