| Month | Ekadashi Name | Date (2003) | Pradosh (Sunset) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Chaitra | Kamada | April 12 | April 13 | | Chaitra | Varuthini | April 27 | April 28 | | Vaishakha | Mohini | May 12 | May 13 | | Vaishakha | Apara | May 27 | May 28 | | Jyeshtha | Nirjala | June 11 | June 12 | | Ashadha | Yogini | July 10 | July 11 | | Shravana | Putrada | August 9 | August 10 | | Shravana | Aja | August 23 | August 24 | | Bhadrapada | Parivartini | Sept 7 | Sept 8 | | Ashwina | Indira | Sept 22 | Sept 23 | | Kartika | Pasankusha | Oct 21 | Oct 22 | | Kartika | Rama | Nov 5 | Nov 6 | | Margashirsha | Utpanna | Dec 5 | Dec 6 |
✅ Gudi Padwa: 2 April 2003 ✅ Ganesh Chaturthi: 31 August 2003 ✅ Diwali: 25 October 2003 marathi calendar 2003
Physically dated (unless you are using it for the 2025 reuse cycle). | Month | Ekadashi Name | Date (2003)
The follows the Shaka Samvat 1925 (named Subhanu ) and Vikram Samvat 2060 ( Durmukha ). As a lunar-based system, it tracks the movement of the moon through 12 months, starting with Gudi Padwa on April 2, 2003, which marked the beginning of the Hindu New Year for the people of Maharashtra. Structure of the 2003 Calendar Structure of the 2003 Calendar The Marathi Calendar
The Marathi Calendar 2003 is a compact cultural timekeeper that blends traditional Panchang elements with everyday practicality. At a glance it feels both familiar and nostalgically rooted — ideal for anyone who remembers consulting a wall calendar before smartphones became universal.
(Note: exact month start/end shifts by 1 day depending on local sunrise and lunisolar adjustments.)