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10 - The Old Hindu Calendars

from I - Arithmetical Calendars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2018

Edward M. Reingold
Affiliation:
Illinois Institute of Technology
Nachum Dershowitz
Affiliation:
Tel-Aviv University
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Summary

Scientists with advanced computers have sometimes failed to predict major earthquakes, but ancient Indian astrology does have the tools to roughly foretell the time and sometimes even the exact date and time of an earthquake.

Murli Manohar Joshi: The Irish Times (August 4, 2003)

Structure and History

The Hindus have both solar and lunisolar calendars. In the Hindu lunisolar system, as in other lunisolar calendars, months follow the lunar cycle and are synchronized with the solar year by introducing occasional leap months. Unlike the Hebrew lunisolar calendar (described in Chapter 8), Hindu intercalated months do not follow a short cyclical pattern. Moreover, unlike other calendars, a day can be omitted any time in a lunar month.

Modern Hindu calendars are based on close approximations to the true times of the sun's entrance into the signs of the zodiac and of lunar conjunctions (new moons). Before about 1100 c.e., however, Hindu calendars used mean times. Though the basic structure of the calendar is similar for both systems, the mean (madhyama) and true (spas. t.a) calendars can differ by a few days or can be shifted by a month. In this chapter we implement the mean system, as described in [4, pp. 360-446], which is arithmetical; Chapter 20 is devoted to the more recent astronomical version. For an ancient description of Hindu astronomy, calendars, and holidays, see the book on India by al-Bīrūnī [1]; a more modern reference is [3].

There are various epochs that are, or have been, used as starting points for the enumeration of years in India. For a list of eras, see [5, pp. 39-47, civ-cvi]. In this chapter, we use the expired Kali Yuga (“Iron Age”) epoch. The expired year number is the number of years that have elapsed since the onset of the Kali Yuga. As van Wijk [6] explains:

We count the years of human life in expired years. A child of seven years has already lived more than seven years; but on the famous 18 Brumaire de l'An VIII de la République Française une et indivisible only 7 years and 47 days of the French Era had elapsed.

Type
Chapter
Information
Calendrical Calculations
The Ultimate Edition
, pp. 155 - 168
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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References

[1] al-Bīrūnī(= Abū-RaiḤān Muḥammad ibn ‘Aḥmad al-Bīrūnī), India: An Accurate Description of all Categories of Hindu Thought, as Well those Which are Admissible as those Which Must be Rejected, circa 1030. Translated and annotated by C. E., Sachau, Albêrûnî's India: An Account of the Religion, Philosophy, Literature, Geography, Chronology, Astronomy, Customs, Laws and Astrology of India, William ḤAllen and Co., London, 1910; reprinted under the Authority of the Government of West Pakistan, Lahore, 1962, and by S. Chand & Co., New Delhi, 1964.Google Scholar
[2] ḤG., Jacobi, “The Computation of Hindu Dates in Inscriptions, &c.,” Epigraphia Indica: A Collection of Inscriptions Supplementary to the Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum of the Archæological Survey of India, J., Burgess, ed., Calcutta, pp. 403-460, p. 481, 1892.
[3] D., Pingree, “History of Mathematical Astronomy in India,” Dictionary of Scientific Biography, C. C., Gillispie, ed., vol. XV, suppl. I, pp. 533-633, 1978.
[4] R., Sewell, The Siddhantas and the Indian Calendar, Being a Continuation of the Author's “Indian Chronography,” with an Article by the Late Dr. J. F. Fleet on the Mean Place of the Planet Saturn, Government of India Central Publication Branch, Calcutta, 1924. This is a reprint of a series of articles in Epigraphia Indica.
[5] R., Sewell and S. B., Dîkshit, The Indian Calendar, with Tables for the Conversion of Hindu and Muhammadan into a.d. Dates, and Vice Versa, with Tables of Eclipses Visible in India by R., Schram, Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, Delhi, 1995. Originally published in 1896.
[6] W. E. van, Wijk, Decimal Tables for the Reduction of Hindu Dates from the Data of the Sūrya-Siddhānta, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1938.Google Scholar

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