The Maithil year is measured in festivals — from the kite-strung Makar Sankranti of deep winter to the sun-worship of Chhath in autumn. Follow the calendar through the seasons: spring’s colours, the monsoon vows, the goddess-nights of autumn, and the rivers and harvests that bind them. Many are led by women and found, in this form, almost nowhere else.
Magh–Phalgun · winter into spring
January – March
- ~14 January
Makar Sankranti (Tila Sakrait)
The mid-January harvest festival of sesame, jaggery and dahi-chura.
- January–February
Saraswati Puja (Vasant Panchami)
The spring worship of the goddess of learning, dear to students across Mithila.
- March
Phaguaa (Holi)
Mithila's Holi — bonfires, colour, jogira songs, and a table of malpua and mutton.
Chait–Baisakh · spring & the new year
March – May
- March–April
Ram Navami
The birth of Rama, kept with special feeling in the land that calls itself the home of his bride, Sita.
- ~14 April
Jur Sital
The Maithil new year — a festival of cool water and fresh sowing in mid-April.
- April–May
Sita Navami
The birth-day of Sita, especially dear to her own land of Mithila.
Jeth–Sawan · summer & the monsoon
May – August
- May–June
Vat Savitri
Married women fast and circle the banyan, praying for their husbands' long life.
- July–August
Naag Panchami
The monsoon worship of serpents and the snake-goddess Manasa.
- July–August
Madhushravani
A fortnight-long festival of newly-wed Maithil women, of nature-worship and the Bihula legend.
Bhado–Aaswin · early autumn
September – October
- September–October
Indra Puja
The worship of the rain-god Indra for a good harvest — surviving almost only in Mithila.
- September–October
Jitiya
A three-day fast in which mothers go without food and water for their children's long life.
- September–October
Jhijhiya
A women's lamp-dance of Dussehra, perforated pots balanced and glowing on the head.
- September–October
Durga Puja (Dashain)
The autumn worship of the goddess as warrior, ending in Vijayadashami — and, across the border, in Nepal's Dashain.
- October
Kojagara
A full-moon festival, almost unique to Mithila, honouring newly-wed grooms and the goddess Lakshmi.
Kartik–Aghan · late autumn
October – December
- October–November (and March–April)
Chhath Puja
The four-day sun festival of Mithila — devotion, fasting and offerings at the river ghats.
- October–November
Sama-Chakeva
A winter festival of clay birds in which sisters pray for their brothers' long life.
- November–December
Vivaha Panchami
The re-enactment of Rama and Sita's wedding, celebrated in great splendour at Janakpur.