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Let
us read the panchanga of, say, October 7th,
2000. Open the page containing October 7th,
2000.(refer to the Gregorian date column).
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| Refer
to the uppermost row of the table. |
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It tells us that the particular date (October
7th, 2000.) falls under shaka 1921 which is the
Pramaathi Samvatsara, the Hindu month of Aashwina,
Shukla paksha - the waxing phase of moon. |
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| The
column on right in the second row |
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that the day is in dakshinayana -the Sun moving
towards (southern) makara vritta (the tropic of
Capricorn) and the Sharad ritu. |
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row for this date reads: |
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At
the sunrise the tithi was navami, that is the
9th lunar date, and the weekday is Tuesday.
The third column conveys the change of tithi.
Here it changes at 8:25 hours and the dashami,
the 10th lunar date of Ashwina begins.
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column tells us that the moon is in Shravana nakshatra
and it leaves the constellation at 11:53 hours.
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next ten columns if referred to their headings
can be understood trivially. (In case of karana
which the half part of a tithi, the Date Panchanga
mentions only first half, since the second half
ends with the end of the particular tithi. Yet
it needs an expert’s advice to determine the karana
for a particular moment.) |
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next wide column to the Gregorian date contains
the shastrartha for the day. For October 7th,
2000. it says that the day is Mahanavami and it
is of navaratrotthapana -end of navaratra, the
Vijaya Dashami or the Dasara Day. The rest of
the information of the day continues elsewhere
on the same page with a reference to the same
Gregorian date in parenthesis. |
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| To
understand the general bearing of the particular
day refer to the shubhaashubha
divasa, auspicious-inauspicious days column
placed next to the kundali -the chart on the page.
There are a few vital things to be remembered
while reading the panchanga. Among the tithis
coming in succession, the missing number of tithi
is always considered as kshaya or eliminated tithi.
This is considered inauspicious. Similarly, when
a tithi repeats it becomes vriddhi, additional
tithi. This too is considered inauspicious. Among
the inauspicious tithis are all the 13th and 14th
tithis in krishna paksha - the waning phase of
the moon, all the New Moon days and all the 1st
tithi of shuddha paksha, the waxing phase of the
moon. |
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| Of
all the constellations, Pushya is considered inauspicious
for weddings while Bharani, Krittikaa, Aashleshaa
and Vishaakhaa are considered inauspicious for
a majority of tasks. |
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