Sk: Brahma. A major Hindu deity thought to be responsible for creating the world. Along with *Taishakuten 帝釈天, he appears as a protector of the historical Buddha *Shaka 釈迦 from earliest times. The pair are shown in scenes from the Buddha's life, particularly administering his first bath, and in triads, *sanzonbutsu 三尊仏, where Bonten usually appears as an ascetic and holds a lotus. However, they came to be seen as general protective deities and in the Nara period frequently were placed on the dais to either side of the main figure. Bonten's special role in the Buddha's life was in persuading him to teach after he had become enlightened. In Japan his attributes are not fixed, and Bonten and Taishakuten may be differentiated only slightly by dress and by mudra that mirror each other. It is only as an esoteric figure that his iconography is truly distinctive. Bonten had no independent cult in Japan but is always shown either with Taishakuten or as one of the Twelve Deities *jūniten 十二天. Well known images include the Nara period set in the *Hokkedō 法華堂 (also known as Sangatsudō 三月堂) of Tōdaiji 東大寺 in Nara, where, according to temple tradition, the sculpture to the left of the main image, *Fukūkenjaku Kannon 不空羂索観音 is Bonten. This figure is shown wearing armor under his robe, which may suggest that he is Taishakuten, who, in India, may be shown as a martial figure. On the other hand, in several paintings in Japan the figure to the left of the main deity (Bonten's proper place) is also shown in armor. In the Hokkedō set, the two are shown wearing robes from the Tang dynasty and are close in appearance to bodhisattvas *bosatsu 菩薩. Other well-known images include the pair from the Nara period in the *Kondō 金堂 of Tōshōdaiji 唐招提寺. The most striking image is the early Heian pair in Tōji 東寺, which captures Bonten as he appears in the outer court of the *Taizōkai mandara 胎蔵界曼荼羅 with four heads, a third eye, and four arms. In addition, he rides on a lotus platform supported by four geese (the goose is his vehicle; it is a symbol of knowledge and its name has the same sound as a word in his mantra). He is dressed in the usual robes of a bosatsu and holds a fly whisk, a lotus, a staff, and has one palm turned out.