The Authentic Orthography
Mountains, Fertility, Devotion · of the god Śiva's wife (as daughter of Himavat, king of the snowy mountains), Up.; MBh.; Kāv.

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
पार्वती
The name in its original Sanskrit form. Pārvatī (पार्वती) is attested in the source tradition — “of the god Śiva's wife (as daughter of Himavat, king of the snowy mountains), Up.; MBh.; Kāv.”. Its macron-length vowels carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
parvati
Reduced to plain parvati, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Pārvatī
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Pārvatī restores macron-length vowels, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Pārvatī.com → xn--prvat-fwa21a.com
The non-ASCII characters in Pārvatī are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Pārvatī.
How Pārvatī travels from ancient script to the modern URL
Sanskrit Pārvatī; from parvata “mountain"; the daughter of the mountain and consort of Śiva.
Mountains, Fertility, Devotion
The IAST form Pārvatī uses registrable Latin diacritics; the Devanagari form is not supported in .com.
How Pārvatī was spoken
Attributes of Pārvatī
The grain that feeds cities, the cycle of sowing and reaping.
The overflowing horn, the sign that the earth is generous when honored.
Stories of Pārvatī
Shrines, festivals, and votive offerings across the sanskrit world invoked Pārvatī as mountains, fertility, devotion. Worshippers did not simply tell stories about this power; they enacted it through sacrifice, song, and the careful observance of ritual. The name was a password: to speak it correctly was to align oneself with the force it named.
Poets and priests wove Pārvatī into hymns, genealogies, and mythic narratives. Whether as a major protagonist or a background power, the name carried a charge that later authors returned to again and again. Each retelling adjusted the portrait, but the core identity — mountains, fertility, devotion — remained recognizable.
After the temples fell silent, the name lived on in language, art, and the names of places and stars. It entered classical education, romantic poetry, and modern fantasy. To restore Pārvatī in Unicode is not nostalgia; it is the recognition that a name with this much history still has work to do.
The lore you have read is the surface — the living myth. Beneath it lies the scholarship: etymology, reconstructed pronunciation, Unicode character breakdown, and the cultural legacy of Pārvatī.
Enter Extended Lore