The Marathi festival calendar (Gudi Padwa new year). Maharashtrian festivals and vrats month by month, with the date and tithi timing of each observance.
Marathi 2014 opens in August during Shaka Samvat 1936 (Jaya) of the Hindu calendar.
August 2014
Shaka Samvat 1936 (Jaya)
Shravana – Bhadrapada
Festivals & Vrats in August 2014
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Nag Panchami
Tithi 1:50 PM, Jul 31 – 3:47 PM, Aug 1
Serpent deities are worshipped on Shravana Shukla Panchami.
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Narali Purnima (Nariyal Purnima)
Tithi 3:36 AM, Aug 10 – 11:41 PM, Aug 10
On Shravana Purnima, coastal communities offer coconuts (naral / nariyal) to the sea god Varuna, marking the end of the monsoon and the return to fishing.
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Krishna Janmashtami
Tithi 6:08 AM, Aug 16 – 5:56 AM, Aug 17
The midnight birth of Lord Krishna.
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Gopalkala (Dahi Handi)
Tithi 5:35 AM, Aug 17 – 6:06 AM, Aug 18
The day after Janmashtami, when human pyramids break the curd-filled dahi-handi hung high, re-enacting young Krishna's butter-stealing pranks.
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Pithori Amavasya Vrat
Tithi 5:16 PM, Aug 24 – 7:43 PM
The Shravana new moon, kept by mothers with the Pithori vrat for their children.
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Hartalika Teej (Kevda Trij) Vrat
Tithi 12:15 AM, Aug 28 – 2:15 AM, Aug 29
On Bhadrapada Shukla Tritiya, women keep a waterless fast and worship Shiva and Parvati for marital happiness, on the eve of Ganesh Chaturthi; in Gujarat it is kept as Kevda Trij.
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Ganesh Chaturthi (Ganeshotsav)
Tithi 2:10 AM, Aug 29 – 3:51 AM, Aug 30
Maharashtra's grandest festival begins with the installation of Ganpati on Bhadrapada Shukla Chaturthi.
Timings shown for New Delhi (IST) at sunrise — use the city box at the top to change it. Solar months begin by each tradition's own Sankranti rule (same-day, next-day, sunset or aparahna). Era years and lunar month names follow standard Vedic calculations and may differ slightly from regional almanacs around an Adhik Maas.
About the Marathi Calendar
The Marathi festival calendar (Gudi Padwa new year). Maharashtrian festivals and vrats month by month, with the date and tithi timing of each observance.
Each day lists its tithi and paksha, the nakshatra, the weekday (vaar) and any festivals or vrats. Tap any day to see the full panchang for that date — tithi start and end times, nakshatra, yoga, karana, sunrise and sunset, and the inauspicious periods (Rahu Kalam, Yamaganda, Gulika Kalam). Use the month and year selectors to browse this year and the next.