Haridwar · Uttarakhand
Maha Shivaratri 2029in Haridwar
Exact puja times & muhurta computed for Haridwar coordinates (29.95°N, 78.16°E)
Key Timings
Festival Date
Sunday, February 11, 2029
Nishita Kaal Puja
00:05 – 00:56
Sunrise
07:00
Sunset
18:02
Why This Date?
Nishita Kaal (Midnight) Rule: Observed on the day when the Chaturdashi tithi prevails during Nishita Kaal (the 8th muhurta of the night, ~11:40 PM – 12:28 AM). Shiva manifested at midnight, making this the sacred observation window.
Tithi Determination Rule
The tithi must prevail during Nishita Kaal (midnight). Used for festivals like Maha Shivaratri and Janmashtami.
Source: Dharmasindhu & Nirnayasindhu – classical Kala-Vyapti system
Puja Vidhi
Puja Steps
- 1
Vrat Sankalpa and Preparation
Begin the fast from morning. Take a bath, wear clean clothes, and make the formal sankalpa for the Shivaratri vrat at th...
- 2
Achamana and Pranayama
Perform achamana (water sipping) for purification, followed by three rounds of pranayama (breath control) to calm the mi...
- 3
Dhyana (Meditation on Shiva)
Meditate on Lord Shiva – three-eyed, moon-crested, blue-throated, holding the trident, damaru, and blessing mudra, sea...
Vrat Phala (Fasting Benefits)
Moksha (liberation from the cycle of birth and death), complete destruction of accumulated sins (Papa Nashana), Shiva's direct grace and darshan, fulfillment of all righteous wishes, and spiritual awakening
Calculation Proof – Transparent Audit Trail
Deity
Lord Shiva
Legend & History
Maha Shivaratri is the great night of Shiva — observed on the Chaturdashi of the dark fortnight of Phalguna — and several Puranas gather different acts of Shiva onto it. Read full legend →Show less ↑
Maha Shivaratri is the great night of Shiva — observed on the Chaturdashi of the dark fortnight of Phalguna — and several Puranas gather different acts of Shiva onto it.
The Shiva Purana places at the centre the marriage of Shiva and Parvati. After Sati ended her body in the fire of Daksha's yajna, Shiva withdrew into a long ascesis on Kailasa. The mountain-king's daughter Parvati performed austerities of equal severity to win him back — fasting through the season, standing on one foot, accepting only fallen leaves and finally not even leaves (Aparna). The gods, knowing the asura Tarakasura could be slain only by a son of Shiva, sent Kamadeva to break the meditation — and Kamadeva was burned, as the Holi tradition recalls. Parvati continued her tapas until Shiva himself relented; he came down from the mountain, accepted her, and at midnight on Phalguna Krishna Chaturdashi the divine wedding was performed by Brahma as the officiating priest. The night vigil of devotees re-enacts the family's wait for the bridegroom's arrival, the offering of bilva-patra recalls what the bridal household offered, and the lighting of every Shivalinga across the land becomes the lighting of every dwaraka along the marriage procession.
A second strand belongs to the Samudra Manthana, told in the Vishnu and Bhagavata Puranas. As devas and asuras churn the milk-ocean, the first thing to rise is not nectar but Halahala — a poison so potent that one drop will end the worlds. The devas flee to Shiva, who takes the poison into his throat and holds it there; Parvati presses his neck so the poison cannot descend into his body and harm the universe within him. The poison stains his throat blue and earns him the name Neelakantha. The night-long vigil, the four praharas of abhisheka, and the offerings of cool milk and water are understood as the universe's own care of Shiva in return — washing the heat of the poison from his throat through the long night.
A third tradition, especially in Kashmiri Shaivism, holds Shivaratri as the night when Shiva first appeared as the infinite jyotirlinga of fire — pillar without beginning or end — that Brahma and Vishnu set out to measure. Brahma flew upward as a swan to find the top; Vishnu burrowed downward as a boar to find the base; both returned exhausted, neither able to reach an end. Vishnu confessed his failure; Brahma lied. Shiva blessed Vishnu with worship across the worlds and cursed Brahma to lose his standing temples — a story that explains why almost no Brahma temples remain. The pillar of fire that neither creator nor preserver could measure is what each Shivalinga is, and the night the pillar appeared is what Maha Shivaratri commemorates.
A fourth, gentler tradition is the story of the hunter who, lost in a forest on this night, climbed a bilva tree above a sleeping tiger and threw down leaves through the night to keep himself awake — leaves which fell, all unknowing, onto a Shivalinga at the base of the tree. The hunter's involuntary all-night vigil and unintentional offering won him liberation; the story teaches that even a sincere accidental act of devotion on this night carries great weight, and is the reason staying awake through the night with simple offerings has been said to equal a year of practice.
How to Observe
Observe a strict fast (nirjala or with fruits). Stay awake all night (jagaran). Offer Bel leaves, milk, water, and honey to the Shiva Lingam during four Praharas (night quarters). Chant "Om Namah Shivaya". Visit Shiva temples.
Significance
The darkest night of the year – symbolizing the overcoming of darkness and ignorance. Considered the night when Shiva's energy is most accessible. Fasting and meditation on this night is said to be equivalent to a year of spiritual practice.
Fasting
Strict fast (nirjala or fruits only). Break fast next morning after puja.