In Hinduism, sacred space is grounded in immanent divine presence rather than symbolic reference or historical memory alone. Natural landscapes—rivers, mountains, groves, and confluences—are often understood as manifestations or bodies of the divine, with tīrthas functioning as crossing points where encounter, purification, and merit are possible. Built architecture intensifies and stabilizes this presence: temples are consecrated as living abodes of deities, activated through prāṇa pratiṣṭhā and organized around cosmological geometry culminating in the inner sanctum. Domestic sacred space extends temple practice into everyday life through household shrines, integrating deity worship with lineage and life-cycle rites while remaining subordinate to formal consecration and priestly authority. Objects, images, vestments, and implements possess conditional efficacy, requiring purity, correct handling, and ongoing service rather than operating autonomously. Pilgrimage unfolds across dense sacred networks that support vows, purification, and communal identity without reducing practice to travel alone. Desecration is framed as pollution or rupture of ritual continuity and addressed through purification, rebuilding, and re-consecration. Across all material forms, Hindu sacred space is defined by presence, consecration, and ritual maintenance, not permanence, abstraction, or mere representation.

1. Natural Sacred Sites

2. Built Sacred Architecture

3. Domestic Sacred Space

4. Objects of Ritual Power

5. Vestments and Implements

6. Sacred Art and Symbolism

7. Pilgrimage Landscapes

8. Desecration and Transformation