Marathi Calendar 1993 Jun 2026

* March 1993. Amalaki Ekadashi. March 4, 1993, Thursday. Phalguna, Shukla Ekadashi. Gauna Amalaki Ekadashi. March 5, 1993, Friday. Drik Panchang

Today, finding a “Marathi Calendar 1993” is an act of archival nostalgia. It evokes a pre-liberalization India—a time when Doordarshan was the only TV channel, when the Sakal or Loksatta newspaper came with a free calendar, and when a phone call required a visit to a PCO. The paper itself, often printed on thick, saffron-tinted sheets by presses in Prabhadevi or Sadashiv Peth , smells of a bygone manufacturing era. The advertisements on its borders—for Godrej cupboards, Vicco turmeric cream, or Bajaj scooters—are now artifacts of aspirational middle-class India. Marathi Calendar 1993

In 1993, the Marathi Panchang (almanac) dictated everything from the sowing season for farmers to the muhurta for weddings in bustling cities like Pune, Mumbai, and Nagpur. Unlike the static Gregorian calendar, the Marathi calendar changes significantly each year, making a vintage copy or a digital recreation of the 1993 version a unique resource. * March 1993

The year 1993 itself lends the calendar historical gravity. Just months earlier, in December 1992, the Babri Masjid demolition had sent shockwaves across India. Maharashtra, with its cosmopolitan capital Mumbai, witnessed communal riots in January 1993. The Marathi calendar, therefore, hanging in homes during that tense spring, became a quiet symbol of continuity and normalcy. It marked the Holi festival (March 6-7, 1993) that year as a day of colors, even as the city tried to heal. Phalguna, Shukla Ekadashi

August 15, 1993 Marathi Daily Panchang for New Delhi, NCT, India

In 1993, the major Marathi festivals fell on the following Gregorian dates:

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