or
Islamic calendars. The primary practical use of a calendar is to identify days: to be informed about or to agree on a future event and to record an event that has happened. Days may be significant for agricultural, civil, religious, or social reasons. For example, a calendar provides a way to determine when to start planting or harvesting, which days are
religious or
civil holidays, which days mark the beginning and end of business accounting periods, and which days have legal significance, such as the day taxes are due or a contract expires. Also, a calendar may, by identifying a day, provide other useful information about the day such as its season. Calendars are also used as part of a complete
timekeeping system: date and time of day together specify a moment in
time. In the modern world, timekeepers can show time, date, and weekday. Some may also show the lunar phase.
Gregorian The
Gregorian calendar is the
de facto international standard and is used almost everywhere in the world for civil purposes. The widely used solar aspect is a cycle of leap days in a 400-year cycle designed to keep the duration of the year aligned with the
solar year. There is a lunar aspect which approximates the position of the moon during the year, and is used in the
calculation of the date of Easter. Each Gregorian year has either 365 or 366 days (the leap day being inserted as 29 February), amounting to an average Gregorian year of 365.2425 days (compared to a solar year of 365.2422 days). The Gregorian calendar was introduced in 1582 as a refinement to the
Julian calendar, that had been in use throughout the European Middle Ages, amounting to a 0.002% correction in the length of the year. During the Early Modern period,
its adoption was mostly limited to
Roman Catholic nations, but by the 19th century it had become widely adopted for the sake of convenience in international trade. The last European country to adopt it was Greece, in 1923. The
calendar epoch used by the Gregorian calendar is inherited from the medieval convention established by
Dionysius Exiguus and associated with the Julian calendar. The year number is variously given as AD (for
Anno Domini) or CE (for
Common Era or
Christian Era).
Religious (
pancanga) for the year 1871/2 from
Rajasthan (Library of Congress, Asian Division) The most important use of pre-modern calendars is keeping track of the
liturgical year and the observation of religious feast days. While the Gregorian calendar is itself historically motivated to the calculation of the
Easter date, it is now in worldwide secular use as the
de facto standard. Alongside the use of the Gregorian calendar for secular matters, there remain several calendars in use for religious purposes. Western Christian liturgical calendars are based on the cycle of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church, and generally include the liturgical seasons of
Advent,
Christmas, Ordinary Time (Time after
Epiphany),
Lent,
Easter, and Ordinary Time (Time after
Pentecost). Some Christian calendars do not include Ordinary Time and every day falls into a denominated season. The
Eastern Orthodox Church employs the use of 2 liturgical calendars; the
Julian calendar (often called the Old Calendar) and the
Revised Julian Calendar (often called the New Calendar). The Revised Julian Calendar is nearly the same as the Gregorian calendar, with the addition that years divisible by 100 are not
leap years, except that years with remainders of 200 or 600 when divided by 900 remain leap years, e.g. 2000 and 2400 as in the Gregorian calendar. The
Islamic calendar or Hijri calendar is a
lunar calendar consisting of 12 lunar months in a year of 354 or 355 days. It is used to date events in most of the Muslim countries (concurrently with the Gregorian calendar) and used by Muslims everywhere to determine the proper day on which to celebrate Islamic holy days and festivals. Its epoch is the
Hijra (corresponding to AD 622). With an annual drift of 11 or 12 days, the seasonal relation is repeated approximately every 33 Islamic years. Various
Hindu calendars remain in use in the Indian subcontinent, including the
Nepali calendars,
Bengali calendar,
Malayalam calendar,
Tamil calendar,
Vikrama Samvat used in Northern India, and
Shalivahana calendar in the
Deccan states. The
Buddhist calendar and the traditional lunisolar calendars of
Cambodia,
Laos,
Myanmar,
Sri Lanka and
Thailand are also based on an older version of the Hindu calendar. Most of the Hindu calendars are inherited from a system first enunciated in
Vedanga Jyotisha of Lagadha, standardized in the
Sūrya Siddhānta and subsequently reformed by astronomers such as
Āryabhaṭa (AD 499),
Varāhamihira (6th century) and
Bhāskara II (12th century). The
Hebrew calendar is used by
Jews worldwide for religious and cultural affairs, also influences civil matters in Israel (such as
national holidays) and can be used in business dealings (such as for the dating of
cheques). Followers of the
Baháʼí Faith use the
Baháʼí calendar. The Baháʼí Calendar, also known as the Badi Calendar was first established by the Bab in the Kitab-i-Asma. The Baháʼí Calendar is also purely a solar calendar and comprises 19 months each having nineteen days.
National The
Chinese,
Hebrew,
Hindu, and
Julian calendars are widely used for religious and social purposes. The
Iranian (Persian) calendar is used in
Iran and some parts of
Afghanistan. The
Assyrian calendar is in use by the members of the Assyrian community in the Middle East (mainly Iraq, Syria, Turkey, and Iran) and the diaspora. The first year of the calendar is exactly 4750 years prior to the start of the Gregorian calendar. The
Ethiopian calendar or Ethiopic calendar is the principal calendar used in
Ethiopia and
Eritrea, with the
Oromo calendar also in use in some areas. In neighboring
Somalia, the
Somali calendar co-exists alongside the Gregorian and Islamic calendars. In
Thailand, where the
Thai solar calendar is used, the months and days have adopted the western standard, although the years are still based on the traditional
Buddhist calendar.
Fiscal A fiscal calendar generally means the accounting year of a government or a business. It is used for budgeting, keeping accounts, and taxation. It is a set of 12 months that may start at any date in a year. The US government's fiscal year starts on 1 October and ends on 30 September. The government of India's fiscal year starts on 1 April and ends on 31 March. Small traditional businesses in India start the fiscal year on
Diwali festival and end the day before the next year's Diwali festival. In accounting (and particularly accounting software), a fiscal calendar (such as a
4/4/5 calendar) fixes each month at a specific number of weeks to facilitate comparisons from month to month and year to year. January always has exactly 4 weeks (Sunday through Saturday), February has 4 weeks, March has 5 weeks, etc. Note that this calendar will normally need to add a 53rd week to every 5th or 6th year, which might be added to December or might not be, depending on how the organization uses those dates. There exists an international standard way to do this (the
ISO week). The ISO week starts on a Monday and ends on a Sunday. Week 1 is always the week that contains 4 January in the Gregorian calendar. ==Formats==