Lunar year calendars

As we know this week another lunar calendar has been celebrated worldwide with great bang. i.e. Chinese new year. So happy new year to those celebrating.

Just came across an interesting article about different lunar calendars and its impact across the globe.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/05/science/chinese-new-year-lunar-calendar.html

What Lunar New Year Reveals About the World?s Calendars
Rather than a scientific given, calendars say a lot about the history and cultural values of the societies that created them.

Performances in Hong Kong celebrating the Lunar New Year on Tuesday.

Lunar New Year kicked off Tuesday as one of the most important holidays in Vietnam, South Korea, China and other Asian countries. Typically, it starts on the second new moon after winter solstice.

On the Gregorian calendar, the civil calendar used in most countries, including the United States, the Lunar New Year changes every year, as do the dates of holidays like Rosh Hashana, Diwali and Ramadan.

It can be easy to think of a calendar as a scientific given, or a reflection of the laws of the universe. In fact, as these holidays remind us, there are as many ways to track time as there are cultures and languages. Each calendar reveals something about how the people who created it relate to the world around them while also preserving rich cultural identities and memories.

Most time-keeping traditions track the movement of the sun, moon and stars. Others consider seasonal events, like the autumnal swarming of sea worms, used to orient each year in the Trobriand Islands off New Guinea, or the flowering of immortelle trees into hundreds of tiny vermilion flames, which marks the start of the dry season in Trinidad.

With any calendar, the basic question is which of thousands, if not millions, of cycles in the world to follow, said Kevin Birth, an anthropology professor at Queens College. Calendars ?always come down to this cultural choice,? he said, so using one system over another is ultimately a social contract, regardless of how scientifically accurate or sophisticated a calendar is.

A solar year ? the time it takes Earth to orbit the sun ? lasts around 365 days, while a lunar year, or 12 full cycles of the Moon, is roughly 354 days. Because of this discrepancy, a purely lunar calendar ? like the Islamic, or Hijri, calendar ? doesn?t stay aligned with the seasons. Islam?s holy month of Ramadan may fall in summer one year, and winter a number of years later.

To correct for seasonal drift, the Chinese, Hindu, Jewish and many other calendars are lunisolar. In these calendars, a month is still defined by the moon, but an extra month is added periodically to stay close to the solar year.

A solar calendar is useful for farming, fishing and foraging societies that need to plan ahead for particular times of the year. But a purely solar calendar, like the Gregorian, tells you nothing about the phases of the Moon.

The traditional Hijri calendar requires an observation of the early crescent moon to start a new month, and thus encourages paying attention to the cosmos. The Gregorian calendar can?t be tracked in the sky, which might be why many Westerners have less awareness of the moon and other natural phenomena, said Sacha Stern, a professor of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at University College London.

Major events on the calendar shape cultural identity. When Jews around the world celebrate Sukkot, a harvest festival, they are observing the timing of the harvest in Israel, and preserving a connection throughout the diaspora, Dr. Birth said.

Holidays also structure personal and historical narratives. Some secular holidays in the United States center on legacies of war, which fits ?when you think that the United States also has the largest military budget in the world,? Dr. Birth said. Chinese holidays usually emphasize family union and honoring ancestors, Mr. Yuan said, which aligns with the importance of filial piety.

Many ancient calendars, like the Chinese and Mesoamerican ones, build in fortunetelling, with prescriptions for when to build a house, get married, have a funeral and other life events. Similar calendars provide structure and comfort to people today. Britt Hart, an astrologer based in Philadelphia, said she thinks people can be drawn to horoscope-based calendars because they?re seeking a grander sense of time and order in the universe.

In the context of history, staying connected to an alternative calendar can also be a form of resisting the mainstream, or maintaining an identity outside of it. When a calendar is imposed on a society, it usually has to do with politics and power. The ability ?to say when the year will start, or decide that a religious festival should be celebrated at a particular time, can be quite useful for a politician,? Dr. Stern said.

The Gregorian calendar has only been used as a global standard for about a century, and is ?very much a reflection of European commerce and colonialism,? Dr. Birth said. It has now been built into computer architecture, but that doesn?t mean another calendar couldn?t one day become dominant.

A Hijri calendar from the Gregorian year 2014 hangs in Dr. Birth?s office. On it, Christmas falls on 3 Rabi al-Awwal, the third day of the third month.

He loves the reminder that, ?holidays you think are stationary actually move, and those you think move are actually stationary.? It shows ?how cultural these things are, rather than natural,? he said.

The Chinese lunar year is not 100% lunar though - as it starts from the first moon after the winter solstice! And the winter solistice depends on earths movment around sun - so it is basically both solar based lunar calendar!

The kuffar of Arabia also used to add one month after every three years to keep their lunar based calender with seasons. This was prohibited by Islam.

n the tenth year of the Hijra, according to sura 9:36?37, a prohibition of Nasīʾ was enacted: The number of months with Allah has been twelve months by Allah’s ordinance since the day He created the heavens and the earth. Of these four are known as forbidden [to fight in]; That is the straight usage, so do not wrong yourselves therein, and fight against the disbelievers collectively as they fight against you collectively. But know that Allah is with those who restrain themselves.
Verily the transposing (of a prohibited month) is an addition to Unbelief: The Unbelievers are led to wrong thereby: for they make it lawful one year, and forbidden another year, of months forbidden by Allah and make such forbidden ones lawful. The evil of their course seems pleasing to them. But Allah guideth not those who reject Faith.

? at-Tawba 9, ayatayn 36-37[SUP][11]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasi'#cite_note-11)[/SUP]