Kalenda ya Misri ya Kale
Kalenda ya Misri ya Kale ilikuwa kalenda ya jua yenye siku 365 inayoendelea kutumiwa hadi leo katika Kanisa la Kikopti na pia na wakulima wa Misri.
Ugawaji wa mwaka
haririMwaka uligawiwa kwa majira matatu ya siku 120 kila moja, pamoja na kipindi cha nyongeza cha siku tano kilichotazamwa kuwa nje ya mwaka wenyewe.
Majira 3 ya mwaka yalifuata hali ya Mto Naili, yaani
- majira ya mafuriko (takribani Juni hadi Septemba)
- majira ya kutokea upya kwa nchi kavu (takribani Oktoba hadi Januari)
- majira ya mavuno (takribani Februari hadi Mei)
Ilhali Misri ni nchi yenye mvua kidogo mno, mafuriko ya kila mwaka yaliyoleta kutoka Ethiopia maji pamoja na matope yenye rutuba yalikuwa msingi wa kilimo katika bonde la Naili hadi lilipojengwa Lambo la Assuan mnamo 1960-1970.
Majira yaligawiwa kwa miezi minne yenye siku 30. Hii miezi 12 hapo awali ilitajwa kwa namba lakini baadaye ilijulikana pia kwa majina ya sherehe zake kuu. Kila mwezi uligawanywa katika miongo mitatu ya siku 10.
Mwaka mfupi
haririMwaka huo ulikuwa mfupi kuliko mwaka wa jua kiasi cha karibu robo siku. Kalenda ya Wamisri ilipoteza karibu siku moja kila baada ya miaka minne kulinganishwa na Kalenda ya Gregori. Hali hiyo ilitambuliwa kama hasara, lakini majaribio ya kusahihisha kasoro kwa kuongeza siku ya sita ya nyongeza kila baada ya miaka minne yalishindikana kutokana na upinzani kwa viongozi wa dini.
Sahihisho liliwezekana tu wakati Misri ilipotawaliwa na Dola la Roma chini ya Kaisari Augusto mnamo mwaka 24 au 25 BK.
Misingi
haririKalenda ilianzishwa mapema wakati wa milenia ya 3 KK. Wataalamu wa Misri ya Kale walitambua kwamba nyota ya Shira (Sirius) ilianza kuonekana angani kila mwaka wakati huohuo kama kutokea kwa mafuriko ya Mto Naili. Hivyo tarehe ya kuonekana kwa Shira mnamo 19 Juni ilikuwa siku ya mwaka mpya wakati kalenda ilipoanzishwa; ila tu, kutokana na ufupi wa mwaka wa Kimisri, Shira ilianza kutokea kabla ya siku ya mwaka mpya.
Matumizi baada ya Misri ya Kale
haririTangu masahihisho yaliyofanywa chini ya Kaisari Augusto, kalenda iliendelea sambamba na Kalenda ya Juliasi ya Waroma. Pia baada ya uvamizi wa Waarabu na kuenea kwa Uislamu iliendelea kutumiwa na Kanisa la Kikopti kwa kupanga liturgia na sikukuu zake.
Pia wakulima wa Misri, wakiwa Wakristo au Waislamu, waliendelea kutumia kalenda hiyo kwa kukadiria kazi zao zilizotegema majira ya mafuriko ya mto Naili.
Marejeo
hariri
Vitabu
hariri- Clagett, Marshall (1995), Ancient Egyptian Science: A Source Book, Vol. II: Calendars, Clocks, and Astronomy, Memoirs of the APS, No. 214, Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.
- Everson, Michael (1999), Encoding Egyptian Hieroglyphs in Plane 1 of the UCS (PDF), Unicode.
- Forisek, Péter (2003), Censorinus and His Work De Die Natali (PDF), Debrecen: University of Debrecen. (Full Hungarian version.)
- Grafton, Anthony Thomas; na wenz. (1985), "Technical Chronology and Astrological History in Varro, Censorinus, and Others", The Classical Quarterly, Vol. XXXV, No. 2, ku. 454–465.
- Høyrup, Jens, "A Historian's History of Ancient Egyptian Science" (PDF), Physis, a review of Clagett's Ancient Egyptian Science, Vols. I & II.
- Jauhiainen, Heidi (2009), Do Not Celebrate Your Feast without Your Neighbors: A Study of References to Feasts and Festivals in Non-Literary Documents from Ramesside Period Deir el-Medina (PDF), Publications of the Institute for Asian and African Studies, No. 10, Helsinki: University of Helsinki.
- Krauss, Rolf; na wenz., whr. (2006), Ancient Egyptian Chronology, Handbook of Oriental Studies, Sect. 1, Vol. 83, Leiden: Brill.
- Luft, Ulrich (2006), "Absolute Chronology in Egypt in the First Quarter of the Second Millennium BC", Egypt and the Levant, Vol. XVI, Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, ku. 309--316.
- Neugebauer, Otto Eduard (1939), "Die Bedeutungslosigkeit der 'Sothisperiode' für die Älteste Ägyptische Chronologie", Acta Orientalia, No. 16, ku. 169 ff. Kigezo:In lang
- O'Mara, Patrick F. (Januari 2003), "Censorinus, the Sothic Cycle, and Calendar Year One in Ancient Egypt: The Epistemological Problem", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. LXII, No. 1, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ku. 17–26
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: date auto-translated (link). - Parker, Richard Anthony (1950), The Calendars of Ancient Egypt (PDF), Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization, No. 26, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Schaefer, Bradley Elliott (2000), "The Heliacal Rise of Sirius and Ancient Egyptian Chronology", Journal for the History of Astronomy, Vol. XXXI, Pt. 2, ku. 149–155.
- Spalinger, Anthony (Januari 1995), "Some Remarks on the Epagomenal Days in Ancient Egypt", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1, ku. 33–47
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: date auto-translated (link). - Tetley, M. Christine (2014), The Reconstructed Chronology of the Egyptian Kings, Vol. I, ilihifadhiwa kwenye nyaraka kutoka chanzo mnamo 2017-02-11, iliwekwa mnamo 2017-02-09.
- Winlock, Herbert Eustis (1940), "The Origin of the Ancient Egyptian Calendar", Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, No. 83, New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, ku. 447–464.
- Vygus, Mark (2015), Middle Egyptian Dictionary (PDF).
Viungo vya Nje
hariri- Detailed information about the Egyptian calendars, including lunar cycles
- Date Converter for Ancient Egypt
- Calendrica Includes the Egyptian civil calendar with years in Ptolemy's Nabonassar Era (year 1 = 747 BC) as well as the Coptic, Ethiopic, and French calendars.
- Civil, ver. 4.0, is a 25kB DOS program to convert dates in the Egyptian civil calendar to the Julian or Gregorian ones