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Aryabhata
Aryabhata (IAST: ; ) (476–550 CE) was the first in the line of great mathematician-astronomers from the classical age of Indian mathematics and Indian astronomy. His most famous works are the Aryabhatiya (499 CE, when he was 23 years old) and the Arya-siddhanta.
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Bhāskara II
Bhaskara (, ) (1114–1185), also known as Bhaskara II and Bhaskara Achārya ("Bhaskara the teacher"), was an Indian mathematician and an astronomer. He was born near Bijjada Bida which is in present day Bijapur district, Karnataka, India. Bhaskara was the head of an astronomical observatory at Ujjain, the leading mathematical center of ancient India. His predecessors in this post had included both the noted Indian mathematicians Brahmagupta and Varahamihira. He lived in the Sahyadri region.
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Buddha
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Sri Yukteswar Giri
Sri Yukteswar Giri (also spelled Sriyukteswar Giri and Sriyukteshvar Giri) () (10 May 1855 - 9 March 1936) is the monastic name of Priyanath Karar (), the guru of Swami Satyananda Giri and Paramahansa Yogananda. Sri Yukteswar was an educator, astronomer, a Jyotisha (Vedic astrologer), a yogi, and a believer in the Bhagavad Gita and the Bible. He was a disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya of Varanasi and a member of the Giri branch of the swami order. Yogananda styled Sri Yukteswar Jnanavatar, or "Incarnation of Wisdom".
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Varahamihira
Daivajna Varāhamihira (Devanagari: वराहमिहिर; 505 – 587), also called Varaha, or Mihira was an Indian astronomer, mathematician, and astrologer who lived in Ujjain. He is considered to be one of the nine jewels (Navaratnas) of the court of legendary king Vikramaditya (thought to be the Gupta emperor Chandragupta II Vikramaditya).
http://wn.com/Varahamihira
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Andhra Pradesh (, ), abbreviated A.P., is a state situated on the southeastern coast of India. It is India's fourth largest state by area and fifth largest by population. Its capital and largest city is Hyderabad. The State has the second longest coastline among all the States in India. The official language of Andhra Pradesh is Telugu, while other languages spoken in Andhra Pradesh are Urdu, English, Tamil, and Hindi.
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Assam (Assamese: অসম Ôxôm ) is a northeastern state of India with its capital at Dispur in the city of Guwahati. Located south of the eastern Himalayas, Assam comprises the Brahmaputra and the Barak river valleys along with the Karbi Anglong and the North Cachar Hills with an area of 30,285 square miles (78,438 km²). Assam is surrounded by six of the other Seven Sister States: Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Meghalaya. These states are connected to the rest of India via a narrow strip in West Bengal called the Siliguri Corridor or "Chicken's Neck". Assam also shares international borders with Bhutan and Bangladesh; and cultures, peoples and climate with South-East Asia – important elements in India’s Look East policy.
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Bangladesh (; , '), officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh (Bengali: গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ ') is a country in South Asia. It is bordered by India on all sides except for a small border with Burma (Myanmar) to the far southeast and by the Bay of Bengal to the south. Together with the Indian state of West Bengal, it makes up the ethno-linguistic region of Bengal. The name Bangladesh means "Country of Bengal" in the official Bengali language.
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Burma, officially the Union of Myanmar, is the second largest country by geographical area in Southeast Asia. The country is bordered by People's Republic of China on the north-east, Laos on the east, Thailand on the south-east, Bangladesh on the west, India on the north-west and the Bay of Bengal to the south-west with the Andaman Sea defining its southern periphery. One-third of Burma's total perimeter, 1,930 kilometers (1,199 mi), forms an uninterrupted coastline.
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The "Kingdom of Cambodia" "Royaume du Cambodge" (official name), also known as Cambodia, derived from Sanskrit Kambujadesa ()), is a country in Southeast Asia that borders Thailand to the west and northwest, Laos to the northeast, Vietnam to the east, and the Gulf of Thailand to the southwest. The geography of Cambodia is dominated by rivers and a lake namely: The Mekong River (Upper and Lower) (Khmer: ទន្លេមេគង្គ Tonlé Mékong Pronounced: Tonlé Mékung = Mother Water River), Sab River Tonlé Sap (Khmer: ទន្លេសាប Pronounced: Tonlé Sab = Fresh Water River), Bassac River Tonlé Bassac (Khmer: ទន្លេបាសាក់ Pronounced: Tonlé Bassuck = ?)
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Goa (; , , Sanskrit: गोमंतक) is India's smallest state by area and the fourth smallest by population. Located in South West India in the region known as the Konkan, it is bounded by the state of Maharashtra to the north, and by Karnataka to the east and south, while the Arabian Sea forms its western coast. Goa is India's richest state with a GDP per capita two and a half times that of the country as a whole. It was ranked the best placed state by the Eleventh Finance Commission for its infrastructure and ranked on top for the best quality of life in India by the National Commission on Population based on the 12 Indicators.
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Karnataka (, pronounced ) is a state in South West India. It was created on 1 November 1956, with the passing of the States Reorganisation Act. Originally known as the State of Mysore, it was renamed Karnataka in 1973.
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Kerala (Malayalam: , {{audio|Ml-Kerala.ogg|) is a state in India. It is located on the south-western region of the country. It was created on 1 November 1956, with the passing of the States Reorganisation Act bringing together the areas where Malayalam was the dominant language.
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Laos (, , or ), officially the '''Lao People's Democratic Republic''', is a landlocked country in Southeast Asia, bordered by Burma and People's Republic of China to the northwest, Vietnam to the east, Cambodia to the south and Thailand to the west.
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Machhegaun ( Sanskrit मच्छेगाऊं)is a village in Kathmandu District in the Bagmati Zone of central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2871 .
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Maharashtra (Marathi: , ) is a state located in West India. The word Maharashtra comes from the words Maha meaning Great and Rashtra meaning Nation, thus rendering the name Maharashtra (Great Nation). It is the second most populous after Uttar Pradesh and third largest state by area in India. It is the richest state in India, contributing to 15% of the country's industrial output and 13.2% of its GDP in year 2005-06.
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Manipur ( ) is a state in northeastern India, with the city of Imphal as its capital. Manipur is bounded by the Indian states of Nagaland to the north, Mizoram to the south and Assam to the west; it also borders Myanmar to the east. It covers an area of .
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Odisha (), or Orissa, is a state of India, located on the east coast of India, by the Bay of Bengal. It is the modern name of the ancient nation of Kalinga, which was invaded by the Maurya Emperor Ashoka in 261 BC. The modern state of Odisha was established on 1 April 1936 at Kanika Palace, Cuttack, as a province in India, and consists predominantly of Odia speakers. 1 April is therefore celebrated as Utkal Divas (Odisha Day).
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Soma (Sanskrit सोम sóma), or Haoma (Avestan), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma-, was a ritual drink of importance among the early Indo-Iranians, and the later Vedic and greater Persian cultures. It is frequently mentioned in the Rigveda, whose Soma Mandala contains many hymns praising its energizing qualities. In the Avesta, Haoma has an entire Yašt dedicated to it.
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The Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka (commonly known as Sri Lanka (, , or ); ; , ) is a country and a sovereign state off souther coast of the Indian subcontinent. A island nation in South Asia, it was till 1972 known as Ceylon (, , or ). Sri Lanka is surrounded by the Indian Ocean, the Gulf of Mannar and the Palk Strait.
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Tamil Nadu (, ) is one of the 28 states of India. Its capital and largest city is Chennai (formerly known as Madras). Tamil Nadu lies in the southernmost part of the Indian Peninsula and is bordered by the States of Puducherry, Kerala, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. It is bound by the Eastern Ghats in the north, the Nilgiri, the Anamalai Hills, and Palakkad on the west, by the Bay of Bengal in the east, the Gulf of Mannar, the Palk Strait in the south east, and by the Indian Ocean in the south.
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Thailand ( or ; Ratcha Anachak Thai, ), formerly Siam (, ), is an independent country that lies in the heart of Southeast Asia. It is bordered to the north by Burma and Laos, to the east by Laos and Cambodia, to the south by the Gulf of Thailand and Malaysia, and to the west by the Andaman Sea and the southern extremity of Burma. Its maritime boundaries include Vietnam in the Gulf of Thailand to the southeast and Indonesia and India in the Andaman Sea to the southwest.
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Tripura ( Tripura) is a state in North-East India, with an area of 4,051 sq. mi. or 10,491.69 km². Tripura is surrounded by Bangladesh on the north, south, and west. The Indian states of Assam and Mizoram lie to the east. The capital is Agartala and the main languages spoken are Bengali and Kokborok. It was formerly an independent Tripuri kingdom and was merged with independent India on 15 October 1949 by the Tripura Merger Agreement. It was also known as "Hill Tippera" (anglicized version of Tipra) during the British Raj period and has a history of over 2500 years and 186 kings.
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West Bengal (Bengali: Poshchim Bônggo, ) is a state in eastern regions of India and is the nation's fourth most populous. It is also the seventh most populous sub-national entity in the world. West Bengal is the third largest contributor to India's GDP and has the second-largest voters in India. West Bengal, together with Bangladesh lying on its east, forms the historical and geographical region of Bengal. To its northeast lie the states of Assam and Sikkim and the country Bhutan, and to its southwest lies the state of Orissa. To the west it borders the states of Jharkhand and Bihar, and to the northwest, Nepal.
http://wn.com/West_Bengal
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The Hindu calendar used in ancient times has undergone many changes in the process of regionalization, and today there are several regional Indian calendars, as well as an Indian national calendar.
Most of these calendars are inherited from a system first enunciated in Vedanga Jyotisha of Lagadha, a late BCE adjunct to the Vedas, standardized in the Surya Siddhanta (3rd century CE) and subsequently reformed by astronomers such as Aryabhata (499 CE), Varahamihira (6th c. CE), and Bhaskara (12th c. CE). Differences and regional variations abound in these computations, but the following is a general overview of Hindu lunisolar calendar.
Day
In the Hindu calendar, the day starts with local sunrise. It is allotted five "properties", called angas. They are: # the tithi (one of 30 divisions of a synodic month) active at sunrise # the vaasara, vaar (ravi-vaar, som-vaar, etc.) or weekday # the nakshatra (one of 27 divisions of the celestial ecliptic) in which the moon resides at sunrise # the yoga (one of 27 divisions based on the ecliptic longitude of the sun and moon) active at sunrise # the karana (divisions based on tithis) active at sunrise. Together these are called the panchāngas (Sanskrit: pancha = five). An explanation of the terms follows.
Vaasara
Vaasara refers to the days of the week and bear striking similarities with the names of the week in many western cultures:!No. | !Sanskrit name of the weekday | !English & Latin names of the weekday | !Celestial object |
1 | |||
2 | Soma vāsara सोमवासर | ||
3 | Mangala vāsara मंगलवासर | Mangala = Mars | |
4 | Budha vāsara बुधवासर | ||
5 | |||
6 | Shukra vāsara शुक्रवासर | Shukra = Venus | |
7 | Shani vāsara शनिवासर | Shani = Saturn | |
The term -vaasara is often realized as vaara or vaar in Sanskrit-derived languages. There are many variations of the names in the regional languages, mostly using alternate names of the celestial bodies involved.
Nakshatra
The ecliptic is divided into 27 nakshatras, which are variously called lunar houses or asterisms. These reflect the moon's cycle against the fixed stars, 27 days and 7¾ hours, the fractional part being compensated by an intercalary 28th nakshatra. Nakshatra computation appears to have been well known at the time of the Rig Veda (2nd–1st millennium BCE).The ecliptic is divided into the nakshatras eastwards starting from a reference point which is traditionally a point on the ecliptic directly opposite the star Spica called Chitrā in Sanskrit. (Other slightly different definitions exist.) It is called Meshādi or the "start of Aries"; this is when the equinox — where the ecliptic meets the equator — was in Aries (today it is in Pisces, 28 degrees before Aries starts). The difference between Meshādi and the present equinox is known as ayanāngsha or fraction of ecliptic. Given the 25,800 year cycle for the precession of the equinoxes, the equinox was directly opposite Spica in 285 CE, around the date of the Surya Siddhanta.
The nakshatras with their corresponding regions of sky are given below, following Basham. As always, there are many versions with minor differences. The names on the right-hand column give roughly the correspondence of the nakshatras to modern names of stars. Note that nakshatras are (in this context) not just single stars but are segments on the ecliptic characterised by one or more stars. Hence there are more than one star mentioned for each nakshatra.
Sanskrit nameसंस्कृतम्!!Malayalam nameമലയാളം! | Tamil nameதமிழ்!!Telugu nameతెలుగు!! Kannada nameಕನ್ನಡ!! Western star name | |||||
1 | Ashvinīअश्विनी | Ashvatiഅശ്വതി| | Aswiniஅஸ்வினி | Aswiniఅశ్విని | Ashwiniಅಶ್ವಿನಿ | Beta Arietis>β and Gamma Arietis |
2 | [[Bharanīभरणी| | Bharaṇiഭരണി | Baraṇiபரணி | Bharaniభరణి | Bharaṇiಭರಣಿ | 35 Arietis35, 39, and 41 Arietis |
3 | Krittikāकृत्तिका| | Kārttikaകാർത്തിക | Kārthikaiகார்த்திகை | Krithika కృత్తిక | Krithika ಕೃತಿಕ | Pleiades (star cluster)>Pleiades |
4 | Rohini (nakshatra)Rohiniरोहिणी || | Rōhiṇiരോഹിണി | Rōhiṇiரோகிணி | Rohini రోహిణి | Rohini ರೋಹಿಣಿ | Aldebaran |
5 | Mrigashīrshaम्रृगशीर्षा| | Makayiramമകയിരം | Mirugasīridamமிருகசீரிடம் | Mrigashīra మృగశిర | Mrigashīra ಮೃಗಶಿರ | Lambda Orionis |
6 | [[Ardra (nakshatra)Ārdrāआद्रा || | Ātira or Tiruvātiraആതിര (തിരുവാതിര) | Thiruvādhiraiதிருவாதிரை | Arudra ఆరుద్ర | Aridra ಆರಿದ್ರ | Betelgeuse |
7 | Punarvasuपुनर्वसु| | Puṇartamപുണർതം | Punarpoosamபுனர்பூசம் | Punarvasuపునర్వసు | Punarvasu ಪುನರ್ವಸು | Castor (star) |
8 | [[Pushyaपुष्य| | Pūyamപൂയം | Poosamபூசம் | Pushyamiపుష్యమి | Pushya ಪುಷ್ಯ | Gamma Cancriγ, δ and θ Cancri |
9 | Āshleshāआश्ळेषा / आश्लेषा| | Āyilyamആയില്യം | Ayilyamஆயில்யம் | Āshleshāఆశ్లేష | Aslesha ಆಶ್ಲೇಷ | δ, ε, η, ρ, and Sigma Hydrae |
10 | [[Maghāमघा| | Makamമകം | Magamமகம் | Makhaమఖ | Maghe ಮಘೆ | Regulus |
11 | Pūrva or Pūrva Phalgunīपूर्व फाल्गुनी| | Pūramപൂരം | Pooramபூரம் | Pūrva Phalgunī/Pubbaపూర్వా ఫల్గుణి / పుబ్బ | Hubba ಹುಬ್ಬ | Delta Leonis>δ and Theta Leonis |
12 | Uttara or [[Uttara Phalgunīउत्तर फाल्गुनी| | Utramഉത്രം | Uthiramஉத்திரம் | Uttara Phalgunī/Uttaraఉత్తర ఫల్గుణి / ఉత్తర | Utthara ಉತ್ತರೆ | Denebola |
13 | Nakshatra#DivisionsHastaहस्त || | Attamഅത്തം | Asthamஅஸ்தம் | Hastaహస్త | Hastha ಹಸ್ತ | Alpha Corviα, β, γ, δ and ε Corvi |
14 | Nakshatra#DivisionsChitrāचित्रा || | Chittira (Chitra)ചിത്തിര (ചിത്ര) | Chithiraiசித்திரை | Chittaచిత్త | Chittha ಚಿತ್ತ | Spica |
15 | Svātīस्वाती| | Chōtiചോതി | Swathiசுவாதி | Swathiస్వాతి | Swarhi ಸ್ವಾತಿ | Arcturus |
16 | Vishākhāविशाखा| | Vishākhamവിശാഖം | Visakamவிசாகம் | Vishākhāవిశాఖ | Vishakheವಿಶಾಖೆ | Alpha Libraeα, β, γ and ι Librae |
17 | Anurādhāअनुराधा| | Anizhamഅനിഴം | Anushamஅனுஷம் | Anurādhāఅనూరాధ | Anuradhaಅನುರಾಧ | Beta Scorpiiβ, δ and π Scorpionis |
18 | Jyeshthaज्येष्ठा| | Kēṭṭa (Trikkēṭṭa)കേട്ട (തൃക്കേട്ട) | Kettaiகேட்டை | Jyeshthaజ్యేష్ఠ | Jestaಜೇಷ್ಟ | Alpha Scorpiiα, σ, and τ Scorpionis |
19 | Mula (astrology)Mūlaमूल || | Mūlamമൂലം | Mūlamமூலம் | Moolaమూల | Moola ಮೂಲ | Epsilon Scorpiiε, ζ, η, θ, ι, κ, λ, μ and ν Scorpionis |
20 | Pūrva Ashādhāपूर्वाषाढा| | Pūrāṭamപൂരാടം | Pūradamபூராடம் | Pūrva Ashādhāపూర్వాషాఢ | Poorvashadaಪೂರ್ವಾಷಾಢ | Delta Sagittarii>δ and Epsilon Sagittarii |
21 | [[Uttara Ashādhāउत्तराषाढा| | Utrāṭamഉത്രാടം | Uthirādamஉத்திராடம் | Uttara Ashādhāఉత్తరాషాఢ | Uttharashadaಉತ್ತರಾಷಾಢ | Zeta Sagittarii>ζ and Sigma Sagittarii |
22 | [[Shravanaश्रवण| | Tiruvōnam ഓണം (തിരുവോണം) | Tiruvōnamதிருவோணம் | Shravanamశ్రవణం | Shravanaಶ್ರಾವಣ | Alpha Aquilaeα, β and γ Aquilae |
23 | Shravishthā or Dhanishtaश्रविष्ठा or धनिष्ठा| | Aviṭṭamഅവിട്ടം | Aviṭṭamஅவிட்டம் | Dhanishtaధనిష్ఠ | Dhanishtaಧನಿಷ್ಟ | Alpha Delphini>α to δ Delphinus |
24 | Shatabhishā or Shatatarakaशतभिषक् / शततारका| | Chatayam ചതയം | Sadayamசதயம் | Shatabhishāmశతభిషం | shathatharaಶಥತಾರ | Gamma Aquarii>γ Aquarii |
25 | Pūrva Bhādrapadāपूर्वभाद्रपदा / पूर्वप्रोष्ठपदा| | Pūruruṭṭātiപൂരുരുട്ടാതി | Pūruruṭṭādhiபூரட்டாதி | Pūrva Bhādraపూర్వాభాద్ర | poorvabadhraಪೂರ್ವಾ ಭಾದ್ರ | Alpha Pegasi>α and Beta Pegasi |
26 | [[Uttara Bhādrapadāउत्तरभाद्रपदा / उत्तरप्रोष्ठपदा| | Uttṛṭṭātiഉത്രട്ടാതി | Uttṛṭṭādhiஉத்திரட்டாதி | Uttara Bhādraఉత్తరాభాద్ర | Uttharabadhraಉತ್ತರಾ ಭಾದ್ರ | Gamma Pegasiγ Pegasi and α Andromedae |
27 | Revati (nakshatra)Revatiरेवती || | Rēvatiരേവതി | Rēvathiரேவதி | Rēvathiరేవతి | Revatiರೇವತಿ | Pisces (constellation)>Piscium |
An additional 28th intercalary nakshatra, Abhijit (अभिजित्)(α, ε and ζ Lyrae - Vega - between Uttarasharha and Sravana. Last two (third and fourth) Padas of Uttrashada and first two (first and second) Padas of Sravana are considered to be Abhijit. Unless specifically mentioned it is not included in the list of the 27 constellations.
The nakshatra in which the moon lies at the time of sunrise of a day is the nakshatra for the day.
Yoga
The Sanskrit word Yoga means "union," but in astronomical calculations it is used in the sense of "alignment." First one computes the angular distance along the ecliptic of each object, taking the ecliptic to start at Mesha or Aries (Meshādi, as defined above): this is called the longitude of that object. The longitude of the sun and the longitude of the moon are added, and normalized to a value ranging between 0° to 360° (if greater than 360, one subtracts 360). This sum is divided into 27 parts. Each part will now equal 800' (where ' is the symbol of the arcminute which means 1/60 of a degree). These parts are called the yogas. They are labeled:# Vishkumbha # Prīti # Āyushmān # Saubhāgya # Shobhana # Atiganda # Sukarman # Dhriti # Shūla # Ganda # Vriddhi # Dhruva # Vyāghāta # Harshana # Vajra # Siddhi # Vyatīpāta # Varigha # Parigha # Shiva # Siddha # Sādhya # Shubha # Shukla # Brāhma # Māhendra # Vaidhriti
Again, minor variations may exist. The yoga that is active during sunrise of a day is the yoga for the day.
Karana
A karaṇa is half of a tithi. To be precise, a karana is the time required for the angular distance between the sun and the moon to increase in steps of 6° starting from 0°. (Compare with the definition of a tithi above.)Since the tithis are thirty in number, one would expect there to be sixty karanas. But there are only eleven. There are four "fixed" karanas and seven "repeating" karanas. The four "fixed" karanas are:
# Kinstughna # Śakuni # Catuṣpāda # Nāgava
The seven "repeating" karanas are:
# Bhava # Bālava # Kaulava # Taitula # Garaja # Vāṇija # Viṣṭi (Bhadra)
The karana active during sunrise of a day is the karana for the day.
Months of the lunisolar calendar
When a new moon occurs before sunrise on a day, that day is said to be the first day of the lunar month. So it is evident that the end of the lunar month will coincide with a new moon. A lunar month has 29 or 30 days (according to the movement of the moon).The tithi at sunrise of a day is the only label of the day. There is no running day number from the first day to the last day of the month. This has some unique results, as explained below:
Sometimes two successive days have the same tithi. In such a case, the latter is called an adhika tithi where adhika means "extra". Sometimes, one tithi may never touch a sunrise, and hence no day will be labeled by that tithi. It is then said to be a tithi kshaya where kshaya means "loss".
Month names
There are twelve months in Hindu lunar Calendar:# Chaitra (चैत्र, चैत) # Vaishākha (वैशाख, बैसाख) # Jyaishtha (ज्येष्ठ, जेठ) # Āshādha (आषाढ, आषाढ़) # Shrāvana (श्रावण, सावन) # Bhaadra or, Bhādrapada (भाद्रपद, भादो) # Āshwin (अश्विन्) # Kārtika (कार्तिक, कार्तक) # Agrahayana or, Mārgashīrsha (मार्गशीर्ष, अगहन) # Pausha (पौष) # Māgah (माघ) # Phālguna(फाल्गुन)
Determining which name a lunar month takes is somewhat indirect. It is based on the rāshi (Zodiac sign) into which the sun transits within a lunar month, i.e. before the new moon ending the month.
There are twelve rāshi names, there are twelve lunar month names. When the sun transits into the Mesha rāshi in a lunar month, then the name of the lunar month is Chaitra. When the sun transits into Vrishabha, then the lunar month is Vaishākh. So on.
If the transits of the Sun through various constellations of the zodiac (Rashi) are used, then we get Solar months, which do not shift with reference to the Gregorian calendar. The Solar months along with the corresponding Hindu seasons and Gregorian months are:
{| CELLPADDING="0" align="center" |- BGCOLOR="#CCCCCC" ! (Rashi)Saur Maas(solar months) ! Ritu(season) ! Gregorianmonths ! Zodiac |- | Mesha | ROWSPAN="2" | Vasant(spring) | March/April | Aries |- | Vrishabha | April/May | Taurus |- | Mithuna | ROWSPAN="2" | Grishma(summer) | May/June | Gemini |- | Karkata | June/July | Cancer |- | Simha | ROWSPAN="2" | Varsha (monsoon) | July/Aug | Leo |- | Kanya | Aug/Sept | Virgo |- | Tula | ROWSPAN="2" | Sharad(autumn) | Sept/Oct | Libra |- | Vrishchika | Oct/Nov | Scorpius |- | Dhanur | ROWSPAN="2" | Hemanta(autumn-winter) | Nov/Dec. | Sagittarius |- | Makara | Dec/Jan | Capricornus |- | Kumbha | ROWSPAN="2" | Shishir(Winter-Spring) | Jan/Feb | Aquarius |- | Meena | Feb/Mar | Pisces |}
The Sanskrit grammatical derivation of the lunar month names Chaitra etc., is: the (lunar) month which has its central full moon occurring at or near the nakshatra Chitrā is called Chaitra. Similarly, for the nakshatras Vishākhā, Jyeshthā, (Pūrva) Ashādhā, Shravan, Bhādrapad, Ashvinī (old name Ashvayuj), Krittikā, Mrigashīrsha, Pushya, Meghā and (Pūrva/Uttara) Phalgunī the names Vaishākh etc. are derived.
The lunar months are split into two pakshas of 15 days. The waxing paksha is called shukla paksha, light half, and the waning paksha the krishna paksha, dark half. There are two different systems for making the lunar calendar:
Extra months
When the sun does not at all transit into any rāshi but simply keeps moving within a rāshi in a lunar month (i.e. before a new moon), then that lunar month will be named according to the first upcoming transit. It will also take the epithet of adhik or "extra". For example, if a lunar month elapsed without a solar transit and the next transit is into Mesha, then this month without transit is labeled adhik Chaitra. The next month will be labeled according to its transit as usual and will get the epithet nija ("original") or shuddha ("clean"). [Note that an adhik māsa (month) is the first of two whereas an adhika tithi is the second of two.]Extra Month, or adhik mas māsa (mas = lunar month) falls every 32.5 months. It is also known as purushottam mas, so as to give it a devotional name. Thus 12 Hindu mas (māsa) is equal to approximate 356 days, while solar year have 365 or 366 (in leap year) which create difference of 9 to 10 days, which is offset every 3rd year. No adhik mas falls during Kartik to Magh.
A month long fair is celebrated in Machhegaun during adhik māsa. It is general belief that one can wash away all one's sins by taking a bath in the Machhenarayan's pond.
Lost months
If the sun transits into two rāshis within a lunar month, then the month will have to be labeled by both transits and will take the epithet kshay or "loss". There is considered to be a "loss" because in this case, there is only one month labeled by both transits. If the sun had transited into only one raashi in a lunar month as is usual, there would have been two separate months labeled by the two transits in question.For example, if the sun transits into Mesh and Vrishabh in a lunar month, then it will be called Chaitra-Vaishaakh kshaya. There will be no separate months labeled Chaitra and Vaishākh.
A kshay māsa occurs very rarely. Known gaps between occurrence of kshaya māsas are 19 and 141 years. The last was in 1983. January 15 through February 12 were Pausha-Māgha kshay. February 13 onwards was (adhik) Phālguna.
Special Case:
If there is no solar transit in one lunar month but there are two transits in the next lunar month,
This is a very very rare occurrence. The last was in 1315. October 8 to November 5 were adhik Kārtik. November 6 to December 5 were Kārtik-Mārgashīrsh kshaya. December 6 onwards was Paush.
Religious observances in case of extra and lost months
Among normal months, adhika months, and kshaya months, the earlier are considered "better" for religious purposes. That means, if a festival should fall on the 10th tithi of the Āshvayuja month (this is called Vijayadashamī) and there are two Āshvayuja months caused by the existence of an adhika Āshvayuja, the first adhika month will not see the festival, and the festival will be observed only in the second nija month. However, if the second month is āshvayuja kshaya then the festival will be observed in the first adhika month itself.When two months are rolled into one in the case of a kshaya māsa, the festivals of both months will also be rolled into this kshaya māsa. For example, the festival of Mahāshivarātri which is to be observed on the fourteenth tithi of the Māgha krishna paksha was, in 1983, observed on the corresponding tithi of Pausha-Māgha kshaya krishna paksha, since in that year, Pausha and Māgha were rolled into one, as mentioned above. When two months are rolled into one in the case of a kshaya māsa, the festivals of both months will also be rolled into this kshaya māsa.
Vaishnava calendar
Month !! Predominating Deity-name of month | ||
Agrahayana | Kesava | |
Pausha | Narayana | |
Magha | Madhava | |
Phalguna | Govinda | |
Caitra | Vishnu | |
Vaisakha | Madhusudana | |
Jyeshta | Trivikrama | |
Ashadha | Vamana | |
Sravana | Sridhara | |
Bhadra | Hrishikesa | |
Asvina | Padmanabha | |
Kartik | Karttika | Damodar (name of Krishna)>Damodara |
Year of the lunisolar calendar
The new year day is the first day of the shukla paksha of Chaitra. In the case of adhika or kshaya months relating to Chaitra, the aforementioned religious rules apply giving rise to the following results:
Another kind of lunisolar calendar
There is another kind of lunisolar calendar which differs from the former in the way the months are named. When a full moon (instead of new moon) occurs before sunrise on a day, that day is said to be the first day of the lunar month. In this case, the end of the lunar month will coincide with a full moon. This is called the pūrnimānta māna or "full-moon-ending reckoning", as against the amānta māna or "new-moon-ending reckoning" used before.This definition leads to a lot of complications:
It must be noted, however, that none of these above complications cause a change in the day of religious observances. Since only the name of the krishna paksha-s of the months will change in the two systems, festivals which fall on the krishna paksha will be defined by the appropriate changed name. That is, the Mahāshivarātri, defined in the amānta māna to be observed on the fourteenth of the Māgha krishna paksha will now (in the pūrnimānta māna) be defined by the Phālguna krishna paksha.
Correspondence of the lunisolar calendar to the solar calendar
A lunisolar calendar is always a calendar based on the moon's celestial motion, which in a way keeps itself close to a solar calendar based on the sun's (apparent) celestial motion. That is, the lunisolar calendar's new year is to kept always close (within certain limits) to a solar calendar's new year.Since the Hindu lunar month names are based on solar transits, and the month of Chaitra will, as defined above, always be close to the solar month of Mesha, the Hindu lunisolar calendar will always keep in track with the Hindu solar calendar.
The Hindu solar calendar by contrast starts on April 14–15 each year. This signifies the sun's "entry" into Mesha rashi and is celebrated as the New Year in Assam, Bengal, Orissa, Manipur, Kerala, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and Tripura. The first month of the year is called "Chitterai (சித்திரை" in Tamil, "Medam" in Malayalam and Bohag in Assamese, Baisakh in Bengali/Punjabi and Nepali. This solar new year is celebrated on the same day in Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Nepal and Thailand due to Tamil influence on those countries.
Year numbering
The epoch (starting point or first day of the zeroth year) of the current era of Hindu calendar (both solar and lunisolar) is February 18, 3102 BCE in the proleptic Julian calendar or January 23, 3102 BCE in the proleptic Gregorian calendar. According to the Puranas this was the moment when Krishna returned to his eternal abode. Both the solar and lunisolar calendars started on this date. After that, each year is labeled by the number of years elapsed since the epoch.This is a unique feature of the Hindu calendar. All other systems use the current ordinal number of the year as the year label. But just as a person's true age is measured by the number of years that have elapsed starting from the date of the person's birth, the Hindu calendar measures the number of years elapsed. , 5111 years had elapsed in the Hindu calendar. However, the lunisolar calendar year usually starts earlier than the solar calendar year, so the exact year will not begin on the same day every year.
Year names
Apart from the numbering system outlined above, there is also a cycle of 60 calendar year names, called Samvatsaras, which started at the first year (at elapsed years zero) and runs continuously: :1. Prabhava :2. Vibhava :3. Shukla :4. Pramoda :5. Prajāpati :6. Āngirasa :7. Shrīmukha :8. Bhāva :9. Yuva :10. Dhātri :11. Īshvara :12. Bahudhānya :13. Pramādhi :14. Vikrama (2000-2001) :15. Vrisha (2001-02) :16. Chitrabhānu (2002-03) :17. Svabhānu (2003-04) :18. Tārana (2004-05) :19. Pārthiva (2005-06) :20. Vyaya (2006-2007) :21. Sarvajeeth (2007-08) :22. Sarvadhāri (2008-09) :23. Virodhi (2009-10) :24. Vikrita (2010-11) :25. Khara (2011-12) :26. Nandana (2012-13) :27. Vijaya :28. Jaya :29. Manmadha :30. Durmukhi :31. Hevilambi :32. Vilambi :33. Vikāri :34. Shārvari :35. Plava :36. Shubhakruti :37. Sobhakruthi :38. Krodhi :39. Vishvāvasu :40. Parābhava :41. Plavanga :42. Kīlaka :43. Saumya :44. Sādhārana :45. Virodhikruthi :46. Paridhāvi :47. Pramādicha :48. Ānanda :49. Rākshasa :50. Anala :51. Pingala :52. Kālayukthi :53. Siddhārthi :54. Raudra :55. Durmathi :56. Dundubhi :57. Rudhirodgāri :58. Raktākshi :59. Krodhana :60. Akshaya This system contains the concept of leap year also.Every 4th year will have 366 days and the others only 365.The starting point is Meshadi, ( 1st of the month MESHA).It is also calculated a day by day mode.beginning from 1 presently it runs 1864000+.... days.This means these much days have passed in the present Kaliyuga (1/10th of Chathur yuga total)
Eras
Hinduism has of four eras or ages, of which we are currently in the last. The four are:# Krita Yuga or Satya Yuga # Treta Yuga # Dvāpara Yuga # Kali Yuga
They are often translated into English as the golden, silver, bronze and Iron Ages. (Yuga means era or age.) The ages see a gradual decline of dharma, wisdom, knowledge, intellectual capability, life span and emotional and physical strength. The epoch provided above is the start of the Kali Yuga. The Kali Yuga is 432,000 years long. The Dvāpara, Tretā and Krita (Satya) Yuga-s are two, three and four times the length of the Kali Yuga respectively. Thus they together constitute 4,320,000 years. This is called a Chaturyuga.
A thousand and a thousand (i.e. two thousand) chaturyuga-s are said to be one day and night of the creator Brahmā. He (the creator) lives for 100 years of 360 such days and at the end, he is said to dissolve, along with his entire Creation, into the Eternal Soul or Paramātman.
A samkhya view of the timespan of a yuga is given by Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri, the guru of Paramahansa Yogananda. This is detailed in his book, The Holy Science. According to this view, one complete yuga cycle is equal to one complete "precession of the equinox", a period of approximately 24,000 years. The ascending phase consists of a 1200 year Kali, 2400 year Dwapara, 3600 year Treta and 4800 year Krita (Satya) yuga. The descending phase reverses this order, thus both ascending and descending phases equal 24,000 years. According to calculations given in the book, the most recent yuga change was in 1699, when the Earth passed from Kali Yuga (the lowest material age) to Dvāpara Yuga (the second age associated with electrical, atomic and finger forces). We are in an ascending spiral right now, and will pass into the Tretā Yuga in 4100 CE. According to the book, the motion of the stars moving across the sky (a.k.a.precession) is the observable of the Sun's motion around another star. The quality of human intellect depends on the distance of the Sun and Earth from a certain point in space known as the Grand Center, Magnetic Center or Vishṇunābhi (the navel/center of Lord Vishnu) Vishnu. The closer the Sun is to it, the more subtle energy the Solar System receives, and the greater is the level of human spiritual and overall development. As the Sun moves around its companion star, it brings us closer to or drives us farther away from Vishnunabi, resulting in the rising and falling ages here on Earth.
Yukteswar tells us that the calendars of the higher ages were based on the Yugas, with each era named after its Yuga. Hence, the year 3000 BCE was known as descending Dwapara 102 (because the last descending Dwapara yuga began 102 years earlier in 3102 BCE). He stated that this method was used up until the recent Dark Ages, when knowledge of the connection with the yugas and the precession cycle was lost; "The mistake crept into the almanacs for the first time during the reign of Raja Parikshit, just after the completion of the last descending Dwapara Yuga. At that time Maharaja Yudhisthira, noticing the appearance of the dark Kali Yuga, made over his throne to his grandson, the said Raja Parikshit. Maharaja Yudhisthira, together with all the wise men of his court, retired to the Himalaya Mountains... thus there was no one who could understand the principle of correctly calculating the ages of the several Yugas". Thus, Yukeswar assumed that Raja Parikshit was not trained in any vedic principles even though he alone ruled the world many years. Thus, he interpreted that Yugas are not calculated correctly. Consequently, he gave the theory that when the Dwapara was over and the Kali era began no one knew enough to restart the calendar count. They knew they were in a Kali Yuga (which is why the old Hindu calendar now begins with K.Y.) but the beginning of this calendar (which in 2006 stands at 5108) can still be traced to 3102 BCE, (3102+2006=5108) the start of the last descending Dwapara Yuga. To this day there is still much confusion why the Kali starts at this date or what the correct length of the Yugas should be. Yukteswar suggests that a return to basing the Yuga calendar on the motion of the equinox would be a positive step.
History
The Hindu Calendar descends from the Vedic times. There are many references to calendrics in the Vedas. The Vedānga (adjunct to Veda) called Jyautisha (literally, "celestial body study") prescribed all the aspects of the Hindu calendars. After the Vedic period, there were many scholars such as Āryabhata (5th century CE), Varāhamihira (6th century) and Bhāskara (12th century) who were experts in Jyautisha and contributed to the development of the Hindu Calendar.The most widely used authoritative text for the Hindu Calendars is the Sūrya Siddhānta, a text of uncertain age, though some place it at 10th century.
The traditional Vedic calendar used to start with the month of agrahayan (agra=first + ayan = travel of the sun, equinox) or Mārgashirsha. This is the month where the Sun crosses the equator, i.e. the vernal equinox. This month was called mārgashirsha after the fifth nakshatra (around lambda orionis). Due to the precession of the Earth's axis, the vernal equinox is now in Pisces, and corresponds to the month of chaitra. This shift over the years is what has led to various calendar reforms in different regions to assert different months as the start month for the year. Thus, some calendars (e.g. Vikram) start with Chaitra, which is the present-day month of the vernal equinox, as the first month. Others may start with Vaisakha (e.g. Bangabda). The shift in the vernal equinox by nearly four months from agrahaayana to chaitra in sidereal terms seems to indicate that the original naming conventions may date to the fourth or fifth millennium BCE, since the period of precession in the Earth's axis is about 25,800 years.
Regional variants
The Indian Calendar Reform Committee, appointed in 1952 (shortly after Indian independence), identified more than thirty well-developed calendars, all variants of the Surya Siddhanta calendar outlined here, in systematic use across different parts of India. These include the widespread Vikrama and Shalivahana calendars and regional variations thereof. The Tamil calendar, a solar calendar, is used in Tamil Nadu and Kollavarsham Calendar is used in Kerala.
Vikrama and Shalivahana calendars
The two calendars most widely used in India today are the Vikrama calendar followed in Western and Northern India and Nepal, and the Shalivahana or Saka calendar which is followed in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Goa.Both the Vikrama and the Shalivahana eras are lunisolar calendars, and feature annual cycles of twelve lunar months, each month divided into two phases: the 'bright half' (shukla paksha) and the 'dark half' (krishna paksha); these correspond respectively to the periods of the 'waxing' and the 'waning' of the moon. Thus, the period beginning from the first day after the new moon and ending on the full moon day constitutes the shukla paksha or 'bright part' of the month; the period beginning from the day after the full moon until and including the next new moon day constitutes the krishna paksha or 'dark part' of the month.
The names of the 12 months, as also their sequence, are the same in both calendars; however, the new year is celebrated at separate points during the year and the "year zero" for the two calendars is different. In the Vikrama calendar, the zero year corresponds to 58 BCE, while in the Shalivahana calendar, it corresponds to 78 CE. The Vikrama calendar begins with the month of Baishakh (April), or Kartak (October/November) in Gujarat. The Shalivahana calendar begins with the month of Chaitra (March) and the Ugadi/Gudi Padwa festivals mark the new year.
Another little-known difference between the two calendars exists: while each month in the Shalivahana calendar begins with the 'bright half' and is followed by the 'dark half', the opposite obtains in the Vikrama calendar. Thus, each month of the Shalivahana calendar ends with the no-moon day and the new month begins on the day after that, while the full-moon day brings each month of the Vikrama calendar to a close (This is an exception in Gujarati Calendar, its month (and hence new year) starts on a sunrise of the day after new moon, and ends on the new moon, though it follows Vikram Samvat).
In Gujarat, Diwali is held on the final day of the Vikram Calendar and the next day marks the beginning of the New Year and is also referred as ‘Annakut’ or Nutan Varsh or Bestu Varash. In the Hindu calendar popularly used in North India the year begins with Chaitra Shukala Pratipadha (March – April).
National calendars in South and South East Asia
A variant of the Shalivahana Calendar was reformed and standardized as the Indian National calendar in 1957. This official calendar follows the Shalivahan Shak calendar in beginning from the month of Chaitra and counting years with 78 CE being year zero. It features a constant number of days in every month (with leap years).The Bengali Calendar, or Bangla calendar (introduced 1584), is widely used in eastern India in the state of West Bengal, Tripura and Assam. A reformation of this calendar was introduced in present-day Bangladesh in 1966, with constant days in each month and a leap year system; this serves as the national calendar for Bangladesh. Nepal follows the Bikram Sambat. Parallel months and roughly the same periods apply to the Buddhist calendars used in Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Sri Lanka and Thailand.
Correspondence between calendars
As an indicator of this variation, Whitaker's Almanac reports that the Gregorian year 2000 CE corresponds, respectively with: # Year 5101 in the Kaliyuga calendar; # Year 2544 in the Buddha Nirvana calendar; # Year 2543 in the Buddhist Era (BE) of the Thai solar calendar # Year 2057 in the Bikram Samvat calendar; # Year 1922 in the Saka calendar; # Year 1921 (shown in terms of 5-yearly cycles) of the Vedanga Jyotisa calendar; # Year 1407 in the Bengali calendar; # Year 1362 in the Burmese Calendar; # Year 514 in the Gaurabda Gaudiya calendar; # Year 1176 in the Malayalam calendar or Kolla Varsham calendar.
See also
References
Further reading
External links
Category:Hindu astronomy Category:Hindu astrology
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