This holiday is based on the
Ethiopian calendar. It is the Ethiopian New Year. Large celebrations are held around the country, notably at the
Raguel Church on
Mount Entoto. According to InCultureParent, "after attending church in the morning, families gather to share a traditional meal of
injera (flat bread) and wat (sauce). Later in the day, young girls donning new clothes, gather daisies and present friends with a bouquet, singing New Year's songs." According to the Ethiopian Tourism Commission, "Enkutatash is not exclusively a religious holiday. Modern Enkutatash is also the season for exchanging formal new year greetings and cards among the urban sophisticated – in lieu of the traditional bouquet of flowers." The Ethiopian counting of years begins in the year 8 of the
common era. This is because the common era follows the calculations of Dionysius, a 6th-century monk, while the
non-Chalcedonian countries continued to use the calculations of
Annianus, a 5th-century monk, which had placed the Annunciation of Christ exactly 8 years later. For this reason, on Enkutatash in the year 2016 of the Gregorian calendar, for example, it became 2009 in the Ethiopian calendar. ==See also==