Solar New Year is the beginning of solar calendar year. The event is celebrated by numerous cultures in various ways at diverse dates. The most common bases chosen to begin a new calendar year are the winter solstice, summer solstice, the spring equinox and the autumnal equinox. South and South-east Asian solar calendars are more formally linked to astronomical events.
Some of the more widely known solar new year celebrations include:
- Enkutatash (Ethiopian calendar): about ten days before the autumnal equinox
- January 1 in the Gregorian and Julian calendars (same number, different days): at present[lower-alpha 1] about twelve and twenty-five days respectively after the northern winter solstice.
- Iranian New Year (Nowruz) : precisely the northern spring equinox
- The various solar new years celebrated in South/SE Asia, whose new year is determined by the position of the Sun relative to the constellation of Aries,[1] such as
- Cambodian New Year: about six or seven days before the northern spring equinox
- Tamil New Year (Puthandu): about 24 or 25 days after the northern spring equinox
- Vaisakhi: about 24 or 25 days after the northern spring equinox
- Pohela Boishakh (Bengali calendar): about 24 or 25 days after the northern spring equinox
See also
Notes
- ↑ The Julian calendar gains a day against the true solar year every 129 years. In other words, the Julian calendar gains 3.1 days every 400 years, while the Gregorian calendar gains 0.1 day over the same time. The Julian calendar will gain another day in 2100 but the Gregorian will not.
References
- ↑ "Water, Water, Everywhere". AsiaCarolinas.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.