Names of the Different Muhurtas in the day
Astrological Comparisons
Days in Week
Directions and Their Meanings
Names of the Different Muhurtas in the day
Jaya Tirtha Charan Dasa
MUHURTAS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
|
06:00 - 06:48
06:48 - 07:36
07:36 - 08:24
08:24 - 09:12
09:12 - 10:00
10:00 - 10:48
10:48 - 11:36
11:36 - 12:24
12:24 - 13:12
13:12 - 14:00
14:00 - 14:48
14:48 - 15:36
15:36 - 16:24
16:24 - 17:12
17:12 - 18:00
18:00 - 18:48
18:48 - 19:36
19:36 - 20:24
20:24 - 21:12
21:12 - 22:00
22:00 - 22:48
22:48 - 23:36
23:36 - 24:24
24:24 - 01:12
01:12 - 02:00
02:00 - 02:48
02:48 - 03:36
03:36 - 04:24
04:24 - 05:12
05:12 - 06:00
|
RUDRA
AHI
MITRA
PITRU
VASU
VARA
VISVADEVA
VIDHI
SATAMUKHI
PURUHUTA
VAHINI
NAKTANCARA
VARUNA
ARYAMA
BHAGA
GIRISHA
AJAPAD
AHIRBUDHNYA
PUSA
ASVINI
YAMA
AGNI
VIDHATR
CANDA
ADITI
JIVA
VISNU
YUMIGADYUTI
BRAHMA
SAMUDRAM
|
BAD
BAD
GOOD
BAD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD *
GOOD
BAD
BAD
BAD
GOOD
GOOD **
BAD
BAD
BAD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
BAD
BAD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
GOOD
VERY GOOD
GOOD
|
*(except Monday and
Friday)
**(except
Sunday)
Again all
Muhurtas are taken at 06:00 AM sunrise. Adjust accordingly.
YOGAS
To begin
"Sat Kriya Karmas" (good Yogas for good activities):
PRITI
AYUSHMANA
SAUBHAGYA
SAUBHANA
DHRITI
VRIDDHI
DHRUVA
SIDDHI
SIDDHA
SHUKLA
VARIYANA
VAIRA
SHULA
BRAHMA
INDRA
To avoid
"Sat Kriya Karmas":
VYAGHATHA
PARIGHA
VAJRA
VYATHIPATHA
VAIDHRITI
GANDA
ATIGANDA
SULA
VISHKUMBHA
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
|
RAHU KALAM
16:30 - 18:00
07:30 - 09:00
15:00 - 16:30
12:00 - 13:30
13:30 - 15:00
10:30 - 12:00
09:00 - 10:30
|
YAMA GHANTAM
12:00 - 13:30
10:30 - 12:00
09:00 - 10:30
07:30 - 09:00
06:00 - 07:30
15:00 - 16:30
14:30 - 16:00
|
GULI KALAM
15:00 - 16:30
13:30 - 15:00
12:00 - 13:30
10:30 - 12:00
09:00 - 10:30
07:30 - 09:00
06:00 - 07:30
|
Again all
times are taken from sunrise at 06:00 AM. Adjust
accordingly. Adjust for local DLS (daylight savings time) if
applicable.
Astrological
Comparisons
Deity
Rama
Krsna
Nrsimha
Buddha
Vamana
Parasurama
Kurma
Varaha
Matsya
|
Planet
Sun
Moon
Mars
Mercury
Jupiter
Venus
Saturn
Rahu
Ketu
|
Element (Parasara Hora Sastra, ch. 2)
fire
water
fire
earth
ether
water
air
-
-
|
Rasi
(house)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
|
Sign
Mesa, Aja
Vrsabha
Mithuna
Karkata, Kataka
Simha
Kanya
Tula
Vrscika
Dhanus, Chapa
Makara
Kumbha
Mina |
(Aries)
(Taurus)
(Gemini)
(Cancer)
(Leo)
(Virgo)
(Libra)
(Scorpio)
(Sagittarius)
(Capricorn)
(Aquarius)
(Pisces)
|
Lord
Mars
Venus
Mercury
Moon
Sun
Mercury
Venus
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
Saturn
Jupiter
|
Element
fire
earth
air
water
fire
earth
air
water
fire
earth
air
water
|
(notes: Lord - according to Garuda Purana 1.60.7-9. Planets in 8th house in a
chart indicate bhakti)
Varna
Brahmana
Ksatriya
Vaisya
Sudra
outcaste
|
Planet
Jupiter, Venus
Sun, Mars
Moon, Mercury
Saturn
Rahu, Ketu
|
Element
water
fire
earth
air
-
|
Purusartha
moksa
dharma
artha
kama
|
Days in
Week
(Hari
Sauri Das: Transcendental Diary I., Appendix A)
Name
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday |
Teutonic
demigod
Sun
Moon
Tiw
Woden (Wotan)
Thor
Freya
Saturn
|
Roman
demigod
Mars
Mercury
Jupiter (Indra)
Venus
Saturn
|
Planet
in SB
Sun (Ravi)
Moon (Soma)
Venus (Sukra)
Mercury (Budha)
Mars (Angaraka)
Jupiter (Brhaspati)
Saturn (Sanaiscara)
|
(British
Encyclopedia) week
period of
seven days, a unit of time artificially devised with no astronomical basis.
The origin of the term is generally associated with the ancient Jews and the
biblical account of the Creation, according to which God laboured for six
days and rested on the seventh. Evidence indicates, however, that the Jews
may have borrowed the idea of the week from Mesopotamia, for the Sumerians
and the Babylonians divided the year into weeks of seven days each, one of
which they designated a day of recreation.
The
Babylonians named each of the days after one of the five planetary bodies
known to them and after the Sun and the Moon, a custom later adopted by the
Romans. For a time the Romans used a period of eight days in civil practice,
but in AD 321 Emperor Constantine established the seven-day week in the Roman
calendar and designated Sunday as the first day of the week. Subsequent days
bore the names Moon's-day, Mars's-day, Mercury's-day, Jupiter's-day,
Venus'-day, and Saturn's-day. Constantine, a convert to Christianity, decreed
that Sunday should be a day of rest and worship.
The days
assigned by the Romans to the Sun, Moon, and Saturn were retained for the
corresponding days of the week in English (Sunday, Monday, and Saturday) and
several related languages. The other weekday names in English are derived
from Anglo-Saxon words for the gods of Teutonic mythology. Tuesday comes from
Tiu, or Tiw, the Anglo-Saxon name for Tyr, the Norse god of war. Tyr was one
of the sons of Odin, or Woden, the supreme deity after whom Wednesday was
named. Similarly, Thursday originates from Thor's-day, named in honour of
Thor, the god of thunder. Friday was derived from Frigg's-day, Frigg, the
wife of Odin, representing love and beauty, in Norse mythology.
Directions
and Their Meanings
(Satyaraja
das: "Om Shalom", p. 179-180 - according to Madhvacarya's SB
commentary, Madhva Bhasya 5.5.10-13)
- south:
karma-kanda (Bhimarula-varuli wasp)
- west: jnana-kanda (Yaksa ghost)
- north: yoga-siddhi (Ajagara snake)
- east: bhakti-marga (Caitanya Mahaprabhu) |