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Calendar<br />

<strong>the</strong> hours of sunlight into 12 hours, but, obviously, in nor<strong>the</strong>rn latitudes an hour during<br />

a long summer day might be twice as long as an hour during a short winter day.<br />

The Western civil calendar that is now used internationally is based on hours of a precisely<br />

defined fixed length, but <strong>the</strong>re are still some local or folk calendars in which <strong>the</strong><br />

length of an hour is much more flexible.<br />

The next most obvious way to divide time is to use <strong>the</strong> phases of <strong>the</strong> Moon.<br />

Originally, a month was a “moonth”: It represented <strong>the</strong> period from one full moon or<br />

new moon to <strong>the</strong> next. We cannot know how people measured time during <strong>the</strong> tens or<br />

hundreds of millennia that all human beings existed as bands of hunters and ga<strong>the</strong>rers,<br />

following <strong>the</strong> herds and <strong>the</strong> ripening fruits and grains in an annual migration north<br />

and south. During <strong>the</strong> last ice age (from roughly 20,000 to 100,000 years ago), when<br />

human beings were forced to live in caves and develop new stoneware technology in<br />

order to survive, <strong>the</strong>y may have begun tallying <strong>the</strong> phases of <strong>the</strong> Moon more carefully<br />

than before in attempting to calculate <strong>the</strong> length of <strong>the</strong> lunar month. In <strong>the</strong> Western<br />

civil calendar, months are arbitrary groups of days, ranging from 28 to 31 days in<br />

length that are not correlated with <strong>the</strong> phases of <strong>the</strong> moon. All major religious calendars<br />

(Christian, Jewish, Moslem, Buddhist, and Hindu) still depend wholly or partly<br />

on having months that are exactly in phase with <strong>the</strong> Moon.<br />

The third most obvious time division is marked by <strong>the</strong> seasons—<strong>the</strong> annual<br />

migration north and south of <strong>the</strong> Sun’s rising and setting points. Probably for a long<br />

time, years were labeled only relatively, as <strong>the</strong> regnal year of a king, by <strong>the</strong> number of<br />

years since some memorable event, and so on; and this starting point would be<br />

changed with every new generation. Only ra<strong>the</strong>r late in <strong>the</strong> history of civilization did<br />

years begin to be numbered from some fixed point in <strong>the</strong> distant past, such as <strong>the</strong> first<br />

Olympiad, <strong>the</strong> founding of <strong>the</strong> city of Rome, or <strong>the</strong> birth of Jesus of Nazareth.<br />

Constructing a Calendar<br />

As could <strong>the</strong>ir predecessors, agricultural villagers today can coordinate <strong>the</strong>ir annual<br />

activities by word of mouth, but citizens of an empire cannot. It obviously will not work<br />

to have <strong>the</strong> arrival times of people coming to a three-day festival in <strong>the</strong> capital city<br />

spread out over a week. Hence, about 5,000 years ago, <strong>the</strong> administrators in Egypt and<br />

Sumeria were faced with <strong>the</strong> problem of constructing a calendar that everyone could<br />

use to see, on each day, how many more days it would be until some scheduled event.<br />

But to construct such a calendar, <strong>the</strong>se people had to deal with four basic questions:,<br />

1. How long is a day<br />

2. How long is a month (Or, equivalently, how many days are <strong>the</strong>re in a<br />

month)<br />

3. How long is a year<br />

4. How many months are in a year<br />

Being used to our modern answers to <strong>the</strong>se questions, we may think <strong>the</strong>m<br />

obvious; but <strong>the</strong>y are not, and adequate answers to <strong>the</strong>m were found only by centuries<br />

of ongoing observations, measurements, and calculations.<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

[109]

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