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Lunar calendar

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A bright full moon shining in the night sky, captured from Madison, Alabama.

A lunar calendar is a special way to keep track of time using the Moon’s phases. Instead of counting days based on how long it takes the Earth to go around the Sun, like our regular calendar, a lunar calendar follows the Moon. Each month matches the time it takes the Moon to go through its different shapes, called phases.

Tabular Islamic calendar

Because the Moon’s cycle is about 29 and a half days, lunar calendar months switch between 29 and 30 days. Twelve of these Moon-based months add up to about 354 days, which is shorter than a full year based on the Sun. This means that over time, the months of a lunar calendar will move through all the seasons.

The most well-known lunar calendar is the Islamic calendar. Different lunar calendars may start their months at different points in the Moon’s cycle, such as the new Moon or the full Moon. The idea of a lunar new year marks the beginning of this special calendar and is used in many cultures around the world.

History

Some people think that long ago, hunters watched the Moon and wrote about it. A person named Samuel L. Macey thinks people started using the Moon to measure time maybe as early as 28,000 to 30,000 years ago.

Start of the lunar month

Lunar and lunisolar calendars have different ways to decide the first day of the month. For example, the Hijri calendar starts with the first sighting of the lunar crescent. In other calendars, like the Hebrew calendar and Chinese calendar, the month begins on the day of the new moon. Some Hindu calendars start each month on the day after the full moon.

Length of the lunar month

The Moon's phases change a little each month. We can only see the Moon if the weather is good. In Sunni Islam, a new month starts when people see the first thin part of the Moon, called Hilal.

Some people made math rules to guess when each month will start. One way is the Tabular Islamic calendar. This calendar uses a pattern that repeats every 30 years. Sometimes the month is a little longer, and sometimes it is a little shorter. This helps guess when the first part of the Moon will appear, which decides the first day of each month in the Islamic lunar calendar.

List of lunar calendars

Some cultures use special calendars based on the Moon's phases. Two examples are the Islamic Hijri calendar and the Javanese calendar. These calendars follow the Moon instead of the Sun to decide when months begin.

Lunisolar calendars

Main article: Lunisolar calendar

Many calendars called "lunar" are really lunisolar calendars. Their months follow the Moon's cycles, but they add extra months sometimes to match the solar year. Ancient Egypt used a solar calendar but kept some lunar traditions for religious and farming reasons. Today, several cultures use lunisolar calendars, including Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Hindu, Hebrew, and Thai calendars.

One common way to keep these calendars in sync is by adding an extra month every few years. Some lunisolar calendars also match natural events that change with both the Moon and the Sun. For example, the calendar of the Banks Islands includes months when special palolo worms come to the beaches, which happens at a certain point in the lunar month.

Images

A colorful montage showing the planets in our solar system—Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—taken by NASA spacecraft. Each planet is shown roughly to scale for comparison.
A marine sandglass used for measuring time at sea, a tool important in nautical history.
Map showing the International Date Line and the 180th meridian in the Aleutian Islands.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Lunar calendar, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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