The two-day festival, called Gadhimai Mela Festival, takes place at the Gadhimai temple about 100 miles south of Kathmandu.
The festival is held every five years, during which hundreds of thousands of animals are killed in the name of the Hindu goddess of power. Devotees believe the ritual will bring them good luck.
In 2009, an estimated 350,000 animals were killed. Close to 500,000 animals were expected to be sacrificed this year, despite campaigns to ban the festival.
Navesh Chitrakar/ReutersSacrificed buffaloes lie on the ground of an enclosed compound during the sacrificial ceremony November 28, 2014.
Millions of Hindus from all over India and Nepal participate in the festival to honor the Goddess Gadhimai, a Hindu deity who devotees believe will grant them wishes if they sacrifice animals and birds.
Navesh Chitrakar/ReutersDevotees gather during the ritual before the sacrificial ceremony, November 28, 2014.
The Sword-wielding Hindu devotees began slaughtering the animals on Friday, ignoring calls by animal rights activists to put an end to the world's largest animal sacrifice ritual.
Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
In past years, nearly 70% of the animals entering Nepal to be slaughtered came from India. That figure has dropped since India's Supreme Court banned the illegal entry of animals to Nepal, especially for the Gadhimai Mela.
Navesh Chitrakar/ReutersA man sits in a tractor to load the sacrificed buffalos a day after the sacrificial ceremony, November 29, 2014.
The festival is partially funded by the government of Nepal as the fair brings in tourists and money. Temple authorities also charge entry and parking fees.
Navesh Chitrakar/ReutersA street vendor makes sweets along the street to sell them to devotees, November 29, 2014.
Animals are coralled into holding pens in a large field before having their throats slit or their heads chopped off.
ReutersA sick buffalo calf lies in an enclosure on the eve of the sacrificial ceremony November 27, 2014.
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