The Old Ways

Zoroastrian Tradition

Chinvat Bridge

CHIN-vaht (Avestan: Chinwad, 'the Bridge of the Separator')

The Zoroastrian bridge of judgment crossed by every soul after death — wide and easy for the righteous, narrow as a blade for the wicked, who fall from it into the darkness of hell below.

Chinvat Bridge (Avestan Chinwad, “the Bridge of the Separator”) is the span every soul must cross in the days following death — the point at which a lifetime of thought, word, and deed becomes visible and consequential. For the righteous, the bridge widens into an easy road; for the wicked, it narrows to the width of a blade’s edge, and they fall from it into the darkness below. The bridge does not judge so much as reveal: it makes external what Asha or Druj has already made of the soul that approaches it.

The bridge in the Vendidad

The Vendidad’s nineteenth Fargard gives the library’s fullest early account of the crossing. Three nights after death, the text says, the soul reaches “the head of the Chinwad bridge, the holy bridge made by Mazda,” where it is asked to account for “the reward for the worldly goods which they gave away here below.” The righteous soul is then met by a beautiful maiden — traditionally identified with Daena — who “makes the soul of the righteous one go up above the Hara-berezaiti,” setting it down on the far side of the bridge “in the presence of the heavenly gods themselves,” where Vohu Manah rises from his golden seat to welcome it: “How hast thou come to us, thou Holy One, from that decaying world into this undecaying one?” The wicked soul, by contrast, is carried off in bonds by the fiend Vizaresha before it ever reaches the bridge’s crossing.

The bridge in the Book of Arda Viraf

The Book of Arda Viraf — a Pahlavi visionary text devoted almost entirely to a living man’s guided tour of the afterlife — names its fifth chapter simply “The Chinwad bridge.” Viraf reports crossing it directly: “The width of that Chinwad bridge became again nine javelin-lengths. With the assistance of Srosh the pious, and Adar the angel, I passed over easily, happily, courageously, and triumphantly.” His guides, Sraosha and the angel Adar, then lead him to see both the reward of the righteous in heaven and the punishment of the wicked in hell, which the text places directly “below the Chinwad bridge,” in a desert called Chakat-i-Daitih. Arda Viraf’s account of hell — “the darkest hell, which is pernicious, dreadful, terrible… a pit, to the bottom of which, a thousand cubits would not reach” — gives the bridge’s danger a vivid and specific geography that the Vendidad’s account only implies.

The Bridge of the Separator in the Gathas

The name Chinvat is not confined to the later ritual and visionary texts. Yasna 46 — among the Gathas ascribed to Zarathushtra himself — already refers to “the Bridge of the Separator” as the destination awaiting “all time dwellers in the House of the Lie,” confirming that the bridge’s role as the dividing line between the righteous and the wicked belongs to the oldest layer of Zoroastrian scripture available in this corpus, not only to its later elaborations.

The bridge as revealed character

Across these three sources — the legal-liturgical Vendidad, the visionary Arda Viraf, and the poetic Gathas — the Chinvat bridge functions consistently as a place where nothing is decided that was not already true. The width of the bridge, the guide who meets the soul, the ease or terror of the crossing: all are the direct continuation of the choices Humata, Hukhta, and Hvarshta made possible during life. The bridge does not create the difference between Asha and Druj; it simply makes that difference, at last, impossible to mistake.

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