Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36907:dd38573e54ac
Added notes on how the Baha'i calendar works.
author | John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 20 Mar 2001 20:33:03 +0000 |
parents | 6098465deff0 |
children | 365eecf7e7d7 |
files | lisp/calendar/cal-bahai.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lisp/calendar/cal-bahai.el Tue Mar 20 20:26:13 2001 +0000 +++ b/lisp/calendar/cal-bahai.el Tue Mar 20 20:33:03 2001 +0000 @@ -28,6 +28,26 @@ ;; This collection of functions implements the features of calendar.el ;; and diary.el that deal with the Baha'i calendar. +;; The Baha'i (http://www.bahai.org) calendar system is based on a +;; solar cycle of 19 months with 19 days each. The four remaining +;; "intercalary" days are called the Ayyam-i-Ha (days of Ha), and are +;; placed between the 18th and 19th months. They are meant as a time +;; of festivals preceding the 19th month, which is the month of +;; fasting. In Gregorian leap years, there are 5 of these days (Ha +;; has the numerical value of 5 in the arabic abjad, or +;; letter-to-number, reckoning). + +;; Each month is named after an attribute of God, as are the 19 days +;; -- which have the same names as the months. There is also a name +;; for each year in every 19 year cycle. These cycles are called +;; Vahids. A cycle of 19 Vahids (361 years) is called a Kullu-Shay, +;; which means "all things". + +;; The calendar was named the "Badi calendar" by its author, the Bab. +;; It uses a week of seven days, corresponding to the Gregorian week, +;; each of which has its own name, again patterned after the +;; attributes of God. + ;; Note: The days of Ayyam-i-Ha are encoded as zero and negative ;; offsets from the first day of the final month. So, (19 -3 157) is ;; the first day of Ayyam-i-Ha, in the year 157 BE.