Vat Purnima | |
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Also called | Vat Savitri |
Observed by | Married woman,[1] particularly in Mithila, Maharashtra, Goa, Gujarat, Uttarakhand, Bihar |
Type | Hindu |
Begins | 13th date in the month of Jyeshtha[2] |
Ends | 15th date in the month of Jyeshtha[2] |
Date | Jyeshtha Shukla Trayodashi, Jyeshtha Shukla Chaturdashi, Jyeshtha Purnima |
Frequency | Annual |
Vat Purnima (=vaṭapūrṇimā, also called Vat Savitri Vrat) is a Hindu celebration observed by married women in North India and in the Western Indian states of Maharashtra, Goa, Gujarat. On this Purnima (full moon) during the three days of the month of Jyeshtha in the Hindu calendar (which falls in May–June in the Gregorian calendar), a married woman marks her love for her husband by tying a ceremonial thread around a banyan tree. The celebration is based on the legend of Savitri and Satyavan as narrated in the epic Mahabharata.