The back page of the 1994 Kohinoor calendar was arguably more famous than the front. It featured a "Map of India" showing new districts, a list of STD codes (remember when Bhubaneswar was 0674 ?), and a train timetable for the Bhubaneswar-Howrah Mail .
For many families, the 1994 Kohinoor Calendar was utilized for: odia kohinoor calendar 1994
The Kohinoor Calendar is more than just a date tracker; it is an indispensable guide for religious rituals and determining auspicious timings ( mahurats ) for marriages, housewarmings ( Ghara Pratishta ), and thread ceremonies. The back page of the 1994 Kohinoor calendar
The autumn festival of Durga Puja, heavily celebrated in Cuttack, Bhubaneswar, and across the state, occurred in October 1994. The Kohinoor calendar meticulously detailed the timings for Mahashtami, Mahanavami sandhi puja, and Vijayadashami. Kartika Purnima and Boita Bandana The autumn festival of Durga Puja, heavily celebrated
The arrived during this transitional period. It featured:
It detailed the movements of major planets like Jupiter ( Guru ), Saturn ( Shani ), and the shadow planets Rahu and Ketu. For people born under specific Rashis , the 1994 calendar offered remedies, fasting guidelines, and warnings to mitigate the adverse effects of planetary alignments. Nostalgia and the Digital Shift
The 1994 edition featured meticulous calculations of the five elements of the Hindu calendar: Vara (weekday), Tithi (lunar day), Nakshatra (asterism), Yoga (luni-solar day), and Karana (half of a tithi). Astrologers used these columns to plan weddings ( Baha ), thread ceremonies ( Bratopanayana ), and housewarming rituals ( Gruha Pravesha ). The Cultural Anatomy of a 1994 Odia Household