Sati or SATI may refer to:

Entertainment

  • Sati (film), a 1989 Bengali film by Aparna Sen and starring Shabana Azmi
  • Sati (novel), a 1990 novel by Christopher Pike
  • Sati (singer) (born 1976), Lithuanian singer
  • Sati, a character in The Matrix Revolutions

Institutes

  • Samrat Ashok Technological Institute, a college in Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh, India
  • South African Translators' Institute, an association in South Africa representing translators and other language practitioners

Places

  • Sati (castle), a medieval fortified town near Shkodër, Albania
  • Hesar-e Sati, a village in Shahriar County, Tehran Province, Iran
  • Sati-ye Olya, a village in Ardabil Province, Iran
  • Sati-ye Sofla, a village in Ardabil Province, Iran
  • Sati-ye Vosta, a village in Ardabil Province, Iran
  • Sati, Sur, a village in Diyarbakır Province, Turkey

People

  • Sharaf al-Din Sati (died 1288), mystic, author, and manuscript producer
  • Sati Beg, ruler of the Ilkhanate

Religion

  • Sati in Hinduism and Buddhism can refer to the following:
  • Sati (Hindu goddess), Shiva's first wife, and after her death, reincarnated as Shiva's next wife, Parvati.
  • Sati(), a good and virtuous or faithful wife
  • Sati (Buddhism), awareness or skillful attentiveness in Buddhism
  • Sati (practice), historical Hindu practice of a widow immolating herself after her husband's death, usually on her husband's funeral pyre
  • Sati (Prevention) Act, 1987, India
  • Sati in Ancient Egyptian religion can refer to Satis (goddess) or Sati, an Egyptian goddess

See also

  • Satis (disambiguation)
  • Sathi (disambiguation)
  • Dakshayani (disambiguation), another name of the Hindu goddess
  • Sade Sati, the -year-long period of Saturn (Shani) in Indian astrology
  • Sarti, an Italian language surname
  • Sat (Sanskrit), a Sanskrit word meaning the true essence of an entity, species or existence
  • Satti, a tribe found in Muree, Kotli sattian, Kahuta and adjoining areas of Rawalpindi Punjab, Pakistan
  • Satti (food), a common barbeque in the southern Philippines, related to but distinct from Malaysian and Indonesian satay