Tapatrayavivarjita (तापत्रयविवर्जित, IAST: Tāpatrayavivarjita) is a Sanskrit-origin Hindu boy-name meaning “Completely free from the three-fold suffering”. Formed from 'tāpa' (heat, affliction), 'traya' (three), and 'vivarjita' (utterly abandoned or freed from), this name proclaims Vishnu as the one eternally liberated from the ādhyātmika, ādhibhautika, and ādhidaivika forms of suffering.

Meaning, etymology & significance

The three fires of affliction—ādhyātmika (arising from within oneself), ādhibhautika (caused by other beings), and ādhidaivika (wrought by cosmic forces)—constitute the 'tāpatraya' that burdens all embodied souls. Vishnu, as Tāpatrayavivarjita, stands entirely beyond this threefold anguish, for He is by nature pure, infinite, and untouched by the conditions of saṃsāra. Devotees invoke this name to seek refuge from their own accumulation of suffering in the shelter of the Untouched Lord.

This lengthy compound is more naturally encountered as a theological descriptor than as a given name; however, it carries deep significance in Vaishnava liturgy as an affirmation of Vishnu's absolute transcendence. Pronounced 'taa-pa-tra-ya-vi-var-ji-ta,' each syllable should be enunciated clearly to honor the fullness of its meaning.

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Scriptural source

Tapatrayavivarjita appears in the Vishnu Sahasranama, among the sacred names of Vishnu.

Astrology — nakshatra, rashi & numerology

By the standard Vedic correspondence between a name’s first syllable and the lunar mansion, Tapatrayavivarjita aligns with the Purva phalguni nakshatra, under the Simha rashi (Moon sign). Its Chaldean name-number is 1.