Do most of you celebrate yule on the soltice or do some of you follow the lunisolar calendar ?

Just out of curiosity, this year the pre Christian Nordic lunisolar calendar marks Jan. 17th as the night of yule. Do y'all think that's too late to celebrate ? I've done it before and when I wait till the more accurate timing in the heathen calendar, here where I live in California it just feels like winter is already over even though it's still cold, all the seasonal decorations are gone and it just doesn't feel right. So this year we celebrated this past weekend on the full moon, which even though it's closer to the solstice it feels better. I use to be hard on myself for striving for historical accuracy, and then I just realized it's not about that, it's about getting together in general around these seasonal shifts and celebrating with friends that makes it so special. Just my take on things

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πŸ‘€︎ u/heathenbarber
πŸ“…︎ Dec 22 2021
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Posting it late, but to honour the Lunisolar New Year in February, I submitted this cosmology exercise sheet in celebratory lacquer optics which I figured you might enjoy
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πŸ‘€︎ u/orewabakadesu
πŸ“…︎ May 14 2021
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"toki tan", a creation story in toki pona (inspired by evolution) + a suggestion for month names in the toki pona lunisolar calendar

toki!! sorry for the really nasa title. i promise itll make sense by the end.

i really love the toki pona lunisolar calendar created by /u/pisceyo . (if you would like to see a working rendition of that calendar, o lukin e ni tan /u/just-a-melon ). one feature of the lunisolar calendar is that its months (or moons, as i will use commonly thruout this post) lack names. here is my sugestion for a potential month naming system.

why might month names benefit the lunisolar calendar?

while tying the moon names to local seasons can be good for personal or local use, it is prone to issues in an online setting. all over the world, the local seasons vary alot. in the southern hemisphere, many places have 4 seasons but in an opposite arrangement to temperate northern hemisphere countries. some places have more than 4 seasons. some places only have 2 seasons. also, if you have 6 or 8 months of one season, thats going to be hard to talk about in a language where the numbers bigger than 2 are deliberately difficult to say.

it would be simpler if the moons of the toki pona lunisolar calendar had names that everyone could use, no matter their local seasons. these names would have to be based on something other than seasons? in many cultures, months are named after mythological figures.

i have always been struck by how poetically beautiful the big bang and the evolution of life on earth is. to me, its like a creation myth. so i wrote a creation story in toki pona inspired by evolution. it is called toki tan and it is in the form of poetry. it is at the end of this post.

so what would be the month names?

i picked toki pona words as the month names. this means that this naming system requires neither new words, nor loan words to operate. the month names are:

mun Wan, mun Kon, mun Seli, mun Ma, mun Telo, mun Mama, mun Kasi, mun Pipi, mun Kala, mun Akesi, mun Waso, mun Soweli.

the intercalary month is still called "mun Namako". moon names would be capitalized in writing to disambiguate them from normal toki pona words, and because they are technically acting as proper names.

the names are symbolic of important moments for the evolution of life on earth, arranged roughly in chronological order (i make no claims of their exactness. the precise timing of evolution is complicated to measu

... keep reading on reddit ➑

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πŸ‘€︎ u/neonpixii
πŸ“…︎ Jul 12 2021
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Finished my custom lunisolar Wheel of the Year!
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πŸ‘€︎ u/RotaVitae
πŸ“…︎ Apr 28 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Finally lit up all the candles on the "Yule log" for lunisolar Yule
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πŸ‘€︎ u/TapirDrawnChariot
πŸ“…︎ Jan 29 2021
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A clock for the toki pona lunisolar calendar!

As some quick background, I was inspired by the toki pona calendar here: https://www.reddit.com/r/tokipona/comments/dr378j/lunisolar_calendar_for_toki_pona_done/

and, while not directly relevant, the mun names here: https://www.reddit.com/r/tokipona/comments/oikpr8/toki_tan_a_creation_story_in_toki_pona_inspired/

This calendar is fantastic. It feels very toki pona to me. I'd like to add a clock to it, one that has similar stylistic goals. Even if you do not need to specify the exact day when you have the phases of the moon, you may wish to specify approximately the *time* of day. (Also, I'm making a commandline app for the calendar so it can sit on my desktop and look pretty, but I want it to update more often.) And so I present my toki pona clock!

This system doesn't have "hours" per se, and definitely doesn't have minutes or seconds. But the day can be split up in multiple ways depending on need, much like how the phases of the moon can be described several ways.

I split the full day into 6; three suno segments based on the movement of the sun, and three pimeja segments based on the cover of night (literally. For the naming system I imagined the night sky as a cover that is drawn over the world. By what or whom? We may never know!) I don't follow the moon here as it can sometimes be up during the day and down at night, and also because people already use "tenpo suno" and "tenpo pimeja". This gives (in order):

  • pimeja pana
  • pimeja len
  • pimeja weka
  • suno kama
  • suno awen
  • suno tawa

Since days start at sunset (see the calendar linked above), I've decided that the end of "tenpo pimeja" and start of "tenpo suno" will be at sunrise. This means these "halves" will be different sizes at different times of the year, and so will their segments. I think this meshes well with toki pona's lack of precision. (It also means it's less useful in the arctic and antarctic circles, but they do strange things with time anyway.)

You can further specify time within these segments if required. For example "open pi suno kama" may mean right at or immediately after sunrise. "pini pi suno kama" may mean just as the sun is getting to what feels like the "awen" part of the day. "meso pi pimeja len" may be roughly midnight. Much like with the calendar,

... keep reading on reddit ➑

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πŸ‘€︎ u/AlbeyAmakiir
πŸ“…︎ Aug 10 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Finally lit up all the candles on the Yule log for lunisolar Yule.
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πŸ‘€︎ u/TapirDrawnChariot
πŸ“…︎ Jan 29 2021
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The Hijri Lunisolar Calendar and Historical Timeline with Common Era and Hegira Era years

Salaam, all! It's 2021 on the Gregorian calendar. And If you follow the strictly Hijri lunar calendar, Ramadan will commence around the 12th of April. But If you follow the Hijri lunisolar calendar, Ramadan will commence around the 8th of September. So, which date will you observe and why? Personally, I've been observing Ramadan on the Hijri lunisolar calendar for the last couple of decades because I believe the traditional interpretation of Quran 9:36-37 is dubious. But for those of us who follow the Hijri lunisolar calendar, and for those who don't follow it, there's not a lot of info on the Hijri lunisolar calendar. So, I created these calendars for the years 2021 through 2025 and a historical timeline with Common Era (CE) and Hegira Era (BH & AH) years for those who are interested. Coincidentally, It's African American History Month here in the US and there's more dates on the timeline related to Africa and people of African descent than you'd usually find on a timeline of Islamic history.

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πŸ‘€︎ u/Melwood786
πŸ“…︎ Feb 01 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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All hail Che Konstnar, leader of lunisolar occlusion!
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πŸ“…︎ Nov 02 2020
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Hindu community celebrates Holi 'Festival of colours': PM Imran Khan and leaders across political aisle express well wishes. 'Holi is a Hindu festival that takes place on the last full moon day of the Hindu lunisolar calendar month and marks the start of spring.' dawn.com/news/1615117/fes…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/dannylenwinn
πŸ“…︎ Mar 29 2021
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Lunisolar Calendar in Toki Pona based on a post by u/pisceyo
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πŸ‘€︎ u/rekagotik
πŸ“…︎ Apr 22 2020
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Today is the first day of TET -vietnamese new year holiday according to the lunisolar calendar in Vietnam
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πŸ‘€︎ u/august9153
πŸ“…︎ Jan 25 2020
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The Festival Year: A Survey of the Annual Festival Cycle and Its Relation to the Heathen Lunisolar Calendar | Joshua Rood academia.edu/8691572/The_…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/OccultVolva
πŸ“…︎ Mar 04 2021
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Trasgian Calendar proposal, a lunisolar calendar

Okay, here is my calendar, use ad urbe condita, at least until something happen like a t'osuua invasion or anything.

https://preview.redd.it/ry9hh3yu51351.png?width=1721&format=png&auto=webp&s=fe554bffd2313961ba8382f8e60120c8c55e973f

All month have between 30 to 29 days,

The New Year start with the solstice of summer. And like is show it, the month is divided between two moments, the nights of darkness and nights of light, or new moon and full moon, those period are composed by weeks of 5 days, and the day go sunset to sunset, NOT IN DAWN TO DAWN OR MIDNIGHT TO MIDNIGHT, IN SUNSET TO SUNSET.

A new month is added before the first month in the second year, and other month come after the six month in the third year, in intervals of five years. Those extra months are of 30 days in total, with his own 15 Nights of Darkness and 15 Days of Light of course.

To my, this is the basic Trasgian (and relateds) calendar at least.

PD: I made a mistake, I made this in base to a irl calendar, and I bad interpreted a sentence about it, so I changed a paragraph.

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πŸ‘€︎ u/Virtem
πŸ“…︎ Jun 05 2020
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Xi He creates the Lunisolar Calendar ηΎ²ε’Œζ°εˆΆεŽ†ζ³• | Myths of China E24 - Who were the creators of the first Lunisolar Calendar? How did they accomplish this feat? What were the methods they used to figure out how to track the passage of time? youtu.be/AlSfFgscwzI
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πŸ“…︎ Aug 02 2020
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How to Construct Lunisolar Calendars for your Fantasy World. youtube.com/watch?v=_7pHe…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/Artifexian
πŸ“…︎ Aug 28 2017
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The Suri LuniSolar Calendar

First, some background information: The Suri are a pastoralist people living in a Sahel-like region on a fictional planet called Oberus. The Suri have a well-known history of astronomy and have knowledge that the planet makes a full rotation every 476.2 days, and the moon makes a rotation every 32 days.

During the Old Suri Kingdom Era, Suri astronomers developed a calendar system to help aid the tribesmen with the hunting season. Because the Suri live in an area without much variation in photoperiod, the calendar was intended to separate the wet and dry season into two parts, and allow for more accurate timekeeping. This system was based on the number 8 (The Suri numbering system is base-8) and the rotation around the sun. The Old Suri Calendar was composed of eight months of alternating 59 and 60 days.

The months of the Old Suri Calendar were:

Irekō Sōkō Jamekō Yōkō Obekō Sojagō Tekkō Magō
/i.re.koː/ /soː.koː/ /dΚ’a.me.koː/ /joː.koː/ /o.be.koː/ /so.dΚ’a.goː/ /te.kːoː/ /ma.goː/

Each of these months simply come from the Suri number 1-8 + -kō, originally the word for "month", but now has shifted to mean sun.

Every five years an extra day is added to the final month, Magō, in order to allow the calendar to stay consistent with the planet's rotations. This day was considered a very fortunate day and was a day of great celebration. Even in the new calendar system, the final day of Magō is one of the most desirable days to be born.

Eventually, in the Classical Period, Suri astronomers wanted to make a calendar that more accurately followed the rotation of the moon. So, a new calendar, incorporating the old was made. This calendar was split into 14 months of 34 days each, closely mirroring the moon's rotation. Six new months were included. These were:

Hyōkō Kenkō Rinakō Tōkō Korokō Kukō
/Γ§joː.koː/ /keΕ‹.koː/ /ri.na.koː/ /toː.koː/ /ko.ro.koː/ /ku.koː/
Beginning-month Bone-Month Flower-Month Tō deer -month Flood-Month Windy-Month

The new order of months was: Hyōkō, Irekō, Kenkō, Sōkō, Jamekō, Rinakō, Yōkō, Obekō, Tōkō, Korokō, Sojagō, Tekkō, Kukō, and finally Magō.

Please Let me know what you think!

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πŸ‘€︎ u/notluckycharm
πŸ“…︎ May 10 2020
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Glad Mōdraniht and Glad GΔ“ol to those observing lunisolar calendars! Here are my offerings from this weekend: bread for the Mothers and honey-glazed ham for Wōden.
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πŸ‘€︎ u/gunsmile
πŸ“…︎ Jan 12 2020
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Lunisolar calendar

Nevermind I just realized I made a stupid mistake

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πŸ‘€︎ u/42IsHoly
πŸ“…︎ Jun 24 2019
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Lunisolar Calendar for Toki Pona - DONE!

toki, jan ale o. It's me again! Yes, the podcast guy. The toki kala podcast will hopefully be airing later on today, however this post is about something else entirely! Im going to break this post into sections so you can skip over ones if you already know/dont want to read it all.

ABOUT CALENDARS Toki Pona has a lot of semantic basis in hunter-gatherer societies, so theres words like alasa but no root word for say, electricity. This also carries over to time. People, because we all live in the 21st century, live in worlds that have a lot of time measurement in them. Hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds. We have a calendar that bases the year on the earth's orbit around the sun, and breaks that up into some months and days for us. The Gregorian calendar.

However, the Gregorian calendar is not the only one in existence. There are many calendars from essentially every culture, sometimes based on the moon (such as the Islamic calendar), and sometimes based on the sun (like our calendar). However, there are also these little things called lunisolar calendars, a truly magical creation, that track both the phases of the moon AND keep everything within the general realm of the solar year and the seasons.* The chinese, buddhist, vietnamese, hindu, babylonian, and hebrew calendars (to name a select few) are some examples of these. Every calendar system requires calculation, and theres no one way to do each.

So, where and how does this all tie into toki pona?

CURRENT TOKI PONA TIME Well, Toki Pona is a language used by humans in the 21st century, all of which have internet access. Thus, we are affected by the passing of the sun and moon in the sky (also affects how we sleep, what we do, what we see) as well as our position in the year based on a calendar, typically the Gregorian calendar. The language reflects this.

Problem is (back to the beginning of the post): Toki Pona wasn't made with these things in mind. In fact, it was made with them, to some degree, intentionally out of mind. A solar calendar is more about the day of the year and whatnot, cuz the sun is a much LONGER cycle to measure, but toki pona does NOT fit this system well. You tell me its "December 27, 2019" without using nimi sin and/or weird number systems that break the intentional lack of one. So we get things like, "tenpo mun" to mean 'month' and "tenpo esun" for week [not the only things youll see but (most) common ones]. But... the months of a solar calendar arent

... keep reading on reddit ➑

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πŸ‘€︎ u/pisceyo
πŸ“…︎ Nov 03 2019
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Which phase of the moon marked the beginning or end of a month in the ancient Germanic lunisolar calendar?

I’ve been attempting to construct a more formalized modern version of the Germanic lunisolar calendar, but I haven’t been able to find anything consistent about with lunar phase begins a lunar month. I’ve found mentions of Scandinavians marking the first full moon after the winter solstice as the beginning of the year, and Bede mentions that the Anglo-Saxons considered the full moon of October to be the beginning of winter, but would that full moon have been in the middle, beginning or end of that lunar month?

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πŸ“…︎ Aug 17 2018
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How do I get my lunisolar calendar to stay on track?

I was working on a calendar for a future earth that has a moon orbit period of 4.63914352 days, while there is the regular Earth orbit period. Days are just as long, and the only thing changed is that the moon is closer. I'm not very good at math, but I have all the other calculations and data for the calendar itself, but I'm struggling to have it not go off track of regular Earth, I'm not sure when to add a leap month. I have looked up multiple guides to help, but I'm still lost. Any help would be appreciated, thank you!

Data:
Moon orbital period- 4.63914352 days
Earth orbital period- 365.256 days
Length of day- 23.9333 hours
Number of Months- 78.73349864 months

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πŸ‘€︎ u/Cremtcx
πŸ“…︎ Jun 06 2020
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YSK that the Chinese calendar is not a Lunar calendar, but a lunisolar calendar that takes both the rotation of the Sun and the Moon into account.

Just figuring that today is CNY, so it's somewhat a relevant topic.

A lunar calendar would be the Muslim calendar, while a solar calendar is the Georgian calender we use daily

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πŸ‘€︎ u/SleepingAran
πŸ“…︎ Feb 05 2019
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Constructing Lunisolar Calendars youtube.com/watch?v=_7pHe…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/Artifexian
πŸ“…︎ Aug 28 2017
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Constructing Lunisolar Calendars [Artifexian] youtube.com/watch?v=_7pHe…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/TheYaYaT
πŸ“…︎ Jan 22 2020
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TIL that Chinese calendar is not a lunar calendar, but a lunisolar calendar which takes both the rotation of Sun and Moon into account. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi…
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πŸ‘€︎ u/SleepingAran
πŸ“…︎ Feb 05 2019
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Is Anyone here celebrating Sinospheric Lunisolar New Year?

If so, happy new year!

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πŸ‘€︎ u/rev_run_d
πŸ“…︎ Feb 05 2016
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What do you think a lunisolar calendar would be more practical in our/your society?
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πŸ‘€︎ u/All3xD
πŸ“…︎ Aug 20 2019
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Wheel of the Year vs. Lunisolar calendar: Opinions?

Hello! Non Wiccan here, but I find Wiccan practices interesting. I'm also a huge nerd, and love calendar systems, astronomy, and math.

For those of you who don't know, a lunisolar calendar is a calendar system based on both the sun and the moon, not just one or the other. The calendar system most people use today (Gregorian) is solar, which means we divide each year up into 12 months, which don't really line up with the cycles of the moon. A lunisolar calendar, such as the Hebrew calendar, has each month lasting one lunar cycle, and adds a leap-month every 19 years or so, so the calendar lines up with the solar year. This way, if you know the date, you know not only the season of the year, but the phase of the moon.

As I understand it, Wiccans celebrate their holidays in accordance with the "Wheel of the Year", which is based directly off of the Gregorian calendar (Today is May 1st, so happy Beltane!). But, this seems very non-ideal for anyone interested in Astronomy/Astrology.

Does anyone here use, or consider using alternative calendar systems?

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πŸ‘€︎ u/bobotast
πŸ“…︎ May 02 2017
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