In the 260-day cycle 20 day names pairs with 13 day numbers, totaling a cycle of 260 days. This cycle was used for divination purposes to foretell lucky and unlucky days. The date of birth was also used to give names to both humans and gods in many Mesoamerican cultures; some cultures used only the calendar name whereas others combined it with a given name. As a result, the word for "day" also means "name" in some Mesoamerican languages. Each day sign was presided over by a god and many had associations with specific natural phenomena..
History Earliest written evidence for the 260 calendar include the
San Andres glyphs (
Olmec, 650 BCE, giving the possible date 3 Ajaw) and the
San Jose Mogote danzante (
Zapotec, 600 - 500 BCE, giving the possible date 1 Earthquake), in both cases assumed to be used as names. However, the earliest evidence of the use of the 260-day cycle comes from astronomical alignments in the Olmec region and western Maya Lowlands, dating to about 1100 BCE. The exact origin of the 260-day count is not known, but there are several theories. One theory is that the calendar came from mathematical operations based on the numbers
thirteen and
twenty, which were important numbers to the Maya. The numbers multiplied together equal 260. Another theory is that the 260-day period came from the length of human
pregnancy. This is close to the average number of days between the
first missed menstrual period and birth, unlike
Naegele's rule which is 40 weeks (280 days) between the
last menstrual period and birth. It is postulated that
midwives originally developed the calendar to predict babies' expected birth dates. A third theory comes from understanding of astronomy, geography and paleontology. The Mesoamerican calendar probably originated with the
Olmecs, and a settlement existed at Izapa, in southeast
Chiapas, Mexico, before 1200 BCE. There, at a latitude of about 15
° N, the Sun passes through zenith twice a year, and there are 260 days between zenithal passages, and
gnomons (used generally for observing the path of the Sun and in particular zenithal passages), were found at this and other sites. The sacred almanac may well have been set in motion on August 13, 1359, BCE, in Izapa.
Trecenas In the post-classic
Aztec calendar the periods of 13 days called a
trecena in Spanish (no indigenous word for this period is known) were also important. The days of a
trecena were usually numbered from 1 to 13. There were some exceptions, such as in the
Tlapanec area where they were counted from 2 to 14. The first day of the
trecena, and the god who was its patron, ruled the following thirteen days. If the first day of a trecena was auspicious then so were the next twelve days. ==365-day calendar==