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Tibetan calendar

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Tibetan Lunisolar calendar
Spaho (སྲིད་པ་ཧོ་,srid pa ho, 斯巴霍Wan Yu tu), used to invoke good fortune and ward off evil spirits, since it depicts the Five Elements, Eight Trigrams, Nine Grades, and Twelve Signs of the Zodiac which apprehend all the attributes of the world

TheTibetan calendar (Tibetan:ལོ་ཐོ,Wylie:lo-tho), or thePhukpa calendar, known as theTibetan lunar calendar, is alunisolar calendar composed of either 12 or 13lunar months, each beginning and ending with anew moon. A thirteenth month is added every two or three years, so that an average Tibetan year is equal to thesolar year.[1] The 15th centuryPhukpa calendar is the main Tibetan calendar, and the Karma Kagyu'sTsurluk calendar is also in current use. The TibetanNew Year celebration isLosar (Tibetan:ལོ་གསར་,Wylie:lo-gsar), which falls either in the months of February or March in theGregorian calendar.

During theTibetan Empire period, the Tibetan calendar was a seasonally based calendar before theBuddha Shakyamuni's Kalachakra calendar system, a blend of both the Indian zodiac and Chinese zodiac systems, was incorporated. The Tibetan calendar is the basis of theMongolian calendar, and the first day of Losar also aligns with the third Mongolian (Hor) month in other almanacs.[2]

Every month, certain dates in the Tibetan calendar have special significance forTibetan Buddhist practices,[3][4] as do certain months of the Tibetan calendar year when the anniversaries of events fromShakyamuni Buddha's life correspond, such asSaga Dawa of the Tibetan fourth month.

Years

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12 zodiac symbol

There were different traditions of naming years (Tibetan:ལོ་,Wylie:lo) in Tibet. From the 12th century onwards, we observe the usage of two sixty-year cycles. The 60-year cycle is known as theBṛhaspati cycle and was first introduced into Tibet by an Indian Buddhist by the name of Chandranath and Tsilu Pandit in 1025 CE.[5] The first cycle is therabjyung (Tibetan:རབ་བྱུང༌།,Wylie:rab byung) cycle. The first year of the firstrabjyung cycle started in 1027. This cycle was adopted from India. The second cycle was derived from China and was calledDrukchu kor (Tibetan:དྲུག་ཅུ་སྐོར།,Wylie:drug cu skor,Chinese:甲子). The first year of the firstDrukchu kor cycle started in 1024. The cycles were counted byordinal numbers, but the years within the cycles were never counted but referred to by special names. The structure of thedrukchu kor was as follows:Each year is associated with an animal and anelement, similar to theChinese zodiac.[6] Animals have the following order:

HareDragonSnakeHorseSheepMonkeyBirdDogBoarRatOxTiger
ཡོས་ yosའབྲུག་ 'brugསྦྲུལ་ sbrulརྟ་ rtaལུག་ lugསྤྲེ་ spreབྱ་ byaཁྱི་ khyiཕག་ phagབྱི་བ་ byi.baགླང་ glangསྟག་ stag

Elements have the following order:

FireEarthIronWaterWood
མེ་ meས་ saལྕགས་ lcagsཆུ་ chuཤིང་ shing

Each element is associated with two consecutive years, first in its male aspect (pho), then in its female aspect (mo). For example, amale Earth-Dragon year is followed by afemale Earth-Snake year, then by amale Iron-Horse year. The sex may be omitted, as it can be inferred from the animal.

The element-animal designations recur in cycles of 60 years (asexagenary cycle), starting with a (male)Wood-Rat year. These large cycles are numbered, the first cycle starting in 1024. Therefore, 2005 roughly corresponds to the (female)Wood-Rooster year of the 17th cycle. The first year of the sixty-year cycle of Indian origin (1027) is calledrab-byung (same name as the designation of the cycle) and is equivalent to the (female) fire-Rabbit year.

Year (Gregorian)Year according torabjyungWylieElementAnimalSex
2008rabjyung 17lo 22sa pho byiEarthRatmale
2009rabjyung 17lo 23sa mo glangEarthOxfemale
2010rabjyung 17lo 24lcags pho stagIronTigermale
2011rabjyung 17lo 25lcags mo yosIronHarefemale
2012rabjyung 17lo 26chu pho 'brugWaterDragonmale
2013rabjyung 17lo 27chu mo sbrulWaterSnakefemale
2014rabjyung 17lo 28shing pho rtaWoodHorsemale
2015rabjyung 17lo 29shing mo lugWoodSheepfemale
2016rabjyung 17lo 30me pho spreFireMonkeymale
2017rabjyung 17lo 31me mo byaFireBirdfemale
2018rabjyung 17lo 32sa pho khyiEarthDogmale
2019rabjyung 17lo 33sa mo phagEarthBoarfemale
2020rabjyung 17lo 34lcags pho byiIronRatmale
2021rabjyung 17lo 35lcags mo glangIronOxfemale
2022rabjyung 17lo 36chu pho stagWaterTigermale
2023rabjyung 17lo 37chu mo yosWaterHarefemale
2024rabjyung 17lo 38shing pho 'brugWoodDragonmale
2025rabjyung 17lo 39shing mo sbrulWoodSnakefemale
2026rabjyung 17lo 40me pho rtaFireHorsemale
2027rabjyung 17lo 41me mo lugFireSheepfemale

Years with cardinal numbers

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Three relatively modern notations ofcardinal numbers are used for Tibetan years.

OnTibetan banknotes from the first half of the 20th century cardinal numbers can be seen, with year 1 in 255 CE, which is a reference to the legendary28th Emperor of Tibet,Thothori Nyantsen.

Since the second half of the 20th century another year notation has been used, where the year of, for example, 2025 CE coincides with the Tibetan year of 2152. This relatively modern year notation is referred to asBö Gyello (bod rgyal lo). In this era the first year is 127 BCE, dated to thelegendary progenitor of theYarlung dynasty,Nyatri Tsenpo.

In Tibetan calendars of the second half of the 20th century and on Tibetancoins cardinal year numbers are found with the indication ofraplo, where the first year coincides with the first year of therabjyung-cycle, that is 1027.Rab lo 928, for example, is the year of 1954 on the westernGregorian calendar.

Year (Gregorian)Epoch
127 BCE
Epoch
255
Epoch
1027
From about February/March 201921461765993
From about February/March 202021471766994
From about February/March 202121481767995
From about February/March 202221491768996
From about February/March 202321501769997
From about February/March 202421511770998
From about February/March 202521521771999
From about February/March 2026215317721000

Months

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During the time of theTibetan Empire (7th – 9th century) Tibetan months (Tibetan:ཟླ་བ་,Wylie:zla ba,THL:dawa) were named according to the four seasons:

First spring month (dpyid zla ra ba), middle spring month (dpyid zla 'bring po), last spring month (dpyid zla mtha' chung),
first summer month (dbyar zla ra ba), middle summer month (dbyar zla 'bring po), last summer month (dbyar zla mtha' chung),
first autumn month (ston zla ra ba), middle autumn month (ston-zla 'bring-po), last autumn month (ston zla mtha' chung),
first winter month (dgun zla ra ba), middle winter month (dgun-zla 'bring-po) and last winter month (dgun zla mtha' chung).

From the 12th century onwards each month has been named by the 12 animals of theChinese zodiac:

stag, (Tiger),yos (Hare),brug (Dragon),sbrul (Snake),rta (Horse),lug (Sheep),sprel (Monkey),bya (Bird),khyi (Dog),phag (Boar),byi ba (Rat), andglang (Ox).

With the introduction of the calendar of theKalacakratantra in the second half of the 11th century, months were also named via lunar mansions within which, roughly speaking, a full moon took place each month:

1st: Chu (mchu, Skt.māgha)
2nd: Wo (dbo, Skt.phālguna)
3rd: Nagpa (nag pa, Skt.caitra)
4th: Saga (sa ga, Skt.vaiśākha)
5th: Nön (snron, Skt.jyeṣṭha)
6th: Chutö (chu stod, Skt.āṣāḍha)
7th: Drozhin (gro bzhin, Skt.śrāvaṇa)
8th: Trum (khrums, Skt.bhādrapada)
9th: Takar (tha skar, Skt.āśvina)
10th: Mindrug (smin drug, Skt.kārttika)
11th: Go (mgo, Skt.mārgaśīrṣa)
12th: Gyal (rgyal, Skt.pauṣa)

In the second half of the 13th century the famous rulerDrogön Chögyal Phagpa introduced the system of counting the month by ordinal numbers, the so-calledHor "Mongolian" month:

1st Hor month (hor-zla dang-po)
2nd Hor month (hor-zla gnyis-pa)
3rd Hor month (hor-zla gsum-pa)
4th Hor month (hor-zla bzhi-pa)
5th Hor month (hor-zla lnga-pa)
6th Hor month (hor-zla drug-pa)
7th Hor month (hor-zla bdun-pa)
8th Hor month (hor-zla brgyad-pa)
9th Hor month (hor-zla dgu-pa)
10th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-pa)
11th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-gcig-pa)
12th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-gnyis-pa)

All these systems of counting or naming months were used up to modern times.

Days

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Phugpa Lhündrub Gyatsho, a Tibetan Calendar and Calculations Pooja

There are three different types of days (zhag), thekhyim zhag, thetshes zhag and thenyin zhag.

The first two of these days are astronomical days. The time needed for the mean Sun to pass through one of the twelve traditional signs of the zodiac (the twelvekhyim) is calledkhyim zla (solar month). One-thirtieth of one solar month (khyim zla) is onekhyim zhag, which might be called a zodiacal day, because there is no equivalent name in Western terminology.

The time needed by the Moon toelongate 12 degrees from the Sun and every 12 degrees thereafter is onetithi (tshes zhag, "lunar day"). The lengths of such lunar days vary considerably due to variations in the movements of the Moon and Sun.

Thirty lunar days form one lunar or synodic month (tshes zla), the period from new moon to new moon. This is equal to the time needed for the Moon to elongate 360 degrees from the Sun (sun to sun). The natural day (nyin zhag) is defined by Tibetans as the period from dawn to dawn. Strictly speaking, the months appearing in a Tibetan almanac, called by us Tibetan calendar months, are not the same as lunar or synodic months (tshes zla), which can begin and end at any time of day. In Tibetan, there is no special term for a calendar month containing whole days. These calendar months are just calledzla ba (month).

A Tibetan calendar month normally starts with the week day or natural day (gza' ornyin zhag) in which the first tithi (tshes zhag) ends. A Tibetan calendar month normally ends with the week day or natural day (gza' ornyin zhag) in which the 30thtithi (tshes zhag) ends. In consequence, a Tibetan calendar month (zla ba) comprises 29 or 30 natural days. In the sequence of natural days or week days, there are no omitted days or days that occur twice. But since these days are also named by the termtshes together with a cardinal number, it happens that certain numbers or dates (the corresponding tithi) do not occur at all (chad) or appear twice (lhag). Thetithi are counted from 1 to 30 and it can happen that a Monday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig) is followed by a Tuesday with the moon day number 3 (tshes gsum). On the other hand, a Monday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig) may be followed by a Tuesday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig). In other words, it happens quite often that certain dates do not appear in the Tibetan almanac and certain dates occur twice. But there are no natural days or week days that occur twice or which are omitted.

The days of the week (Tibetan:གཟའ,Wylie:gza') are named forastronomical objects.[7]

DayTibetan (Wylie)Phonetic transcriptionObject
Sundayགཟའ་ཉི་མ་ (gza' nyi ma)nyimaSun
Mondayགཟའ་ཟླ་བ་ (gza' zla wa)dawaMoon
Tuesdayགཟའ་མིག་དམར་ (gza' mig dmar)MikmarMars
Wednesdayགཟའ་ལྷག་པ་ (gza' lhak pa)LhakpaMercury
Thursdayགཟའ་ཕུར་བུ། (gza' phur bu)PurbuJupiter
Fridayགཟའ་པ་སངས་ (gza' pa sangs)PasangVenus
Saturdayགཟའ་སྤེན་པ་ (gza' spen ba)PenbaSaturn

Nyima "Sun",Dawa "Moon" andLhakpa "Mercury" are common personal names for people born on Sunday, Monday or Wednesday respectively.

History

[edit]

During the time of theTibetan Empire, the twelve months were named according to the four seasons of the year, and the year started in spring.[8]

Tibetans historically used the Indian astrological system, Tib.kar rtsis, that divided the days into rhythms defined by the elements and the constellations,[8] and later used a Chinese astrological system, Tib.byung rtsis, which focuses on twelve animals and the five elements to describe patterns of events. The Indian and Chinese systems were joined bythe Buddha's teachings found within the SutraAvatamsakra and the TantraKalachakra to develop the Tibetan astrological calendar.

Beginning in the 12th century, the years were named after the 12 animals common in theChinese zodiac.

The translation of theKalachakra Tantra in the late 11th century CE marked the beginning of a change of Tibet's calendar. This tantra references the Indian astronomical calendar system with its calculations that follow the progression of the constellations - the five planets, and the sun and moon eclipses.

As the original teachings of the Kalacakra were taught by the Buddha himself, two hundred years later, the Kalacakra calendar was officially adopted as a Tibetan calendar by theÜ-Tsang kingDrogön Chögyal Phagpa, in the second half of the 13th century.[citation needed]

A distinct Tibetan calendar was developed in 1284 by the lineage of the Gyalwang Karmapas, the Tsurphu tradition calendar. ThisTsurluk calendar is based on the3rd Karmapa, Rangjung Dorje's astrological treatise calledThe Compendium of Astrology (Tib.rtsis kun bsdus pa), a treatise from which many later treatises authored by the subsequentKarmapas and byJamgon Kongtrul the Great evolved. The Tsurluk calendar is still overseen by Tsipa Gelek Dhargay, at the17th Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje's seat inRumtek, Sikkim, India.[8]

In 1447, a Tibetan astrologerPhukpa Lhündrub Gyatso composed an astrological treatise calledThe Oral Teachings of Pundarika (Tib.pad dkar zhal lung). His work founded thePhukpa calendar which is the main calendar of Tibet.[8] This main Tibetan calendar, the Phukpa, was modified many times during the subsequent centuries, and it remains a luni-solar calendar.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Gyllenbok, J. (2018).Encyclopaedia of Historical Metrology, Weights, and Measures: Volume 1. Science Networks. Historical Studies. Springer International Publishing. p. 402.ISBN 978-3-319-57598-8. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  2. ^Blunden, J. (2008).Mongolia. Bradt Guides (in Italian). Bradt Travel Guides. p. 69.ISBN 978-1-84162-178-4. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  3. ^Barnett, R.; Akiner, S. (1996).Resistance and Reform in Tibet. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 240.ISBN 978-81-208-1371-7. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  4. ^Gwynne, P. (2011).World Religions in Practice: A Comparative Introduction. Wiley. p. 304.ISBN 978-1-4443-6005-9. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  5. ^Sarat Chandra Das,A Tibetan-English dictionary: with Sanskrit synonyms, p. viii (accessed: October 25, 2009).
  6. ^Crump, W.D. (2016).Encyclopedia of New Year's Holidays Worldwide. EBL-Schweitzer. McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers. p. 42.ISBN 978-1-4766-0748-1. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  7. ^Schlagintweit, E. (1863).Buddhism in Tibet: Illustrated by Literary Documents and Objects of Religious Worship, with an Account of the Buddhist Systems Preceding it in India. F.A. Brockhaus. p. 289. Retrieved2024-05-13.
  8. ^abcdNitartha, "About the Tibetan calendar",https://nitartha.org/about-the-tibetan-calendar/

Primary sources

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  • (Sanskrit) Kalacakratantra. (Tibetisch) mChog gi dang-po sangs-rgyas las phyung-ba rgyud kyi rgyal-po dus kyi 'khor-lo.
  • Grags-pa rgyal-mchan: Dus-tshod bzung-ba'i rtsis-yig
  • sde-srid Sangs-rgyas rgya-mtsho: Phug-lugs rtsis kyi legs-bshad mkhas-pa'i mgul-rgyan vaidur dkar-po'i do-shal dpyod-ldan snying-nor
  • karma Nges-legs bstan-'jin: gTsug-lag rtsis-rigs tshang-ma'i lag-len 'khrul-med mun-sel nyi-ma ñer-mkho'i 'dod-pa 'jo-ba'i bum-bzang

Secondary sources

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  • Svante Janson,Tibetan Calendar Mathematics, accessed December 16, 2009
  • Norbu, Thubten & Harrer, Heinrich (1960).Tibet Is My Country. London: Readers Union, Rupert Hart-Davis.
  • de Körős; Alexander Csoma (1834).A Grammar of the Tibetan Language. Calcutta.
  • Henning, Edward (2007).Kalacakra and the Tibetan Calendar. Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences. NY: Columbia University Press. p. 408.ISBN 978-0-9753734-9-1.
  • Laufer, Berthold (1913).The Application of the Tibetan Sexagenary Cycle. T´oung Pao, Vol. 14, pp. 569–596.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Petri, Winfried (1966).Indo-tibetische Astronomie. Habilitationsschrift zur Erlangung der venia legendi für das Fach Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften an der Hohen Naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Ludwig Maximilians Universität zu München. München.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Pelliot, Paul (1913).Le Cycle Sexagénaire dans la Chronologie Tibétaine. Paris: Journal Asiatique 1, pp. 633–667.
  • Schuh, Dieter (1973).Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung. Wiesbaden: Steiner Verlag.
  • Schuh, Dieter (1974).Grundzüge der Entwicklung der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, Supplement II. XVIII. Deutscher Orientalistentag vom 1. bis 5. Oktober 1972 in Lübeck. Vorträge, pp. 554–566.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Tsepon W.D. Shakabpa (1967).Tibet: A Political History. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  • Tournadre, Nicolas & Sangda Dorje (2003).Manual of Standard Tibetan: Language and Civilization. trans. Ramble, Charles. Ithaca: Snow Lion Publications.ISBN 1-55939-189-8.
  • Yamaguchi, Zuiho (1973).Chronological Studies in Tibet. Chibetto no rekigaku: Annual Report of the Zuzuki Academic foundation X, pp. 77–94.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Yamaguchi, Zuiho (1992).The Significance of Intercalary Constants in the Tibetan Calendar and Historical Tables of Intercalary Month. Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the 5th Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vol. 2, pp. 873–895: Narita.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)

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