The concept of nine protective deities first appears in
Wrihaspati Tattwa and
Sundarigama, two influential Balinese Hindu theological texts dating to the fifteenth century. The Javanese priest
Dang Hyang Niratha is credited with introducing the Nawa Sanga system to Bali in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. The formulation of the Nawa Sanga served as a means of political and religious unification at a time when Bali was divided by competing Hindu sects, following the collapse of the Majapahit Empire and during the rapid spread of Islam across the Indonesian archipelago. Unlike the
asta dikpalaka system—derived from Vedic tradition—which recognises eight directional guardian deities with Brahma at the centre, the Nawa Sanga places
Shiva at the centre. In this system, all deities of the Nawa Sanga, with the exception of
Vishnu and
Brahma, are understood as manifestations of Shiva. This reflects Niratha’s strong Shaivite orientation. The inclusion and spatial positioning of Vishnu, Shiva, and Brahma nevertheless preserved reverence for the
Trimurti, which remained a central theological concept in Balinese Hinduism at the time. == References ==