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Somvati Amavasya

Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics
Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics Image: Wikimedia Commons. Nagarjun Kandukuru / CC BY 2.0

Overview

Somvati Amavasya is the term used in the Hindu calendar to denote a no-moon day (Amavasya) that falls on a Monday (Somvar). Within Hindu religious practice, the conjunction of these two cycles — the lunar phase associated with the new moon and the weekday associated with Lord Shiva and the Moon — is generally regarded as a notably auspicious occasion for ritual observances such as bathing in sacred rivers, charitable giving, ancestral remembrance and vrata (votive observance). The day does not occur every month; rather, it appears only when the lunar reckoning aligns Amavasya tithi with a Monday, and the frequency therefore varies from year to year.

This draft is intended as a starting body for IndiaWiki editors. It outlines neutral context, identifies sections that will require verification against authoritative sources such as Sanskrit scriptural references, regional Panchang traditions, and reliable secondary scholarship in religious studies, and avoids asserting any specific date, ritual prescription, or regional custom that cannot be confirmed from the title and cohort alone. Editors should treat all generalised statements below as starting points to be checked, refined, replaced or removed in the published article, and should expand any local, sectarian or scriptural detail only with proper citations.

Background

The Hindu lunisolar calendar divides each lunar month into two pakshas (fortnights): the Shukla Paksha, ending on Purnima (full moon), and the Krishna Paksha, ending on Amavasya (new moon). Amavasya is traditionally associated with practices relating to the pitrs (ancestors), with quietude, with certain forms of meditation, and, in some traditions, with caution regarding ritual undertakings of a celebratory nature. Monday, in turn, is widely associated in popular Hindu practice with the worship of Lord Shiva and, by name (Soma), with the Moon.

When an Amavasya tithi coincides with a Monday, the day is designated Somvati Amavasya. Editors should verify how various Dharmashastra commentaries, Puranic passages and regional almanac traditions describe the day, and how its observance differs across linguistic and sectarian communities in the Indian subcontinent and the diaspora. The exact rules for determining when a tithi "falls on" a particular weekday — typically based on whether the tithi is current at sunrise, or at another specified moment — also vary by Panchang tradition (for example, between the Purnimanta and Amanta reckonings, and between regional schools). These technical details should be presented carefully and with citation rather than generalised.

Significance

In popular Hindu observance, Somvati Amavasya is widely considered an occasion suitable for ritual bathing at tirthas (sacred bathing places), tarpana and shraddha rites for departed ancestors, fasting (vrata) by women in certain regional customs, and the worship of Lord Shiva and Parvati. Pilgrim gatherings at riverbank ghats, temple tanks and confluences are commonly reported in association with such days, although the scale and character of these gatherings differ by location and year. Editors should not assume uniformity of practice across India; observances vary substantially between, for instance, North Indian, Maharashtrian, Bengali, Odia, Tamil and Nepali traditions.

The religious literature attached to the day frequently references stories of merit accruing to those who undertake specific observances, and in some traditions the day is associated with longevity blessings, marital well-being or release from ancestral debts. The provenance of such associations — whether in Puranic narrative, regional folklore, or modern devotional literature — should be checked carefully before any claim is included. The article should distinguish between scripturally grounded statements, widely attested customs, and locally specific practices.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following list identifies areas where the published article will need careful sourcing. Each item should be confirmed through authoritative scriptural, scholarly or reliable contemporary sources before inclusion.

  • The precise calendrical rule used to determine Somvati Amavasya, including the role of sunrise, tithi overlap, and differences between Amanta and Purnimanta reckonings.
  • How frequently Somvati Amavasya occurs in a typical year, and whether this varies meaningfully between Panchang traditions. Avoid stating any specific number unless supported by a citation.
  • Scriptural references in Puranas (such as Skanda, Padma, Bhavishya or others) that may mention Somvati Amavasya, along with accurate citation of chapter and verse.
  • Regional names and variant observances across Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Odisha, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, Punjab, Nepal and the diaspora.
  • Specific vrata procedures, including the role of the peepal tree (Ashvattha) circumambulation reported in some traditions, fasting protocols, and offerings — none of which should be presented as universal.
  • The relationship of Somvati Amavasya to Pitr Paksha, Mahalaya Amavasya, Mauni Amavasya, Hariyali Amavasya and other named Amavasyas, where applicable.
  • Notable pilgrimage sites where observance is traditionally concentrated, with care taken not to overstate participation figures.
  • Any historical references in travel literature, gazetteers, or scholarly ethnography concerning the day's observance.
  • Treatment of the day in modern almanacs published by recognised religious institutions and publishers.
  • Distinctions between popular media coverage and scholarly description, particularly with regard to claims about origins or "ancient" status.

Editors are reminded that uncited claims about miraculous outcomes, fixed numbers of devotees, or guaranteed religious benefits should be paraphrased as belief rather than fact, and attributed to a clearly identified tradition or source.

Suggested structure for the final article

A balanced final article on Somvati Amavasya might be organised along the following lines, subject to editorial judgement:

  • Lead section: a concise definition of the day, its calendrical basis, and a one-line summary of why it is observed.
  • Etymology and nomenclature: the Sanskrit components Soma/Somvar and Amavasya, and any regional language variants.
  • Calendrical basis: explanation of the lunisolar calendar, tithi reckoning, and the rule for designating a Somvati Amavasya, with citations to almanac authorities.
  • Religious significance: scriptural references, theological associations with Shiva and the ancestors, and the framing of the day in Dharmashastra and Puranic literature.
  • Observances and rituals: with sub-sections by region or tradition, clearly distinguishing widely shared from locally specific practices.
  • Pilgrimage and gatherings: noted sites and practices, presented descriptively and without exaggerated figures.
  • Cultural references: appearances in literature, cinema, devotional music or contemporary media, where verifiable.
  • See also, References, and External links.

Editors may consider adding an infobox summarising the day's calendrical attributes, but should avoid populating fields with figures or dates that cannot be sourced.

Editorial notes

This draft has been prepared without reference to any specific year, location, organisation, individual or numerical claim. Reviewers should:

  • Replace generalised statements with sourced, attributed content wherever possible.
  • Use neutral, encyclopaedic register and Indian English spelling and usage.
  • Avoid promotional language, devotional exhortation, or assertions of religious efficacy in the editorial voice; such material should be attributed to identifiable traditions or texts.
  • Cross-check transliterations of Sanskrit and regional language terms, ideally using IAST where appropriate, and provide gloss for technical vocabulary.
  • Consider WP:RS-style sourcing standards: prefer peer-reviewed scholarship, established religious publishers and recognised almanacs over user-generated content and unverified devotional websites.
  • Be especially cautious with claims about antiquity, universality and crowd sizes, all of which are commonly overstated in popular sources.
  • Where regional variation exists, present it as variation rather than contradiction, and avoid privileging one tradition as normative.

Once verified content is added, this scaffolding may be progressively removed so that the final published article reads as a coherent encyclopaedic entry rather than as a checklist.

References

To be supplied by editors. Suggested categories of references include: standard editions and translations of relevant Puranas; Dharmashastra digests; recognised regional Panchang publications; peer-reviewed studies in Hindu calendrical practice and ritual; reputable encyclopaedias of Hinduism; and reliable contemporary news or ethnographic reporting where pilgrimage practices are described. All citations should follow IndiaWiki referencing conventions, and online sources should be archived where feasible.