Ritu (Indian season)


Ritu defines "season" in different ancient Indian calendars used in countries, India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka, and there are six ritus or seasons. The word is derived from the Vedic Sanskrit word Ṛtú, a fixed or appointed time, especially the proper time for sacrifice or ritual in Vedic religion; this in turn comes from the word Ṛta, as used in Vedic Sanskrit literally means the "order or course of things". This word is used in nearly all Indian languages.

North, West, and Central Indian calendars, South

Nepal and India observes six ecological seasons. Southern parts of India experiences the seasons on a different schedule than the one depicted here.
No.RituSeasonHindu lunar monthsGregorian monthCharacteristicsSeasonal festivals
1Vasanta
वसन्त
SpringChaitra and VaishakhaMarch & AprilTemperature around 20-30 degrees Celsius; vernal equinox occurs in the middle of this season. First spring harvest along with harvest festivals.Vasant panchami, Ugadi, Gudhi Padwa, Holi, Rama Navami, Vishu/Rongali Bihu/Baisakhi/Brahmin New Year, Hanuman Jayanti
2Grīṣma
ग्रीष्म
Summer/Hot SeasonJyeshtha and Ashadha~ May & JuneVery hot, temperatures up to 45-50 degrees Celsius; summer solstice occurs. This is one of the two typical Indian/ Hindu Marriage Seasons.Vat Pournima, Rath Yatra, Guru Purnima
3Varṣā
वर्षा
Monsoon/Rainy SeasonShravana and Bhadrapada ~ July & AugustVery hot, very humid and heavy monsoon rains; begins with the lunar month AFTER the summer solstice.Raksha Bandhan, Krishna Janmaashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi, Nuakhai, Onam, Gurujonar Tithi, Mahalaya Amavasya
4Sharad
शरद्
AutumnAshwina or Ashvayuja and Kartika~ Late- September, October & mid-NovemberMild temperatures; 19-25 degrees Celsius; autumnal equinox occurs in the middle of this season. First autumn harvest occurs along with harvest festivals. Some trees in the Himalayas or upper elevations change colors much like in northern latitudes across the world.Navaratri, Vijayadashami, Sharad Purnima, Bihu, Deepavali, Dhanatrayodashi, Kartik Purnima
5Hemanta
हेमन्त
Prewinter/Cool SeasonMargashirsha and Pausha ~ Late November & DecemberVery pleasant temperatures; generally, 19-25 degrees Celsius; ends with the winter solstice. Some trees in the Himalayas and other hills complete shedding their leaves much like in northern latitudes across the world.
Margashira Mahotsavam. Music Season with a number of Indian Carnatic classical music and dance concerts.
6Shishira
शिशिर
Winter/Dewy SeasonMagha and Phalguna~ January & FebruaryModerately cold, but pleasant during occasional sunshine; temperatures may decrease below 10 degrees Celsius. This season is typical to tropical and subtropical regions because trees actually shed their leaves in this season in tropical areas; starts with the winter solstice.Shivaratri, Shigmo, Tamil New Year, Sankranthi

East Indian Calendars

East Indian Hindu calendar.
The Bengali Calendar is similar to the Sanskrit calendar above, but differs in start and end times which moves certain dates/days around. The East Indian Calendar has the following seasons or ritus:
Bengali seasonStartEndBengali monthsladhakiEnglish
Grishmo
Mid-AprilMid-JuneBoishakh, Joishthosos ka, སོས་གSummer
Borsha
Mid-JuneMid-AugustAsharh, Srabonyarka, དབྱར་ཁMonsoon
Shorot
Mid-AugustMid-OctoberBhadro, Ashwinstonka, སྟོན་ཀEarly Autumn
Hemonto
mid-Octobermid-DecemberKartik, Ogrohayondgun stod, དགུན་སྟོད།Late Autumn
Shit
mid-Decembermid-FebruaryPaush, Maghdgun smid, དགུན་སྨདWinter
Bosonto
mid-Februarymid-AprilPhalgun, Choitroshid ka, དཔྱིད་ཀSpring

South Indian Calendars

Malayalam calendar

The Malayalam calendar or Kollam Era, a solar and sidereal Hindu calendar used in Kerala, follows a pattern of six seasons slightly different from North Indian Calendars.
No.RituSeasonMalayalam solar monthsSanskrit solar monthsGregorian monthsSeasonal festivals
1Vasantam
വസന്തം
SpringMakaram -Kumbham-Meenam Makara -Kumbha-Mīna February & MarchVasantha Panchami, Holi
2Grishmam
ഗ്രീഷ്മം
SummerMeenam -Medam-Idavam Mīna -Meṣa-Vṛṣabha April & MayVishu
3Varsham
വർഷം
Monsoon or RainIdavam -Mithunam-Karkatakam Vṛṣabha -Mithuna-Karkaṭaka June & JulyKarkataka Vavu
4Sarath
ശരത്ത്
Early AutumnKarkitakam -Chingam-Kanni Karkaṭaka -Siṃha-Kanyā August & SeptemberRakshabandhanam, Krishna Janmashtami, Onam
5Hemantham
ഹേമന്തം
Late AutumnKanni -Thulam-Vrischikam Kanyā -Tulā-Vṛścik‌‌‌am October & November
6Sisiram
ശിശിരം
WinterVrischikam -Dhanu-Makaram Vṛścik‌‌‌am -Dhanu-Makara December & January

Tamil calendar

The Tamil Calendar follows a similar pattern of six seasons as described for north Indian Hindu calendars which in fact need adjustment as taking new year from Grishma like that Bengali calendar....
Tamil season NamesEnglish MeaningGregorian MonthsTamil Months
Muthuvenil முதுவேனில்Matured heat / warmthApril 15 to June 14Chithirai and Vaikasi
Kar கார்Dark CloudsJune 15 to August 14Ani and Adi
Kulir குளிர்Cold / ChillAugust 15 to October 14Avani and Purattasi
Munpani முன்பனிEarly Dew / MistOctober 15 to December 14Aipasi and Karthikai
Pinpani பின்பனிLate Dew / MistDecember 15 to February 14Margazhi and Thai
Ilavenil இளவேனில்Tender heat / warmthFebruary 15 to April 14Masi and Panguni

In culture

The seasons are described in literature such as the Sanskrit poem Ṛtusaṃhāra written by the legendary Sanskrit poet Kālidāsa.
Names of the ritu are commonly used for persons: typically, Vasant, Sharad, Hemant, Shishir and Varsh are "male" names; "female" names include Vasanti, Sharada, Hemanti, Grishma and Varsha.