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Pr Ntr Kmt World Religious Calendar Pagan Holy Days

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<strong>World</strong> <strong>Religious</strong> <strong>Calendar</strong> 1371<br />

In the Celtic tree claendar, this day was considered so holy that it was not part of any tree month and<br />

was not assigned an Ogham letter.<br />

The Celtic calendar started out as a moon calendar, but was aligned with the solar year during<br />

antiquity. Robert Graves proposed the Celtic tree calendar described here. While widely used by<br />

Neo-<strong>Pagan</strong>s, many critics dispute the authenticity. The Beth-Luis-Nion calendar (the one used here)<br />

starts with New Year on the Winter Solstice. The Beth-Luis-Faern calendar starts with New Year on<br />

Samhain.<br />

Robert Graves claimed that the Celts used a 13 month tree calendar. Critics dispute this claim.<br />

Graves’ claims are based on 19th century work by Edward Davies, who found references to the trees in<br />

the 1685 work Ogygia by Ruairi Ó Flaitheartaigh, which was in turn derived from oral history and older<br />

works such as Book of Ballymote and Auraicept na n-Éces.<br />

Asatru (ancient Norse) information<br />

Month: Yule<br />

Roman information<br />

a.d. X Kal. Ian.<br />

10 days before the Kalends of January<br />

Month: December<br />

The a.d. X Kal. designation means ante diem or ten “days before” the Kalends (first day or New<br />

Moon) of the next month. When counting days, the Romans included both the start and end day (in<br />

modern Western culture, we skip the start day). When the Romans switched to a solar calendar, they<br />

continued to use the lunar day names.<br />

The Roman month of December is named for decem, because it was originally the tenth month of the<br />

Roman solar year. December was sacred to Vesta, the Roman Goddess of hearth, home, and family.<br />

The earliest Roman months were lunar. According to Roman mythology, the ten month solar calendar<br />

aligned to the vernal equinox was introduced by Romulus, the founder of Rome, around 753 BCE. In<br />

Romulus’ calendar, December (the tenth month) had 30 days. Numa Pompilius, the second of the seven<br />

traditional kings of Rome, added two more months, for a 12 month year. In Numa’s calendar, December<br />

had 29 days. Gaius Julius Caesar, as Pontifex Maximus (supreme bridge-builder, a religious title),<br />

reorganized the calendar on the first day of 45 BCE. In Caesar’s calendar (the Julian <strong>Calendar</strong>),<br />

December had 31 days. Caesar’s calendar was calculated by Sosigenes, an Egyptian<br />

astrologer/astronomer. In 8 BCE, Augustus Caesar fixed errors by pontiffs after Julius’ death and made<br />

other minor modifications, resulting in the modern Western calendar. The modern Gregorian <strong>Calendar</strong>,<br />

named for Roman Catholic Pope Gregory the Thirteenth, was a realignment in 1582.<br />

Today totals 5 in modern Western numerology.<br />

numerology<br />

lunar information 2007<br />

1371 of 1413 7/14/08 9:29 AM

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