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Makar Sankranti

Makar(a) Sankranti (Sanskrit: मकरसङ्क्रान्ति, romanizedMakarasaṅkrānti),[1] also referred to as Uttarayana, Makar, or simply Sankranti, is a Hindu observance and a festival. Usually falling on the date of January 15 annually,[2][3][4] this occasion marks the transition of the Sun from the zodiac of Sagittarius (dhanu) to Capricorn (makara).[5][2][6] Since the Sun has made this transition which vaguely coincides with moving from south to north, the festival is dedicated to the solar deity, Surya,[7] and is observed to mark a new beginning.[8] Many native multi-day festivals are organised on this occasion all over India.

Makar Sankranti
Holy dip by devotees in river Ganga on the occasion of Makar Sankranti
Also calledUttarayana
Sankranti
Til Sakraat
Magha
Môkôr Sôṅkrānti
Mela
Ghughuti
Bhogi
Sakraat
Pongal
Observed byHindus, Buddhists
Liturgical colorRed
TypeReligious and cultural, harvest festival
CelebrationsKite flying, bonfires, fairs, Surya Pooja in river, feast, arts, dance, socialization, Cow Pooja
DateFirst day of makara masa (15 Jan in leap years; 14 Jan in all other years)
FrequencyAnnual
Related toPongal, Maghe Sankranti, Magh Bihu, Tusu Festival

The festivities associated with Makar Sankranti are known by various names Makara Sankranti in Kerala, Magh Bihu in Assam, Maghi Saaji in Himachal Pradesh, Maghi Sangrand in Punjab, Maghi Sangrand or Uttarain (Uttarayana) in Jammu, Sakrat in Haryana, Sakraat in Rajasthan, Sukarat in central India, Pongal in Tamil Nadu, Uttarayana in Gujarat, and Uttar Pradesh, Ghughuti in Uttarakhand, Dahi Chura in Bihar, Makar Sankranti in Odisha, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Goa, West Bengal (also called Poush Sankranti or Mokor Sonkranti), Uttar Pradesh (also called Khichidi Sankranti), Uttarakhand (also called Uttarayani) or as simply, Sankranti in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana,[9][10] Maghe Sankranti (Nepal), Songkran (Thailand), Thingyan (Myanmar), Mohan Songkran (Cambodia), Til Sakraat in Mithila, Maghe Sankranti Nepal, and Shishur Senkrath (Kashmir). On Makar Sankranti, the Sun god is worshipped along with Vishnu and goddess Lakshmi throughout India.[11]

Makar Sankranti is observed with social festivities such as colourful decorations, rural children going house to house, singing and asking for treats in some areas,[12] melas (fairs), dances, kite flying, bonfires and feasts.[10][13] The Magha Mela, according to Indologist Diana L. Eck, is mentioned in the Hindu epic Mahabharata.[14] Many observers go to sacred rivers or lakes and bathe in a ceremony of thanks to the sun.[14] Every twelve years, the Hindus observe Makar Sankranti with Kumbha Mela – one of the world's largest mass pilgrimage, with an estimated 60 to 100 million people attending the event.[14][15][16] At this event, they say a prayer to the sun and bathe at the Prayagaraj confluence of the River Ganga and River Yamuna,[14] a tradition attributed to Adi Shankaracharya.[17] Makar Sankranti is a time of celebration and thanks giving, and is marked by a variety of Rituals and tradition.[18]

Date Variations

UT date and time of equinoxes and solstices on Earth,
IST date and time of Makar Sankranti[19][20]
event equinox solstice equinox solstice Makar Sankranti
month March June September December January
year day time day time day time day time day(IST) time (IST)
2018 20 16:15 21 10:07 23 01:54 21 22:22 14 13:46
2019 20 21:58 21 15:54 23 07:50 22 04:19 14 19:50
2020 20 03:50 20 21:43 22 13:31 21 10:03 15 02:06
2021 20 09:37 21 03:32 22 19:21 21 15:59 14 08:14
2022 20 15:33 21 09:14 23 01:04 21 21:48 14 14:28
2023 20 21:25 21 14:58 23 06:50 22 03:28 14 20:43
2024 20 03:07 20 20:51 22 12:44 21 09:20 15 02:42
2025 20 09:02 21 02:42 22 18:20 21 15:03 14 08:54
2026 20 14:46 21 08:25 23 00:06 21 20:50 14 15:05
2027 20 20:25 21 14:11 23 06:02 22 02:43 14 21:09
2028 20 02:17 20 20:02 22 11:45 21 08:20 15 03:22

Makar Sankranti is set by the solar cycle and corresponds to the exact time astronomical event of the Sun entering Capricorn and is observed on a day that usually falls on 14 January of the Gregorian calendar, but on 15 January in leap years. Makar Sankranti's date and time is analogous to Sidereal time of Zodiac sign of Capricorn (when sun enters).[21]

The year is 365.24 days long and the time difference between the two consecutive instances of Makar Sankranti (Sidereal time of the Zodiac sign of Capricorn) is almost the same as the year. We only have 365 days in a year so in the time of four years Calendar lags by one day so we need to adjust it by leap day, 29 February. But Makar Sankranti falls before leap day correction is made therefore on every fourth year it falls on 15 January. Sidereal time of sign of Capricorn also shifts by a day due to leap year. Similarly, the time of Equinoxes also shifts by a day in each four years window. For example, Equinox of September does not fall on the same date each year nor does the winter solstice. Any event related to one revolution of the earth around the sun will have this date shift within 4 years cycle. Similar changes can be seen in the exact time of Solstices and equinoxes. See the table, how the time of the equinox and a Solstice increases and decreases in a cycle of four years.[22]

We can see the time difference between two consecutive winter Solstices is about 5 hours 49 minutes 59 seconds, with respect to winter Solistice time, and the time difference between two consecutive Mankar Sankranti is about 6 hours and 10 minutes. Towards the end of the 21st Century, there will be more occurrences of Makar Sankranti on 15 January in a four-year cycle. And Makar Sankranti (the Sidereal time of the Zodiac sign of Capricorn) will be on 16 January for the first in the year 2102 as 2100 will not be a leap year.[23]

Makar Sankranti and Uttar Ayana

Makar Sankranti is celebrated when the Sun's ecliptic longitude becomes 270° measured from a fixed starting point which is in opposition to Spica,[24] i.e. this is a sidereal measure. Uttarayana begins when the Sun's ecliptic longitude becomes 270° measured from the Vernal equinox,[25] i.e. this is a tropical measure. While both concern a measure of 270° their starting points are different. Hence, Makar Sankranti and Uttarayana occur on different days. On the Gregorian calendar, Makar Sankranti occurs on 14 or 15 January; Uttarayana starts on 21 December.

Due to the precession of the equinoxes the tropical zodiac (i.e. all the equinoxes and solstices) shifts by about 1° in 72 years. As a result, the December solstice (Uttarayana) is continuously but very slowly moving away from Makar Sankranti. Conversely, the December solstice (Uttarayana) and Makar Sankranti must have coincided at some time in the distant past. Such a coincidence last happened 1700 years back, in 291 AD [24].

Significance

Every year Makar Sankranti is celebrated in the month of January. This festival is dedicated to the Hindu religious sun god Surya.[3][26] This significance of Surya is traceable to the Vedic texts, particularly the Gayatri Mantra, a sacred hymn of Hinduism found in its scripture named the Rigveda. According to the constitution of God, Our Holy Vedas and Shrimad Bhagwat Geeta, if we take initiation from a Complete Guru/Saint and worship Supreme God and attain emancipation. By performing true scripture-based way of worship, one's life becomes blessed, and the Earth will become heaven.[27]

Makara Sankranti is regarded as important for spiritual practices and accordingly, people take a holy dip in rivers, especially Ganga, Yamuna, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri. The bathing is believed to result in merit or absolution of past sins. They also pray to the sun and thank for their successes and prosperity.[28] A shared cultural practices found amongst Hindus of various parts of India is making sticky, bound sweets particularly from sesame (til) and a sugar base such as jaggery (gud, gur, gul). This type of sweet is a symbolism for being together in peace and joyfulness, despite the uniqueness and differences between individuals.[3] For most parts of India, this period is a part of early stages of the Rabi crop and agricultural cycle, where crops have been sown and the hard work in the fields is mostly over. The time thus signifies a period of socializing and families enjoying each other's company, taking care of the cattle, and celebrating around bonfires, in Gujarat the festival is celebrated by flying kites.[3]

Makara Sankranti is an important pan-Indian solar festival, known by different names though observed on the same date, sometimes for multiple dates around the Makar Sankranti. It is known as Pedda Panduga in Andhra Pradesh, Makara Sankranti in Karnataka, Telangana, and Maharashtra, Pongal in Tamil Nadu,[29] Magh Bihu in Assam, Magha Mela in parts of central and north India, as Makar Sankranti in the west, Makara Sankranti or Shankaranti in Kerala,[30] and by other names.[3]

Nomenclature and regional names

 
A night lit up on Makar Sankranti Uttarayana Festival with Kites and Lights.

Makar or Makara Sankranti is celebrated in many parts of the Indian subcontinent with some regional variations. It is known by different names and celebrated with different customs in different Indian states and South Asian countries:

In most regions of India, Sankranti festivities last for two to four days of which each day is celebrated with distinct names and rituals.[36]

  • Day 1 – Maghi (preceded by Lohri), Bhogi Panduga
  • Day 2 – Makara Sankranti, Pongal, Pedda Panduga, Uttarayana, Magh Bihu
  • Day 3 – Mattu Pongal, Kanuma Panduga
  • Day 4 – Kaanum Pongal, Mukkanuma

Regional variations and customs

 
Kite flying is a tradition of Makar Sankranti in many parts of India.

It is celebrated differently across the Indian subcontinent. Many people take a dip in places like Ganga Sagar and pray to the Sun God (Surya). It is celebrated with pomp in southern parts of India as Sankranti in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka (Pongal in Tamil Nadu), and in Punjab as Maghi.

Many melas or fairs are held on Makar Sankranti the most famous being the Kumbha Mela, held every 12 years at one of four holy locations, namely Haridwar, Prayag (Prayagraj), Ujjain and Nashik. The Magha Mela (or mini-Kumbh Mela held annually at Prayag) and the Gangasagar Mela (held at the head of the Ganges River, where it flows into the Bay of Bengal). Makar Mela in Odisha. Tusu Mela also called as Tusu Porab is celebrated in many parts of Jharkhand and West Bengal. Poush Mela, held traditionally on the seventh day of Poush, at Shantiniketan, in West Bengal, is unrelated to this festival. Mela Maghi is held in memory of the forty Sikh martyrs (Chalis Mukte) who gave their lives to protect Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Guru of Sikhism, every year at Muktsar Sahib in Punjab. Before this tradition, the festival was observed and mentioned by Guru Amar Das, the third Guru of Sikhism.[37]

 
Feast of Makar Sankranti

Andhra Pradesh and Telangana

The festival Sankranti is celebrated for four days in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.[38] Telugu women decorate the entrance of their homes by geometric patterns drawn using colored rice flour, called Muggu.

  • Day 1 – Bhogi
  • Day 2 – Sankranti, the main festival day
  • Day 3 – Kanuma
  • Day 4 – Mukkanuma

Bhogi

Bhogi is the first day of the four-day festival. It is celebrated with a bonfire with logs of wood, other solid-fuels, and wooden furniture at home that are no longer useful. In the evening, a ceremony called Bhogi Pallu, fruits of the harvest such as regi pallu and sugarcane are collected along with flowers of the season. Money is often placed into a mixture of treats and is poured over children. The children then collect the money and sweet fruits.

Sankranti

The second and main day of the four-day festival, and is dedicated to the Hindu god Surya.[39] The day marks the start of the Uttarayana, when the sun enters the 10th house of the zodiac Makara.[40] It is commonly called as Pedda Panduga (Big festival) in the Andhra Pradesh state.[41] Ariselu, a traditional sweet dish is offered to the god.

Kanuma

The third day of the four-day festival, it is dedicated to the cattle and other domestic animals. The cattle are decorated, especially cows, they are offered bananas, a special meal and worshipped.[42] On this day, popular community sport Kodi Pandem will begun playing until the next one to two days, especially in the Coastal Andhra region of Andhra Pradesh.[43]

Mukkanuma

It is the fourth and last day of the four-day festival. Many families hold reunions on this day.

 
Colorful floor artwork (muggulu) decorate entrances and streets during Sankranti

Assam

 
A Buffalo fight held at Ranthali, in Nagaon District of Assam, on the occasion of Magh bihu.

Magh Bihu (also called Bhogali Bihu (Bihu of eating foods and enjoyment) or Maghar Domahi is a harvest festival celebrated in Assam, India, which marks the end of harvesting season in the month of Maagha (January–February).[44] It is the Assam celebration of Makar Sankranti, with feasting lasting for a week.[45]

The festival is marked by feasts and bonfires.[46] Young people erect makeshift huts, known as Meji and Bhelaghar, from bamboo, leaves and thatch, and in Bhelaghar they eat the food prepared for the feast, and then burn the huts the next morning.[47] The celebrations also feature traditional Assamese games such as tekeli bhonga (pot-breaking) and buffalo fighting.[48] Magh Bihu celebrations start on the last day of the previous month, the month of "Pooh", usually the 29th of Pooh and usually 14 January, and is the only day of Magh Bihu in modern times (earlier, the festival would last for the whole month of Magh, and so the name Magh Bihu).[49] The night before is "Uruka" (28th of Pooh), when people gather around a bonfire, cook dinner, and make merry.

During Magh Bihu people of Assam make cakes of rice with various names such as Shunga Pitha, Til Pitha etc. and some other sweets of coconut called Laru or Laskara.

 
A traditional sweet sesame-jaggery based ladoo exchanged and eaten on Makar Sankranti.

Bihar

It is popularly known as Sakraat or Khichdi in western Bihar and Til Sakraat or Dahi Chura in rest of Bihar where people usually eat Dahi and Chura (Flattened Rice), sweets made of Til Sesame seeds and Chini (Sugar)/Gud(Jaggery) such as Tilkut, Tilwa (Til ke Ladoo) etc. In the state, the crops harvested around the time are Sesame Seeds, Paddy, etc

Goa

Known as Sankrant in Goa and like in the rest of the country, people distribute sweets in the form of granules of sugar-coated till pulses among family members and friends. Newly married women offer five sunghat or small clay pots with black beaded threads tied around them, to the deity. These pots are filled with newly harvested food grains and are offered with betel leaves and areca nut.[50] Its observance takes place on a rather subdued note, unlike major festivals of the region like Ganesh chaturthi.

Gujarat

Uttarayana, as Makar Sankranti is called in Gujarati, is a major festival in the state of Gujarat[51] which lasts for two days.

  • 14 January is Uttarayana
  • 15 January is Vasi-Uttarayana (Stale Uttarayana).[52]

Gujarati people keenly await this festival to fly kites, called 'patang'. Kites for Uttarayana are made of special light-weight paper and bamboo and are mostly rhombus shaped with central spine and a single bow. The string often contains abrasives to cut down other people's kites.

In Gujarat, from December through to Makar Sankranti, people start enjoying Uttarayana. Undhiyu (spicy, baked mix of winter vegetables) and chikkis (made from til (sesame seeds), peanuts and jaggery) are the special festival recipes savoured on this day. The Hindu Sindhi community in western regions of India, that is also found in southeastern parts of Pakistan, celebrate Makar Sankranti as Tirmoori. On this day, parents sending sweet dishes to their daughters.[53]

Haryana and Delhi

"Sakraant" in Haryana and Delhi rural areas, is celebrated with traditional Hindu rituals of North India similar to Western UP and border areas of Rajasthan and Punjab. This includes ritual purification by taking the holy dip in rivers, especially in Yamuna, or at sacred ponds such as ancient sarovars Kurukshetra and at local tirtha ponds associated with the ancestral guardian/founder deity of the village called Jathera or Dhok (dahak in Sanskrit or fire) in villages to wash away sins. People prepare kheer, churma, halva with desi ghee and distribute til-gud (sesame and jaggery) laddoos or chikkis. Brothers of married woman visits her home with a gift pack, called "Sindhara" or "Sidha", of wood and warm clothing for her and her husband's family. Women give gift to their in-laws called "Manana". Women congregate in the nearby havelis to sing Haryani folk songs and exchange gifts.[54]

Jammu

In Jammu, Makar Sankranti is celebrated as 'Uttrain' (derived from Sanskrit: Uttarayana).[55][56] Alternatively, terms 'Attrain' or 'Attrani' have also been used to describe this festival. A day before is celebrated as Lohri by Dogras to commemorate end of Poh (Pausha) month.[57] It is also beginning of the Magha month as per Hindu Solar Calendar, hence also known as 'Maghi Sangrand' (Sankranti of Magh month).

Among Dogras, there is a tradition of 'Mansana' (charity) of Khichdi of Maah Dal. Khichdi of Maah di Dal is also prepared on this day and that is why this day is also referred to as 'Khichdi wala Parva'. There is also a tradition of sending Khichdi & other food items to house of married daughters. Fairs are organised on holy places and pligrimages on this day.[58] Dhagwal in Hiranagar tehsil is known for Fair on Makar Sankranti and Janamashtami.[59]

People of Jammu also take holy bath in Devika river and pilgrimages like Uttar Behni and Purmandal on this occasion.[60] This day is also celebrated as birth anniversary of Baba Ambo ji, a local deity of Jammu region.[61]

At Vasuki temple of Bhaderwah of Jammu, the idols of Vasuki Nag are covered on Magh Sankranti and they are uncovered only after three months on Vaisakha Sankranti[62][63]

Karnataka

 
Mysuru Decorated Cows. January 2017.

This is the Suggi (ಸುಗ್ಗಿ) or harvest festival for farmers of Karnataka. On this auspicious day, girls wear new clothes to visit near and dear ones with a Sankranti offering in a plate and exchange the same with other families. This ritual is called "Ellu Birodhu." Here the plate would normally contain "Ellu" (white sesame seeds) mixed with fried groundnuts, neatly cut dry coconut and fine cut bella (jaggery). The mixture is called "Ellu-Bella" (ಎಳ್ಳು ಬೆಲ್ಲ). The plate contains shaped sugar candy moulds (Sakkare Acchu, ಸಕ್ಕರೆ ಅಚ್ಚು) with a piece of sugarcane. There is a saying in Kannada "ellu bella thindu olle maathadi" that translates to 'eat the mixture of sesame seeds and jaggery and speak only good.' This festival signifies the harvest of the season, since sugarcane is predominant in these parts. Ellu Bella, Ellu Unde, bananas, sugarcane, red berries, haldi and kumkum and small gift items useful in everyday lives are often exchanged among women in Karnataka. During the occasion, newly married women give away bananas for five years to married women from the first year of her marriage. Kite flying, drawing rangolis, giving away of red berries known as Yalchi kai are some of the intrinsic parts of the festival. Another vital ritual in rural Karnataka is the display of decorated cows and bulls and their procession is done and they are also made to cross a fire and this custom is known as "Kichchu Haayisuvudu".[64][65]

Maharashtra

 
Multicolored sugar halwa surrounded by til-gul (sesame and jaggery) ladoos. These exchanged and eaten on Makar Sankranti in Maharashtra.

In Maharashtra, on Makar Sankranti day, people exchange til-gul (sweetmeats made from sesame seeds and jaggery). A famous line associated with this joyous occasion is til gul ghya god god bola (Eat this sesame and jaggery and speak sweet words). Tilacha halwa (sugar granules) are also offered as prasad in the Devghar (Prayer room) after seeking blessings. Gulachi poli is a popular flat bread stuffed with shredded jaggery and ground til in pure ghee are enjoyed for lunch as well as dinner.

Married women invite friends/family members and celebrate Haldi-Kunku. Guests are given til-gul and some small gift, as a part of the ritual.[66] On this day, Hindu women and men make it a point to wear black clothes. As Sakranti falls in the winter months of the region, wearing black adds to the body warmth.[66] This is an essential reason behind wearing black, which is otherwise barred on festival days. As per another legend, Lord Surya forgave his son Shani and his son visited him on Sankranti.[67] That is the essential reason why people distribute sweets and urge them to let go of any negative or angry feelings. Also, newly married women offer five sunghat or small clay pots with black beaded threads tied around them, to the Shakti deity. These pots are filled with newly harvested food grains and are offered with betel leaves and areca nut. Its observance takes place on a rather subdued note, unlike major festivals of the region like Ganesh Chaturthi.

Odisha

The festival is known as Makara Sankranti in Odisha[68] where people prepare makara chaula (Odia: ମକର ଚାଉଳ): uncooked newly harvested rice, banana, coconut, jaggery, sesame, rasagola, Khai/Liaa and chhena puddings for naivedya to gods and goddesses. The withdrawing winter entails a change in food habits and intake of nourishing and rich food. Therefore, this festival holds traditional cultural significance. It is astronomically important for devotees who worship the sun god at the great Konark temple with fervour and enthusiasm as the sun starts its annual swing northwards.[69] According to various Indian calendars, the Sun's movement changes and the days from this day onwards become lengthier and warmer and so the Sun-God is worshiped on this day as a great benefactor. Many individuals at the start of the day perform a ritual bath while fasting.[69] Makara Mela (Fun fair) is observed at Dhabaleswar in Cuttack, Hatakeshwar at Atri in Khordha, Makara Muni temple in Balasore and near deities in each district of Odisha. In Puri special rituals are carried out at the temple of Lord Jagannath.[69] In Mayurbhanj, Keonjhar, Kalahandi, Koraput and Sundargarh where the tribal population is greater, the festival is celebrated with great joy. They celebrate this festival with great enthusiasm, singing, dancing and generally having an enjoyable time. This Makara Sankranti celebration is next to the Odia traditional new year Maha Vishuva Sankranti which falls in mid April. Tribal groups celebrate with traditional dancing, eating their particular dishes sitting together, and by lighting bonfires.

Punjab

 
Mela

In Punjab, Makar Sankranti is celebrated as Maghi which is a religious and cultural festival. Bathing in a river in the early hours on Maghi is important. Hindus light lamps with sesame oil as this is supposed to give prosperity and drive away all sins. A major mela is held at Sri Muktsar Sahib on Maghi which commemorates a historical event in Sikh history.[70]

Rajasthan and Western Madhya Pradesh (Malwa and Nimar)

"Makar Sankrati" or "Sakraat" in the Rajasthani language[71] is one of the major festivals in the state of Rajasthan. The day is celebrated with special Rajasthani delicacies and sweets such as pheeni (either with sweet milk or sugar syrup dipped), til-patti, gajak, kheer, ghevar, pakodi, puwa, and til-laddoo.[72]

Specially, the women of this region observe a ritual in which they give any type of object (related to household, make-up or food) to 13 married women. The first Sankranti experienced by a married woman is of significance as she is invited by her parents and brothers to their houses with her husband for a big feast. People invite friends and relatives (specially their sisters and daughters) to their home for special festival meals (called as "Sankrant Bhoj"). People give out many kind of small gifts such as til-gud (jaggery), fruits, dry khichadi, etc. to Brahmins or the needy ones.

Kite flying is traditionally observed as a part of this festival.[73] On this occasion the sky in Jaipur and Hadoti regions is filled with kites, and youngsters engage in contests trying to cut each other's strings.[73]

Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, and Sri Lanka

 
The Tamil festival of Pongal coincides with Makar Sankranti, and celebrates Surya.

It is a four-day festival in South India and Sri Lanka:

The festival is celebrated four days from the last day of the Tamil month Margazhi to the third day of the Tamil month Thai (Pausha).

Bhogi

The first day of festival is Bhogi (போகி). It is celebrated on the last day of Margazhi[74] by throwing away and destroying old clothes and materials, by setting them on fire, marking the end of the old and the emergence of the new. In villages there will be a simple ceremony of "Kappu Kattu" (kappu means secure). The 'neem' leaves are kept along the walls and roof of the houses. This is to eliminate evil forces.

Thai Pongal
 
A Tamil Hindu girl in traditional dress for Pongal.

The second day of festival is Thai Pongal or simply Pongal. It is celebrated by boiling rice with fresh milk and jaggery in new pots, which are later topped with brown sugar, cashew nuts and raisins early in the morning and allowing it to boil over the vessel. This tradition gives Pongal its name. The moment the rice boils over and bubbles out of the vessel, the tradition is to shout "பொங்கலோ பொங்கல் (Ponggalo Ponggal)!" and blow the sangu (a conch), a custom practised to announce it was going to be a year blessed with good tidings. Then, new boiled rice is offered to the Sun god during sunrise, as a prayer which symbolises thanks to the sun for providing prosperity. It is later served to the people in the house for the ceremony. People prepare savouries and sweets such as vadai, murukku, payasam and visit each other and exchange greetings.

Maattu Pongal
 
Jallikattu, or "taming the bull", is an ancient Pongal tradition.

The third day of festival is Maattu Pongal (மாட்டுப் பொங்கல்). It is for offering thanks to cattle, as they help farmers in agriculture. On this day the cattle are decorated with paint, flowers and bells. They are allowed to roam free and fed sweet rice and sugar cane. Some people decorate the horns with gold or other metallic covers. In some places, Jallikattu, or taming the wild bull contest, is the main event of this day and this is mostly seen in the villages.

Kaanum Pongal

The fourth day of the festival is Kaanum Pongal (காணும் பொங்கல்: the word kaanum means "to view"). During this day people visit their relatives, friends to enjoy the festive season. It is a day to thank relatives and friends for their support in the harvest. It started as a farmers festival, called as Uzhavar Thirunaal in Tamil. Kolam (கோலம்) decorations are made in front of the house during Thai Pongal festival.

Kerala

In Kerala, this is called as Sankranti or Makara Sankranti. In Malabar villages, this used to be celebrated as the victory over a demon. In Sabarimala, on this day, the Makaravilakku is lit.

Tripura

The Tripuri is the promoter of Hangrai festivals. They have first introduced this festival of immersing of ancestors' remains in the holy river. Since then it was adopted by other groups in India and popularized over the years.

Mythology inform us that when the world was just created by Lord Siva or Sibrai there was only the grassland and nothing was present. The god then created an egg to produce a human being. The egg hatched to give birth to a human being, creating a big bang. He crawled out of eggshells and looked around for anyone like him, but he found none. There was total silence, peace tranquility, and harmony on the earth. He was frightened by seeing this scenario of earth. He remained near the eggshell most of the time and went back near to the empty eggshell, went inside of half of the shell and covered it with another one, and hid there.

The almighty God was upset by this development. Years later he created another egg, and after ten months it hatched. There was a big bang when it hatched that shook the earth and gave birth to another human. He was very courageous and powerful, as soon as he came out of the human eggshell, he started shouting and announced to the whole of the world, 'I am the first to be born in this earth, I am the eldest on the earth, no one is elder to me in this earth. He named himself Subrai and declared to the whole of the earth that he is the ruler of this earth and king of this universe. Hearing the big bang Hangrai got more frightened, closed his eyes, and silently remained inside the shell. But when he heard the voice like his own, he came out of his shell and met Subrai. At this Subrai told that he is older than Hangrai, since then Subrai became the elder brother of Hangrai, and people knew them as it is.

Thousand of years later when they grew older, the time had come to leave this world. As Hangrai grew older than Subrai, one day he felt sick very seriously, Hangrai was on his death bed, Subrai was taking care of him. Then god came before them and said, 'Among both of you, Hangrai is elder than Subrai, I only know this, because I have created both of you. Hangrai will leave this earth very soon. Subrai will do all necessary rituals to cremate the body of Hangrai.' And god disappeared from there.

Then Subrai cried like a baby, touching the feet of Hangrai, saying, 'Elder brother, I have treated you like a younger brother for thousands of years, forgive me for my wrongdoing unto you.'

Hangrai said, 'I have done so!' and touched his head as gesture of forgiving and blessing unto him, and then breadth for his last.

After the death of Hangrai, his younger brother Subrai cremated his body and did all the rituals, and immerged Hangrai's remaining in the holy water of the river on the last day of Pousa month. Since then, people observed these rituals and festivals every year and continued to this day. That is why the day is named "Hangrai", which has later adopted by other ethnic groups of people of India.

Every year on the day of Hangrai the Tripuri people observe it in grand pomp and show. In every house of Tripuri preparation for Hangrai starts two-three days before. Houses are cleaned, washed whitewashed. All the utensils, clothes, articles are cleaned, homes are decorated. Different types of Tripura cakes, dishes, and drinks are prepared, near and dear ones, relatives are invited for a feast.

Uttar Pradesh

The festival is known as Kicheri in Purvanchal and Awadh parts of Uttar Pradesh and involves ritual bathing.[75] Over two million people gather at their respective sacred places for this holy bathing such as Prayagraj and Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh and Haridwar in Uttarakhand.[76] The day at a domestic household begins by taking ritual bath before sunrise, doing ritualistic prayers to the rising Sun. It also includes pledging for and donating Food, clothing and money to Brahmin/s called Purohita. It is followed by generous gifting of Food, Clothing, jewelleries and money to female relatives like to married Daughters, Sisters and Daughter-in-Laws and their families. Sesame seeds, Jaggery, chiura and Yogurt are eaten post the prayers. This is followed by Khichdi as the next meal (hence the vernacular name of the Festival).

Uttarakhand

Makar Sankranti is a popular festival in Uttarakhand. It known by various names in the different parts of the state such as Uttarayani, Khichri Sangrand, Pusyodia, Ghughutia, Ghughuti Tyar, Kale Kauva, Makrain, Makraini, Gholda, Gwalda and Chunyatyar.[77]

 
Bagnath Temple in Bageshwar during the Uttarayani Fair, 2018.

In the Kumaon region of Uttarakhand, Makar Sankranti (also called as Ghughuti (घुघुति) or Ghughuti Tyar or Ghughutia or Kale Kauva or Uttarayani) is celebrated with great gusto. The famous Uttarayani mela (fair) is held in Bageshwar town each year in the month of January on the occasion of Makar Sankrati.[78][79] According to the Almora Gazetteer, even in the early twentieth century, the annual Uttarayani mela at Bageshwar was visited by approximately 15,000 people and was the largest fair of Kumaon division.[80] The religious ritual of the Uttarayani mela consists of bathing before daybreak at the confluence of Saryu and Gomati followed by an offering of water to Lord Shiva inside the Bagnath Temple.[81][82] Those who are more religiously disposed, continue this practice for three days in succession, which is known as "Trimaghi".[81] On this day, people also give 'khichdi' (a dish made by mixing pulses and rice) in charity, take ceremonial dips in holy rivers, participate in Uttarayani fairs and offer deep fried sweetmeats consisting of flour and jaggery to crows and other birds as a way to pay homage to the departed souls of their ancestors.[83]

West Bengal

 
A feast at Poush Sankranti

In West Bengal, Sankranti, also known as Poush Sankranti[84] named after the Bengali month in which it falls (last date of that month), is celebrated as a harvest festival Poush Parbon (Bengali: পৌষ পার্বণ). (It falls on 14 January on the Western calendar.) The freshly harvested paddy and the date palm syrup in the form of Khejurer Gur (Bengali: খেজুরের গুড়) and Patali (Bengali: পাটালি) is used in the preparation of a variety of traditional Bengali sweets made with rice flour, coconut, milk and 'khejurer gur' (date palm jaggery) and known as 'Pitha' (Bengali: পিঠে). All sections of society participate in a three-day festival that begins on the day before Sankranti and ends on the day after. The Goddess Lakshmi is usually worshipped on the day of Sankranti.

In the Himalayan regions of Darjeeling, the festival is as known as Magey Sakrati. It is distinctly associated with the worship of Lord Shiva. Traditionally, people bathe at sunrise and then commence their pooja. Elsewhere, many people take a dip in places like Ganga Sagar (the point where the river Ganges meets the Bay of Bengal).[85] Ganga Sagar falls in West Bengal.

Outside India

 
The festival is known as Maghe Sakranti by Hindus in Nepal, and above is a traditional basket dance festivity to celebrate it.

Bangladesh

Shakrain is an annual celebration of winter in Bangladesh, observed with the flying of kites.[86]

Nepal

Maghe Sankranti is a Nepalese festival observed on the first of Magha in the Vikram Sambat (B.S) calendar (about 14 January). Tharu people celebrate this particular day as new year. It is also regarded as the major government declared annual festival of the Magar community.[87]

Observant Hindus take ritual baths during this festival. These include Sankhamul on the Bagmati near Patan; In the Gandaki/Narayani river basin at Triveni, Devghat near Chitwan Valley and Ridi on the Kaligandaki; and in the Koshi River basin at Dolalghat on the Sun Koshi. Festive foods like laddoo, ghee and sweet potatoes are distributed.

Pakistan (Sindh)

On this festive day, Sindhi parents send ladoos and chiki (Laaee) made of sesame seeds to their married daughters. The Sindhi community in India too celebrate Makar Sankranti as Tirmoori which involves parents sending sweet dishes to their daughters.[88]

Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Singapore, Canada, Australia, America and some Europe countries

On this day, the Tamil farmers and the Tamil People honour the Sun God Suriya Narayanan. This happens when the sun enters the zodiac sign of Capricorn (Makara). The Thai Pongal festival is celebrated in mid-January, or the Tamil month of Thai, to coincide with the rice harvest.[89]

See also

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External links

makar, sankranti, makar, sankranti, sanskrit, मकरसङ, romanized, makarasaṅkrānti, also, referred, uttarayana, makar, simply, sankranti, hindu, observance, festival, usually, falling, date, january, annually, this, occasion, marks, transition, from, zodiac, sagi. Makar a Sankranti Sanskrit मकरसङ क र न त romanized Makarasaṅkranti 1 also referred to as Uttarayana Makar or simply Sankranti is a Hindu observance and a festival Usually falling on the date of January 15 annually 2 3 4 this occasion marks the transition of the Sun from the zodiac of Sagittarius dhanu to Capricorn makara 5 2 6 Since the Sun has made this transition which vaguely coincides with moving from south to north the festival is dedicated to the solar deity Surya 7 and is observed to mark a new beginning 8 Many native multi day festivals are organised on this occasion all over India Makar SankrantiHoly dip by devotees in river Ganga on the occasion of Makar SankrantiAlso calledUttarayanaSankrantiTil SakraatMaghaMokor Soṅkranti MelaGhughutiBhogi SakraatPongalObserved byHindus BuddhistsLiturgical colorRedTypeReligious and cultural harvest festivalCelebrationsKite flying bonfires fairs Surya Pooja in river feast arts dance socialization Cow PoojaDateFirst day of makara masa 15 Jan in leap years 14 Jan in all other years FrequencyAnnualRelated toPongal Maghe Sankranti Magh Bihu Tusu FestivalThe festivities associated with Makar Sankranti are known by various names Makara Sankranti in Kerala Magh Bihu in Assam Maghi Saaji in Himachal Pradesh Maghi Sangrand in Punjab Maghi Sangrand or Uttarain Uttarayana in Jammu Sakrat in Haryana Sakraat in Rajasthan Sukarat in central India Pongal in Tamil Nadu Uttarayana in Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh Ghughuti in Uttarakhand Dahi Chura in Bihar Makar Sankranti in Odisha Karnataka Maharashtra Goa West Bengal also called Poush Sankranti or Mokor Sonkranti Uttar Pradesh also called Khichidi Sankranti Uttarakhand also called Uttarayani or as simply Sankranti in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana 9 10 Maghe Sankranti Nepal Songkran Thailand Thingyan Myanmar Mohan Songkran Cambodia Til Sakraat in Mithila Maghe Sankranti Nepal and Shishur Senkrath Kashmir On Makar Sankranti the Sun god is worshipped along with Vishnu and goddess Lakshmi throughout India 11 Makar Sankranti is observed with social festivities such as colourful decorations rural children going house to house singing and asking for treats in some areas 12 melas fairs dances kite flying bonfires and feasts 10 13 The Magha Mela according to Indologist Diana L Eck is mentioned in the Hindu epic Mahabharata 14 Many observers go to sacred rivers or lakes and bathe in a ceremony of thanks to the sun 14 Every twelve years the Hindus observe Makar Sankranti with Kumbha Mela one of the world s largest mass pilgrimage with an estimated 60 to 100 million people attending the event 14 15 16 At this event they say a prayer to the sun and bathe at the Prayagaraj confluence of the River Ganga and River Yamuna 14 a tradition attributed to Adi Shankaracharya 17 Makar Sankranti is a time of celebration and thanks giving and is marked by a variety of Rituals and tradition 18 Contents 1 Date Variations 1 1 Makar Sankranti and Uttar Ayana 2 Significance 3 Nomenclature and regional names 4 Regional variations and customs 4 1 Andhra Pradesh and Telangana 4 2 Assam 4 3 Bihar 4 4 Goa 4 5 Gujarat 4 6 Haryana and Delhi 4 7 Jammu 4 8 Karnataka 4 9 Maharashtra 4 10 Odisha 4 11 Punjab 4 12 Rajasthan and Western Madhya Pradesh Malwa and Nimar 4 13 Tamil Nadu Puducherry and Sri Lanka 4 14 Kerala 4 15 Tripura 4 16 Uttar Pradesh 4 17 Uttarakhand 4 18 West Bengal 5 Outside India 5 1 Bangladesh 5 2 Nepal 5 3 Pakistan Sindh 5 4 Sri Lanka Malaysia Singapore Canada Australia America and some Europe countries 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDate VariationsUT date and time of equinoxes and solstices on Earth IST date and time of Makar Sankranti 19 20 event equinox solstice equinox solstice Makar Sankrantimonth March June September December Januaryyear day time day time day time day time day IST time IST 2018 20 16 15 21 10 07 23 01 54 21 22 22 14 13 462019 20 21 58 21 15 54 23 07 50 22 04 19 14 19 502020 20 03 50 20 21 43 22 13 31 21 10 03 15 02 062021 20 09 37 21 03 32 22 19 21 21 15 59 14 08 142022 20 15 33 21 09 14 23 01 04 21 21 48 14 14 282023 20 21 25 21 14 58 23 06 50 22 03 28 14 20 432024 20 03 07 20 20 51 22 12 44 21 09 20 15 02 422025 20 09 02 21 02 42 22 18 20 21 15 03 14 08 542026 20 14 46 21 08 25 23 00 06 21 20 50 14 15 052027 20 20 25 21 14 11 23 06 02 22 02 43 14 21 092028 20 02 17 20 20 02 22 11 45 21 08 20 15 03 22Makar Sankranti is set by the solar cycle and corresponds to the exact time astronomical event of the Sun entering Capricorn and is observed on a day that usually falls on 14 January of the Gregorian calendar but on 15 January in leap years Makar Sankranti s date and time is analogous to Sidereal time of Zodiac sign of Capricorn when sun enters 21 The year is 365 24 days long and the time difference between the two consecutive instances of Makar Sankranti Sidereal time of the Zodiac sign of Capricorn is almost the same as the year We only have 365 days in a year so in the time of four years Calendar lags by one day so we need to adjust it by leap day 29 February But Makar Sankranti falls before leap day correction is made therefore on every fourth year it falls on 15 January Sidereal time of sign of Capricorn also shifts by a day due to leap year Similarly the time of Equinoxes also shifts by a day in each four years window For example Equinox of September does not fall on the same date each year nor does the winter solstice Any event related to one revolution of the earth around the sun will have this date shift within 4 years cycle Similar changes can be seen in the exact time of Solstices and equinoxes See the table how the time of the equinox and a Solstice increases and decreases in a cycle of four years 22 We can see the time difference between two consecutive winter Solstices is about 5 hours 49 minutes 59 seconds with respect to winter Solistice time and the time difference between two consecutive Mankar Sankranti is about 6 hours and 10 minutes Towards the end of the 21st Century there will be more occurrences of Makar Sankranti on 15 January in a four year cycle And Makar Sankranti the Sidereal time of the Zodiac sign of Capricorn will be on 16 January for the first in the year 2102 as 2100 will not be a leap year 23 Makar Sankranti and Uttar Ayana See also Astronomical basis of the Hindu calendar Makar Sankranti is celebrated when the Sun s ecliptic longitude becomes 270 measured from a fixed starting point which is in opposition to Spica 24 i e this is a sidereal measure Uttarayana begins when the Sun s ecliptic longitude becomes 270 measured from the Vernal equinox 25 i e this is a tropical measure While both concern a measure of 270 their starting points are different Hence Makar Sankranti and Uttarayana occur on different days On the Gregorian calendar Makar Sankranti occurs on 14 or 15 January Uttarayana starts on 21 December Due to the precession of the equinoxes the tropical zodiac i e all the equinoxes and solstices shifts by about 1 in 72 years As a result the December solstice Uttarayana is continuously but very slowly moving away from Makar Sankranti Conversely the December solstice Uttarayana and Makar Sankranti must have coincided at some time in the distant past Such a coincidence last happened 1700 years back in 291 AD 24 SignificanceEvery year Makar Sankranti is celebrated in the month of January This festival is dedicated to the Hindu religious sun god Surya 3 26 This significance of Surya is traceable to the Vedic texts particularly the Gayatri Mantra a sacred hymn of Hinduism found in its scripture named the Rigveda According to the constitution of God Our Holy Vedas and Shrimad Bhagwat Geeta if we take initiation from a Complete Guru Saint and worship Supreme God and attain emancipation By performing true scripture based way of worship one s life becomes blessed and the Earth will become heaven 27 Makara Sankranti is regarded as important for spiritual practices and accordingly people take a holy dip in rivers especially Ganga Yamuna Godavari Krishna and Kaveri The bathing is believed to result in merit or absolution of past sins They also pray to the sun and thank for their successes and prosperity 28 A shared cultural practices found amongst Hindus of various parts of India is making sticky bound sweets particularly from sesame til and a sugar base such as jaggery gud gur gul This type of sweet is a symbolism for being together in peace and joyfulness despite the uniqueness and differences between individuals 3 For most parts of India this period is a part of early stages of the Rabi crop and agricultural cycle where crops have been sown and the hard work in the fields is mostly over The time thus signifies a period of socializing and families enjoying each other s company taking care of the cattle and celebrating around bonfires in Gujarat the festival is celebrated by flying kites 3 Makara Sankranti is an important pan Indian solar festival known by different names though observed on the same date sometimes for multiple dates around the Makar Sankranti It is known as Pedda Panduga in Andhra Pradesh Makara Sankranti in Karnataka Telangana and Maharashtra Pongal in Tamil Nadu 29 Magh Bihu in Assam Magha Mela in parts of central and north India as Makar Sankranti in the west Makara Sankranti or Shankaranti in Kerala 30 and by other names 3 Nomenclature and regional namesThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A night lit up on Makar Sankranti Uttarayana Festival with Kites and Lights Makar or Makara Sankranti is celebrated in many parts of the Indian subcontinent with some regional variations It is known by different names and celebrated with different customs in different Indian states and South Asian countries Sankranti Makara Sankranti Makara Sankramanam Pedda Panduga Andhra Pradesh Telangana 31 Pusna West Bengal Assam Meghalaya 32 Suggi Habba Makara Sankramana Makara Sankranti Karnataka 33 Makar Sankranti Uttarayana or Ghughuti Uttarakhand Makar Sankranti orMakara Mela and Makara Chaula Odisha Makar Sankranti or Sankaranti or Shankaranti Kerala 34 Makar Sankranti or Dahi Chura or Til Sankranti Mithila Bihar Makar Sankranti Maghi Sankranti Haldi Kumkum or Sankranti Maharashtra Jammu Goa Nepal Hangrai Tripura 35 Pongal or Uzhavar Thirunal Tamil Nadu Sri Lanka Singapore Malaysia Uttarayana Gujarat Maghi Haryana Himachal Pradesh Punjab Magh Bihu or Bhogali Bihu Assam Shishur Saenkraat Kashmir Valley 28 Sakraat or Khichdi Uttar Pradesh and western Bihar Poush Sangkranti West Bengal Bangladesh Tila Sakrait Mithila Tirmoori PakistanIn most regions of India Sankranti festivities last for two to four days of which each day is celebrated with distinct names and rituals 36 Day 1 Maghi preceded by Lohri Bhogi Panduga Day 2 Makara Sankranti Pongal Pedda Panduga Uttarayana Magh Bihu Day 3 Mattu Pongal Kanuma Panduga Day 4 Kaanum Pongal MukkanumaRegional variations and customsThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kite flying is a tradition of Makar Sankranti in many parts of India It is celebrated differently across the Indian subcontinent Many people take a dip in places like Ganga Sagar and pray to the Sun God Surya It is celebrated with pomp in southern parts of India as Sankranti in Andhra Pradesh Telangana and Karnataka Pongal in Tamil Nadu and in Punjab as Maghi Many melas or fairs are held on Makar Sankranti the most famous being the Kumbha Mela held every 12 years at one of four holy locations namely Haridwar Prayag Prayagraj Ujjain and Nashik The Magha Mela or mini Kumbh Mela held annually at Prayag and the Gangasagar Mela held at the head of the Ganges River where it flows into the Bay of Bengal Makar Mela in Odisha Tusu Mela also called as Tusu Porab is celebrated in many parts of Jharkhand and West Bengal Poush Mela held traditionally on the seventh day of Poush at Shantiniketan in West Bengal is unrelated to this festival Mela Maghi is held in memory of the forty Sikh martyrs Chalis Mukte who gave their lives to protect Guru Gobind Singh the tenth Guru of Sikhism every year at Muktsar Sahib in Punjab Before this tradition the festival was observed and mentioned by Guru Amar Das the third Guru of Sikhism 37 Feast of Makar Sankranti Andhra Pradesh and Telangana The festival Sankranti is celebrated for four days in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana 38 Telugu women decorate the entrance of their homes by geometric patterns drawn using colored rice flour called Muggu Day 1 Bhogi Day 2 Sankranti the main festival day Day 3 Kanuma Day 4 MukkanumaBhogiBhogi is the first day of the four day festival It is celebrated with a bonfire with logs of wood other solid fuels and wooden furniture at home that are no longer useful In the evening a ceremony called Bhogi Pallu fruits of the harvest such as regi pallu and sugarcane are collected along with flowers of the season Money is often placed into a mixture of treats and is poured over children The children then collect the money and sweet fruits SankrantiThe second and main day of the four day festival and is dedicated to the Hindu god Surya 39 The day marks the start of the Uttarayana when the sun enters the 10th house of the zodiac Makara 40 It is commonly called as Pedda Panduga Big festival in the Andhra Pradesh state 41 Ariselu a traditional sweet dish is offered to the god KanumaThe third day of the four day festival it is dedicated to the cattle and other domestic animals The cattle are decorated especially cows they are offered bananas a special meal and worshipped 42 On this day popular community sport Kodi Pandem will begun playing until the next one to two days especially in the Coastal Andhra region of Andhra Pradesh 43 MukkanumaIt is the fourth and last day of the four day festival Many families hold reunions on this day Colorful floor artwork muggulu decorate entrances and streets during Sankranti Assam A Buffalo fight held at Ranthali in Nagaon District of Assam on the occasion of Magh bihu Magh Bihu also called Bhogali Bihu Bihu of eating foods and enjoyment or Maghar Domahi is a harvest festival celebrated in Assam India which marks the end of harvesting season in the month of Maagha January February 44 It is the Assam celebration of Makar Sankranti with feasting lasting for a week 45 The festival is marked by feasts and bonfires 46 Young people erect makeshift huts known as Meji and Bhelaghar from bamboo leaves and thatch and in Bhelaghar they eat the food prepared for the feast and then burn the huts the next morning 47 The celebrations also feature traditional Assamese games such as tekeli bhonga pot breaking and buffalo fighting 48 Magh Bihu celebrations start on the last day of the previous month the month of Pooh usually the 29th of Pooh and usually 14 January and is the only day of Magh Bihu in modern times earlier the festival would last for the whole month of Magh and so the name Magh Bihu 49 The night before is Uruka 28th of Pooh when people gather around a bonfire cook dinner and make merry During Magh Bihu people of Assam make cakes of rice with various names such as Shunga Pitha Til Pitha etc and some other sweets of coconut called Laru or Laskara A traditional sweet sesame jaggery based ladoo exchanged and eaten on Makar Sankranti Bihar It is popularly known as Sakraat or Khichdi in western Bihar and Til Sakraat or Dahi Chura in rest of Bihar where people usually eat Dahi and Chura Flattened Rice sweets made of Til Sesame seeds and Chini Sugar Gud Jaggery such as Tilkut Tilwa Til ke Ladoo etc In the state the crops harvested around the time are Sesame Seeds Paddy etc Goa Known as Sankrant in Goa and like in the rest of the country people distribute sweets in the form of granules of sugar coated till pulses among family members and friends Newly married women offer five sunghat or small clay pots with black beaded threads tied around them to the deity These pots are filled with newly harvested food grains and are offered with betel leaves and areca nut 50 Its observance takes place on a rather subdued note unlike major festivals of the region like Ganesh chaturthi Gujarat Main article International Kite Festival in Gujarat Uttarayan Uttarayana as Makar Sankranti is called in Gujarati is a major festival in the state of Gujarat 51 which lasts for two days 14 January is Uttarayana 15 January is Vasi Uttarayana Stale Uttarayana 52 Gujarati people keenly await this festival to fly kites called patang Kites for Uttarayana are made of special light weight paper and bamboo and are mostly rhombus shaped with central spine and a single bow The string often contains abrasives to cut down other people s kites In Gujarat from December through to Makar Sankranti people start enjoying Uttarayana Undhiyu spicy baked mix of winter vegetables and chikkis made from til sesame seeds peanuts and jaggery are the special festival recipes savoured on this day The Hindu Sindhi community in western regions of India that is also found in southeastern parts of Pakistan celebrate Makar Sankranti as Tirmoori On this day parents sending sweet dishes to their daughters 53 Haryana and Delhi Sakraant in Haryana and Delhi rural areas is celebrated with traditional Hindu rituals of North India similar to Western UP and border areas of Rajasthan and Punjab This includes ritual purification by taking the holy dip in rivers especially in Yamuna or at sacred ponds such as ancient sarovars Kurukshetra and at local tirtha ponds associated with the ancestral guardian founder deity of the village called Jathera or Dhok dahak in Sanskrit or fire in villages to wash away sins People prepare kheer churma halva with desi ghee and distribute til gud sesame and jaggery laddoos or chikkis Brothers of married woman visits her home with a gift pack called Sindhara or Sidha of wood and warm clothing for her and her husband s family Women give gift to their in laws called Manana Women congregate in the nearby havelis to sing Haryani folk songs and exchange gifts 54 Jammu In Jammu Makar Sankranti is celebrated as Uttrain derived from Sanskrit Uttarayana 55 56 Alternatively terms Attrain or Attrani have also been used to describe this festival A day before is celebrated as Lohri by Dogras to commemorate end of Poh Pausha month 57 It is also beginning of the Magha month as per Hindu Solar Calendar hence also known as Maghi Sangrand Sankranti of Magh month Among Dogras there is a tradition of Mansana charity of Khichdi of Maah Dal Khichdi of Maah di Dal is also prepared on this day and that is why this day is also referred to as Khichdi wala Parva There is also a tradition of sending Khichdi amp other food items to house of married daughters Fairs are organised on holy places and pligrimages on this day 58 Dhagwal in Hiranagar tehsil is known for Fair on Makar Sankranti and Janamashtami 59 People of Jammu also take holy bath in Devika river and pilgrimages like Uttar Behni and Purmandal on this occasion 60 This day is also celebrated as birth anniversary of Baba Ambo ji a local deity of Jammu region 61 At Vasuki temple of Bhaderwah of Jammu the idols of Vasuki Nag are covered on Magh Sankranti and they are uncovered only after three months on Vaisakha Sankranti 62 63 Karnataka Mysuru Decorated Cows January 2017 This is the Suggi ಸ ಗ ಗ or harvest festival for farmers of Karnataka On this auspicious day girls wear new clothes to visit near and dear ones with a Sankranti offering in a plate and exchange the same with other families This ritual is called Ellu Birodhu Here the plate would normally contain Ellu white sesame seeds mixed with fried groundnuts neatly cut dry coconut and fine cut bella jaggery The mixture is called Ellu Bella ಎಳ ಳ ಬ ಲ ಲ The plate contains shaped sugar candy moulds Sakkare Acchu ಸಕ ಕರ ಅಚ ಚ with a piece of sugarcane There is a saying in Kannada ellu bella thindu olle maathadi that translates to eat the mixture of sesame seeds and jaggery and speak only good This festival signifies the harvest of the season since sugarcane is predominant in these parts Ellu Bella Ellu Unde bananas sugarcane red berries haldi and kumkum and small gift items useful in everyday lives are often exchanged among women in Karnataka During the occasion newly married women give away bananas for five years to married women from the first year of her marriage Kite flying drawing rangolis giving away of red berries known as Yalchi kai are some of the intrinsic parts of the festival Another vital ritual in rural Karnataka is the display of decorated cows and bulls and their procession is done and they are also made to cross a fire and this custom is known as Kichchu Haayisuvudu 64 65 Maharashtra Multicolored sugar halwa surrounded by til gul sesame and jaggery ladoos These exchanged and eaten on Makar Sankranti in Maharashtra In Maharashtra on Makar Sankranti day people exchange til gul sweetmeats made from sesame seeds and jaggery A famous line associated with this joyous occasion is til gul ghya god god bola Eat this sesame and jaggery and speak sweet words Tilacha halwa sugar granules are also offered as prasad in the Devghar Prayer room after seeking blessings Gulachi poli is a popular flat bread stuffed with shredded jaggery and ground til in pure ghee are enjoyed for lunch as well as dinner Married women invite friends family members and celebrate Haldi Kunku Guests are given til gul and some small gift as a part of the ritual 66 On this day Hindu women and men make it a point to wear black clothes As Sakranti falls in the winter months of the region wearing black adds to the body warmth 66 This is an essential reason behind wearing black which is otherwise barred on festival days As per another legend Lord Surya forgave his son Shani and his son visited him on Sankranti 67 That is the essential reason why people distribute sweets and urge them to let go of any negative or angry feelings Also newly married women offer five sunghat or small clay pots with black beaded threads tied around them to the Shakti deity These pots are filled with newly harvested food grains and are offered with betel leaves and areca nut Its observance takes place on a rather subdued note unlike major festivals of the region like Ganesh Chaturthi Odisha The festival is known as Makara Sankranti in Odisha 68 where people prepare makara chaula Odia ମକର ଚ ଉଳ uncooked newly harvested rice banana coconut jaggery sesame rasagola Khai Liaa and chhena puddings for naivedya to gods and goddesses The withdrawing winter entails a change in food habits and intake of nourishing and rich food Therefore this festival holds traditional cultural significance It is astronomically important for devotees who worship the sun god at the great Konark temple with fervour and enthusiasm as the sun starts its annual swing northwards 69 According to various Indian calendars the Sun s movement changes and the days from this day onwards become lengthier and warmer and so the Sun God is worshiped on this day as a great benefactor Many individuals at the start of the day perform a ritual bath while fasting 69 Makara Mela Fun fair is observed at Dhabaleswar in Cuttack Hatakeshwar at Atri in Khordha Makara Muni temple in Balasore and near deities in each district of Odisha In Puri special rituals are carried out at the temple of Lord Jagannath 69 In Mayurbhanj Keonjhar Kalahandi Koraput and Sundargarh where the tribal population is greater the festival is celebrated with great joy They celebrate this festival with great enthusiasm singing dancing and generally having an enjoyable time This Makara Sankranti celebration is next to the Odia traditional new year Maha Vishuva Sankranti which falls in mid April Tribal groups celebrate with traditional dancing eating their particular dishes sitting together and by lighting bonfires Punjab Main article Maghi Mela In Punjab Makar Sankranti is celebrated as Maghi which is a religious and cultural festival Bathing in a river in the early hours on Maghi is important Hindus light lamps with sesame oil as this is supposed to give prosperity and drive away all sins A major mela is held at Sri Muktsar Sahib on Maghi which commemorates a historical event in Sikh history 70 Rajasthan and Western Madhya Pradesh Malwa and Nimar Makar Sankrati or Sakraat in the Rajasthani language 71 is one of the major festivals in the state of Rajasthan The day is celebrated with special Rajasthani delicacies and sweets such as pheeni either with sweet milk or sugar syrup dipped til patti gajak kheer ghevar pakodi puwa and til laddoo 72 Specially the women of this region observe a ritual in which they give any type of object related to household make up or food to 13 married women The first Sankranti experienced by a married woman is of significance as she is invited by her parents and brothers to their houses with her husband for a big feast People invite friends and relatives specially their sisters and daughters to their home for special festival meals called as Sankrant Bhoj People give out many kind of small gifts such as til gud jaggery fruits dry khichadi etc to Brahmins or the needy ones Kite flying is traditionally observed as a part of this festival 73 On this occasion the sky in Jaipur and Hadoti regions is filled with kites and youngsters engage in contests trying to cut each other s strings 73 Tamil Nadu Puducherry and Sri Lanka Main article Pongal festival The Tamil festival of Pongal coincides with Makar Sankranti and celebrates Surya It is a four day festival in South India and Sri Lanka Day 1 Bhogi Pandigai ப க பண ட க Day 2 Thai Pongal த ப ங கல Day 3 Maattu Pongal ம ட ட ப ப ங கல Day 4 Kaanum Pongal க ண ம ப ங கல The festival is celebrated four days from the last day of the Tamil month Margazhi to the third day of the Tamil month Thai Pausha BhogiThe first day of festival is Bhogi ப க It is celebrated on the last day of Margazhi 74 by throwing away and destroying old clothes and materials by setting them on fire marking the end of the old and the emergence of the new In villages there will be a simple ceremony of Kappu Kattu kappu means secure The neem leaves are kept along the walls and roof of the houses This is to eliminate evil forces Thai Pongal A Tamil Hindu girl in traditional dress for Pongal The second day of festival is Thai Pongal or simply Pongal It is celebrated by boiling rice with fresh milk and jaggery in new pots which are later topped with brown sugar cashew nuts and raisins early in the morning and allowing it to boil over the vessel This tradition gives Pongal its name The moment the rice boils over and bubbles out of the vessel the tradition is to shout ப ங கல ப ங கல Ponggalo Ponggal and blow the sangu a conch a custom practised to announce it was going to be a year blessed with good tidings Then new boiled rice is offered to the Sun god during sunrise as a prayer which symbolises thanks to the sun for providing prosperity It is later served to the people in the house for the ceremony People prepare savouries and sweets such as vadai murukku payasam and visit each other and exchange greetings Maattu Pongal Jallikattu or taming the bull is an ancient Pongal tradition The third day of festival is Maattu Pongal ம ட ட ப ப ங கல It is for offering thanks to cattle as they help farmers in agriculture On this day the cattle are decorated with paint flowers and bells They are allowed to roam free and fed sweet rice and sugar cane Some people decorate the horns with gold or other metallic covers In some places Jallikattu or taming the wild bull contest is the main event of this day and this is mostly seen in the villages Kaanum PongalThe fourth day of the festival is Kaanum Pongal க ண ம ப ங கல the word kaanum means to view During this day people visit their relatives friends to enjoy the festive season It is a day to thank relatives and friends for their support in the harvest It started as a farmers festival called as Uzhavar Thirunaal in Tamil Kolam க லம decorations are made in front of the house during Thai Pongal festival Kerala In Kerala this is called as Sankranti or Makara Sankranti In Malabar villages this used to be celebrated as the victory over a demon In Sabarimala on this day the Makaravilakku is lit Tripura The Tripuri is the promoter of Hangrai festivals They have first introduced this festival of immersing of ancestors remains in the holy river Since then it was adopted by other groups in India and popularized over the years Mythology inform us that when the world was just created by Lord Siva or Sibrai there was only the grassland and nothing was present The god then created an egg to produce a human being The egg hatched to give birth to a human being creating a big bang He crawled out of eggshells and looked around for anyone like him but he found none There was total silence peace tranquility and harmony on the earth He was frightened by seeing this scenario of earth He remained near the eggshell most of the time and went back near to the empty eggshell went inside of half of the shell and covered it with another one and hid there The almighty God was upset by this development Years later he created another egg and after ten months it hatched There was a big bang when it hatched that shook the earth and gave birth to another human He was very courageous and powerful as soon as he came out of the human eggshell he started shouting and announced to the whole of the world I am the first to be born in this earth I am the eldest on the earth no one is elder to me in this earth He named himself Subrai and declared to the whole of the earth that he is the ruler of this earth and king of this universe Hearing the big bang Hangrai got more frightened closed his eyes and silently remained inside the shell But when he heard the voice like his own he came out of his shell and met Subrai At this Subrai told that he is older than Hangrai since then Subrai became the elder brother of Hangrai and people knew them as it is Thousand of years later when they grew older the time had come to leave this world As Hangrai grew older than Subrai one day he felt sick very seriously Hangrai was on his death bed Subrai was taking care of him Then god came before them and said Among both of you Hangrai is elder than Subrai I only know this because I have created both of you Hangrai will leave this earth very soon Subrai will do all necessary rituals to cremate the body of Hangrai And god disappeared from there Then Subrai cried like a baby touching the feet of Hangrai saying Elder brother I have treated you like a younger brother for thousands of years forgive me for my wrongdoing unto you Hangrai said I have done so and touched his head as gesture of forgiving and blessing unto him and then breadth for his last After the death of Hangrai his younger brother Subrai cremated his body and did all the rituals and immerged Hangrai s remaining in the holy water of the river on the last day of Pousa month Since then people observed these rituals and festivals every year and continued to this day That is why the day is named Hangrai which has later adopted by other ethnic groups of people of India Every year on the day of Hangrai the Tripuri people observe it in grand pomp and show In every house of Tripuri preparation for Hangrai starts two three days before Houses are cleaned washed whitewashed All the utensils clothes articles are cleaned homes are decorated Different types of Tripura cakes dishes and drinks are prepared near and dear ones relatives are invited for a feast Uttar Pradesh The festival is known as Kicheri in Purvanchal and Awadh parts of Uttar Pradesh and involves ritual bathing 75 Over two million people gather at their respective sacred places for this holy bathing such as Prayagraj and Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh and Haridwar in Uttarakhand 76 The day at a domestic household begins by taking ritual bath before sunrise doing ritualistic prayers to the rising Sun It also includes pledging for and donating Food clothing and money to Brahmin s called Purohita It is followed by generous gifting of Food Clothing jewelleries and money to female relatives like to married Daughters Sisters and Daughter in Laws and their families Sesame seeds Jaggery chiura and Yogurt are eaten post the prayers This is followed by Khichdi as the next meal hence the vernacular name of the Festival Uttarakhand Makar Sankranti is a popular festival in Uttarakhand It known by various names in the different parts of the state such as Uttarayani Khichri Sangrand Pusyodia Ghughutia Ghughuti Tyar Kale Kauva Makrain Makraini Gholda Gwalda and Chunyatyar 77 Bagnath Temple in Bageshwar during the Uttarayani Fair 2018 In the Kumaon region of Uttarakhand Makar Sankranti also called as Ghughuti घ घ त or Ghughuti Tyar or Ghughutia or Kale Kauva or Uttarayani is celebrated with great gusto The famous Uttarayani mela fair is held in Bageshwar town each year in the month of January on the occasion of Makar Sankrati 78 79 According to the Almora Gazetteer even in the early twentieth century the annual Uttarayani mela at Bageshwar was visited by approximately 15 000 people and was the largest fair of Kumaon division 80 The religious ritual of the Uttarayani mela consists of bathing before daybreak at the confluence of Saryu and Gomati followed by an offering of water to Lord Shiva inside the Bagnath Temple 81 82 Those who are more religiously disposed continue this practice for three days in succession which is known as Trimaghi 81 On this day people also give khichdi a dish made by mixing pulses and rice in charity take ceremonial dips in holy rivers participate in Uttarayani fairs and offer deep fried sweetmeats consisting of flour and jaggery to crows and other birds as a way to pay homage to the departed souls of their ancestors 83 West Bengal A feast at Poush Sankranti In West Bengal Sankranti also known as Poush Sankranti 84 named after the Bengali month in which it falls last date of that month is celebrated as a harvest festival Poush Parbon Bengali প ষ প র বণ It falls on 14 January on the Western calendar The freshly harvested paddy and the date palm syrup in the form of Khejurer Gur Bengali খ জ র র গ ড and Patali Bengali প ট ল is used in the preparation of a variety of traditional Bengali sweets made with rice flour coconut milk and khejurer gur date palm jaggery and known as Pitha Bengali প ঠ All sections of society participate in a three day festival that begins on the day before Sankranti and ends on the day after The Goddess Lakshmi is usually worshipped on the day of Sankranti In the Himalayan regions of Darjeeling the festival is as known as Magey Sakrati It is distinctly associated with the worship of Lord Shiva Traditionally people bathe at sunrise and then commence their pooja Elsewhere many people take a dip in places like Ganga Sagar the point where the river Ganges meets the Bay of Bengal 85 Ganga Sagar falls in West Bengal Outside India The festival is known as Maghe Sakranti by Hindus in Nepal and above is a traditional basket dance festivity to celebrate it Bangladesh Main article Shakrain Shakrain is an annual celebration of winter in Bangladesh observed with the flying of kites 86 Nepal Maghe Sankranti is a Nepalese festival observed on the first of Magha in the Vikram Sambat B S calendar about 14 January Tharu people celebrate this particular day as new year It is also regarded as the major government declared annual festival of the Magar community 87 Observant Hindus take ritual baths during this festival These include Sankhamul on the Bagmati near Patan In the Gandaki Narayani river basin at Triveni Devghat near Chitwan Valley and Ridi on the Kaligandaki and in the Koshi River basin at Dolalghat on the Sun Koshi Festive foods like laddoo ghee and sweet potatoes are distributed Pakistan Sindh On this festive day Sindhi parents send ladoos and chiki Laaee made of sesame seeds to their married daughters The Sindhi community in India too celebrate Makar Sankranti as Tirmoori which involves parents sending sweet dishes to their daughters 88 Sri Lanka Malaysia Singapore Canada Australia America and some Europe countries On this day the Tamil farmers and the Tamil People honour the Sun God Suriya Narayanan This happens when the sun enters the zodiac sign of Capricorn Makara The Thai Pongal festival is celebrated in mid January or the Tamil month of Thai to coincide with the rice harvest 89 See alsoAstronomical basis of the Hindu calendar List of Hindu festivals Jallikattu List of harvest festivals UttarayanaReferences www wisdomlib org 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An Encyclopedia of Holidays Festivals Solemn Observances and Spiritual Commemorations ABC CLIO p 547 ISBN 978 1 59884 205 0 Fieldhouse Paul 17 April 2017 Food Feasts and Faith An Encyclopedia of Food Culture in World Religions 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 349 ISBN 978 1 61069 412 4 After a 100 years Makar Sankranti gets a new date The Hindustan Times 14 Jan 2017 a b Nikita Desai 2010 A Different Freedom Kite Flying in Western India Culture and Tradition Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 30 33 ISBN 978 1 4438 2310 4 Makar Sankranti 2021 Know Why Makar Sankranti Festival Is Celebrated NDTV 11 January 2021 Kailash Puri Eleanor Nesbitt 2013 Pool of Life The Autobiography of a Panjabi Agony Aunt Sussex Academic Press pp 34 35 ISBN 978 1 78284 067 1 Kapila Vatsyayan 1987 Traditions of Indian folk dance Clarion Books pp 192 193 ISBN 978 0 85655 253 3 a b c d Diana L Eck 2013 India A Sacred Geography Random House pp 152 154 ISBN 978 0 385 53192 4 Kumbha Mela The Largest Gathering on Earth Alan Taylor The Atlantic 14 January 2013 Biggest Gathering On Earth Begins In India Kumbha Mela May Draw 100 Million Mark Memmott NPR Washington DC 14 January 2013 Roshan Dalal 2011 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 341517 6 see Kumbh Mela entry Makar Sankranti United States Naval Observatory 4 January 2018 Earth s Seasons and Apsides Equinoxes Solstices Perihelion and Aphelion Archived from the original on 24 December 2017 Retrieved 18 September 2018 Solstices and Equinoxes 2001 to 2100 AstroPixels com 20 February 2018 Retrieved 21 December 2018 sun enters Capricorn zodiac Solstices Equinoxes and Leap Years Daruwalla Chirag Bejan 10 January 2022 Makar Sankranti 2022 Know how Uttarayan 2022 will impact your zodiac sign The Times of India Retrieved 14 January 2022 a b Mercier Raymond 2007 Bilimoria Purushottama Melukote Sridhar eds Traditions of Science Cross cultural Perspectives Essays in honour of B V Subbarayappa New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers See discussion of Citra pakṣa This is the same as saying when the Sun reaches the December solstice point Beteille Andre 1964 A Note on the Pongal Festival in a Tanjore Village Man 64 73 75 see discussion of Makar Sankranti doi 10 2307 2797924 JSTOR 2797924 Know Which Practice Can Clear off Sins on Makar Sankranti 2022 SA News Channel 11 January 2022 Retrieved 14 January 2022 a b Tumuluru Kamal Kumar 2015 hi me rpota Hindu Prayers Gods and Festivals Partridge Publishing Sankranti in India News18 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sankranti in India News18 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sankranti 2022 ప డ గ ఒక కట వ డ కల అన క మకర స క ర త ప రత య కత ఇద News18 Telugu in Telugu Retrieved 14 January 2022 Assam History Map Population amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 14 January 2022 Roy Nikita Makar Sankranti In Karnataka Date Significance And Celebration Of Suggi Habba www india com Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sankranti in India News18 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2022 https www india com viral 11 different names of makar sankranti across the world 861293 Makar Sankranti drikpanchang com Retrieved 15 January 2020 Jawandha Nahar Singh 1 January 2010 Glimpses of Sikhism Sanbun Publishers Rajat Gupta Nishant Singh Ishita Kirar amp Mahesh Kumar Bairwa 2015 Hospitality amp Tourism Management Vikas Publishing House 1 A Mani Pravin Prakash and Shanthini Selvarajan 2017 Mathew Mathews ed Singapore Ethnic Mosaic The Many Cultures One People World Scientific Publishing Company Singapore pp 207 211 ISBN 978 981 323 475 8 Vijaya Ramaswamy 2017 Historical Dictionary of the Tamils Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 274 275 ISBN 978 1 5381 0686 0 The Speciality of Sankranti The Hindu 11 January 2016 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 13 January 2022 According to James Stewart this reverence for cattle as Kiri amma is common in Tamil Hindus in India and Sri Lanka as well as Sinhalese Buddhists James Stewart 2015 Vegetarianism and Animal Ethics in Contemporary Buddhism Taylor amp Francis pp 126 128 ISBN 978 1 317 62397 7 Kodi Pandalu TV9 Telugu in Telugu 20 December 2021 Retrieved 13 January 2022 Celebrating Nature s Bounty Magh Bihu EF News International Archived from the original on 17 January 2012 Retrieved 14 January 2012 Sharma S P Seema Gupta 2006 Fairs amp Festivals of India Pustak Mahal p 25 ISBN 978 81 223 0951 5 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1987 p 137 ISBN 978 0 85229 571 7 Bihu being celebrated with joy across Assam The Hindu 14 January 2005 Archived from the original on 4 February 2005 Retrieved 2 May 2009 Bonfire feast amp lots more Jorhat celebrations promise traditional joy this Magh Bihu The Telegraph 12 January 2008 Archived from the original on 15 June 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2009 Assamese calendar Of sesame laddoos and prayers for husbands Times of India The Times of India Desai Anjali H 2007 India Guide Gujarat India Guide Publications Vyas Rajnee 16 January 2019 Welcome to 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ti in Hindi Narendra Pablisiṅga Hausa Jasta Hariram 1982 Bharata meṃ Nagapuja aura parampara in Hindi Sanmarga Prakasana Shankranti Sankranti Pongal Makara Shankranti Harvest festival New Year Karnataka com 13 January 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Makara sankranti india com 15 January 2018 Retrieved 9 August 2021 a b Makar Sankranti The Way It Is Celebrated in States Across India News18 14 January 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Satpathy Kriti Saraswat 12 January 2017 Makar Sankranti 2017 How is Sankranti celebrated in Maharashtra India News Breaking News India com Retrieved 15 January 2021 Goyal Ashutosh 2014 RBS Visitors Guide India Odisha Odisha Travel Guide Data and Expo India Pvt Ltd 4 a b c Times News Network TNN 15 January 2014 Makar Sankranti observed with pomp in state The Times of India Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 Makar Sankranti What When Why How To Celebrate All Indian Festivals 7 November 2021 Retrieved 8 November 2021 Krishnan Rukmini 10 January 2014 Makar Sankranti Celebrations DNA Diligent Media Corporation Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 Makar Sankranti Food Ifood TV Archived from the original on 16 January 2014 a b Press Trust of India PTI 14 January 2014 Makar Sankranti celebrations Sky lanterns dot the sky The Times of India Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 Eastern World 16 January 2019 via Google Books Bhalla Kartar Singh 2005 Let s Know Festivals of India Star Publications 5 Traditional fervour marks Makar Sankranti The Times of India 15 January 2012 Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 eUttaranchal Rediscover Uttarakhand Tourism Culture amp People euttaranchal com 6 March 2013 Retrieved 18 January 2020 Singh S K Nag P eds 1999 Tourism and trekking in Nainital Region New Delhi Concept Pub ISBN 978 81 7022 769 4 पत त प वन सरय ग मत नद क स गम ग दग म क त ह आ Amar Ujala Bureau in Hindi Bageshwar Amar Ujala 26 December 2016 Retrieved 24 May 2017 Walton H G 1911 Almora A Gazetter Allahabad The Government Press United Provinces pp Appendix XXIV a b Pant Shiva Darshan 1988 The Social Economy of the Himalayans Based on a Survey in the Kumaon Himalayas Mittal Publications p 197 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Choliya dances enthrall at Bageshwar mela Almora Harsha S TNN 14 June 2016 Retrieved 15 December 2018 Ghughuti The Mouth Watering Festival of Kumaon Ghughuti Festival Uttarakhand Stories Connect to Uttarakhand with eUttarakhand and Share Stories 2 November 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2020 West Bengal District Gazetteers Calcutta and Howrah State editor West Bengal District Gazetteers 16 January 1972 via Google Books Devotees throng Gangasagar on Makara Sankranti The Hindu Retrieved 15 January 2012 Shakrain A festival of Kites and Fireworks 22 January 2016 Magar Tharu communities observe Maghi festival in pictures kathmandupost com Retrieved 27 September 2022 Reejhsinghani Aroona 2004 Essential Sindhi Cookbook Penguin Books India 6 Harvest Festival in Sri Lanka Ulavar Thirunaal Pongal Festival pongalfestival org External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Makar Sankranti Wikiquote has quotations related to Makar Sankranti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Makar Sankranti amp oldid 1136363946, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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