Everything about The Zoroastrian Calendar totally explained
The
Zoroastrian calendar is a religious
calendar used by members of the
Zoroastrian faith, and it's an approximation of the (tropical)
solar calendar. To this day,
Zoroastrians, irrespective of geographic location, adhere to (variations of) this calendar for religious purposes.
History
Prior to the calendar reform of
Sassanid emperor
Ardashir I (
226-
241 CE), the calendar in common use since at least the mid-5th century BCE had a 360-day year, and was based systemically on the
Babylonian calendar. Under that system, the
Kabiseh (== deficit) that accumulated over time was leveled out by the periodic
intercalation of a thirteenth month, as determined by observation. The tradition of naming the days and months after divinities was based on a similar Egyptian custom, and had been previously instituted at some point between 458 BCE and 330 BCE, very probably during the reign of
Artaxerxes II (
404-
358 BCE).
The calendar introduced by
Ardashir I had a 365-day year based even more closely on the
Egyptian calendar. It still had 12 months of 30 days each, and the months and days of the month that had been named in
Achaemenid times remained as they were. However, the 12th month was followed by five additional
Gatha or
Gah days, after the ancient
Avesta hymns of the same name. In addition, all forms of intercalation were discarded, and the first day of the religious year was shifted from the 1st day of the 1st month to the 1st day of the 9th month.
The new system created confusion and was met with resistance, and many Zoroastrian feasts and celebrations had two dates, a tradition that's maintained by some Zoroastrians to this day. Many rites were practiced over many days instead of one day and duplication of observances was continued to make sure no holy days were missed.
The situation got so complicated that another
calendar reform was implemented by Ardashir's grandson
Hormizd I (
272-
273 CE). The new and old holy days were linked together to form continual six-day feasts.
Norouz (or Navroz), the first day of spring, was an exception - the first and the sixth day of the month were celebrated as different occasions and the sixth day became more significant as Zoroasters’ birthday rather than as a continuation of the spring festival celebrations.
Since the reforms of Ardashir I also did away with all forms of intercalation, the calendar and seasons had diverged by four months by the time
Yazdegerd III (
632–
651 CE) ascended the throne. This resulted in the
Gahambars (the seasonal festivals) being celebrated at the wrong times of the year. Yazdegerd III had another reform prepared, but it wasn't implemented when the Arabs overthrew the dynasty.
Yazdegerdi (Y.Z.) Era
Following
Alexander's conquest of Persia in
330 BCE, the
Seleucids (
312-
248 BCE) instituted the Hellenic practice of dating by era, as opposed to dating by the reign of individual kings, and began the era of Alexander (now referred to as the
Seleucid era). This practice wasn't considered acceptable to the Zoroastrian priests, who consequently founded a new era, the era of
Zoroaster - which incidentally led to the first serious
attempt to establish a historical date for the prophet. The
Parthians (
150 BCE-
224 CE), who succeeded the Seleucids, continued the Seleucid/Hellenic tradition, and it wasn't until the calendar reform of Ardashir I that dating by
regnal year was reinstituted.
The Zoroastrian calendar uses the
Y.Z. suffix for its
calendar era (year numbering system), indicating the number of years since the coronation in
632 CE of
Yezdegerd III, the last monarch of the
Sassanian dynasty.
Variations
As a result of the lack of intercalation embodied in the calendar reforms of Ardashir I, the calendar and the seasons were, over time, no long synchronized. Already in the 9th century, the Zoroastrian theologian Zadspram had noted that the state of affairs was less than optimal and estimated that at the time of Final Judgement the two systems would be out of sync by four years.
In
1006, the roaming New Year's day once again coincided with the day of the
vernal equinox, and (according to legend) it was resolved that the Zoroastrian calendar henceforth intercalate an additional month every 120 years as prescribed in
Denkard III.419 (it must however be noted that the Denkard is itself a 9th century work). At some point between 1125 and 1250, the
Parsi-Zoroastrians of the Indian subcontinent inserted such an
embolismic month, named
Aspandarmad vahizak (the month of Aspandarmad but with a
vahizak suffix). That month would also be the last month intercalated - subsequent generations of Parsis neglected to insert a thirteenth month.
At the time of the decision to intercalate every 120 years, the calendar was called the
Shahenshahi (== imperial) calendar. The Parsis, not aware that they were not intercalating correctly, continued to call their calendar
Shahenshahi. This practice has survived to this day, and adherents of other variants of the Zoroastrian calendar denigrate the
Shahenshahi as "royalist".
Meanwhile, the Zoroastrians who remained in Iran never once intercalated a thirteenth month. Around
1720, an Irani-Zoroastrian priest named Jamasp Peshotan Velati travelled from Iran to India. Upon his arrival, he discovered that there was a difference of a month between the Parsi calendar and his own calendar. Velati brought this discrepancy to the attention of the priests of
Surat, but no consensus as to which calendar was correct was reached. Around
1740, some influential priests argued that since their visitor had been from the ancient 'homeland', his version of the calendar must be correct, and their own must be wrong. On
June 6,
1745, a number of Parsis in and around Surat adjusted their calendars according to the recommendation of their priests. This calendar became known as the
Kadimi calendar in both India and Iran, which in due course became contracted to
Kadmi or
Quadmi.
In
1906, Khurshedji Cama, a Bombay
Parsi, founded the "Zarthosti Fasili Sal Mandal", or Zoroastrian Seasonal-Year Society. The
Fasili or
Fasli calendar, as it became known, was based on an older model, introduced in 1079 during the reign of the
Seljuk Malik Shah and which had been well received in agrarian communities.This calendar had two salient points: 1) It was in harmony with the seasons and New Year's day coincided with
vernal equinox. 2) It followed the Egyption-Zoroastrian model (12 months of 30 days each plus 5 extra days), but also had an auto-regulatory leap day every four years - the leap day, called
Avardad-sal-Gah, followed the five existing
Gah days at the end of the year. The
Fasli society also claimed that their calendar was an accurate religious calendar, as opposed to the other two calendars, which they asserted were only political.
The new calendar received little support from the Indian Zoroastrian community since it was considered to contradict the injunctions expressed in the
Denkard (III.419). In Iran, however, the
Fasli calendar gained momentum following a campaign in 1930 to persuade the Iranian Zoroastrians to adopt the new calendar of the seasons, which they called the
Bastani calendar. In 1925, the Iranian Parliament had introduced a new
Iranian calendar, which (independent of the
Fasli movement) incorporated both points proposed by the Fasili Society, and since the Iranian national calendar had also retained the Zoroastrian names of the months, it wasn't a big step to integrate the two. The
Bastani calendar was duly accepted by the majority of the Zoroastrians. In Yazd, however, the Zoroastrian community resisted, and to this day follow the
Kadmi calendar.
In
1992, all three calendars happened to have the first day of a month on the same day, and although many Zoroastrians suggested a consolidation of the calendars, no consensus could be reached. Some priests also objected on the grounds that the religious implements would require re-consecration, at not insignificant expense.
Month and day names
The months and the days of the month in the Zoroastrian calendar are dedicated to, and named after, a divinity or divine concept. The religious importance of the calendar dedications is very significant. Not only does it establish the hierarchy of the major divinities, it ensures the frequent invocation of their names since the divinities of both day and month are mentioned at every Zoroastrian act of worship.
The oldest (though undateable) testimony for the existence of the day dedications comes from
Yasna 16, a section of the
Yasna liturgy that's - for the most part - a veneration to the 30 divinities with day-name dedications. In those
Avestan language verses, the names appear in the following sequence:
| 1. |
Dadvah Ahura Mazdā, 2. Vohu Manah, 3. Aša Vahišta, 4. Khšathra Vairya, 5. Spenta Ārmaiti, 6. Haurvatāt, 7. Ameretāt |
| 8. |
Dadvah Ahura Mazdā, 9. Ātar, 10. Āpō, 11. Hvar, 12. Māh, 13. Tištrya, 14. Geuš Urvan |
| 15. |
Dadvah Ahura Mazdā, 16. Mithra, 17. Sraoša, 18. Rašnu, 19. Fravašayō, 20. Verethragna, 21. Rāman, 22. Vāta |
| 23. |
Dadvah Ahura Mazdā, 24. Daēna, 25. Aši, 26. Arštāt, 27. Asmān, 28. Zam, 29. Manthra Spenta, 30. Anaghra Raočā. |
The quarternary dedication to
Ahura Mazda was perhaps a compromise between orthodox and heterodox factions, with the 8th, 15th and 23rd day of the calendar perhaps originally having been dedicated to
Apam Napat,
Haoma and
Dahmān Afrīn respectively. The dedication to the
Ahuric Apam Napat would almost certainly have been an issue for devotees of Aredvi Sura Anahita, whose shrine cult was enormously popular between the 4th c. BCE and the 3rd c. CE and who is (accretions included) a functional equal of Apam Napat. To this day these three divinities are considered 'extra-calenary' divinites inasfar as they invoked together with the other 27, so making a list of 30 discrete entities.
The 2nd through 7th days are dedicated to the
Amesha Spentas, the six 'divine sparks' through whom all subsequent creation was accomplished, and who - in present-day Zoroastrianism - are the archangels.
Days 9 through 13 are dedications to
Yazatas of the five
Nyashes of the
Khordeh Avesta:
Fire,
Water,
Sun,
Moon, the star
Tištrya that here perhaps represents the firmament in its entirety. Day 14 is dedicated to the soul of the Ox, linked with and representing all animal creation.
Day 16, leading the second half of the days of the month, is dedicated to the divinity of oath, Great
Mithra (like Apam Napat of the
Ahuric triad). He is followed by those closest to him,
Sraoša and Rašnu, likewise judges of the soul, the representatives of which - the
Fravashi(s) - come next.
Verethragna, Rāman, Vāta are respectively the hypostases of victory, the breath of life, and the (other) divinity of the wind and 'space'.
The last group represent the more 'abstract' divinities: Religion, Recompense, and Justice; Heaven and
Earth; Sacred Invocation and Endless Light.
In present-day use, the day and month names are the
middle Persian equivalents of the divine names or the concepts, but in some cases reflect Semitic influences (for instance Tištrya appears as Tir, which Boyce (1982:31-33) asserts is derived from Nabu-*Tiri). Moreover, the names of the 8th, 15th and 23rd day of the month - reflecting Babylonian practice of dividing the month into four periods - can today be distinguished from one another: These three days are respectively named
Dae-pa Adar,
Dae-pa Mehr and
Dae-pa Din,
middle Persian expressions meaning 'Creator of' Atar, Mithra and Daena respectively.
The divinities to which month-names are dedicated are twelve of the thirty to whom days of the month dedicated, but the month-name dedications additionally establish which of the twelve divinities were/are considered to rank higher than the others. The list of month-names doesn't occur anywhere in the texts of the
Avesta, but are known from commentaries and translations of those texts, from various regional Zoroastrian calendars of the Sassanid era and from living usage. In addition to
Dae (
middle Persian for Avestan
Daena) and thus a dedication to Ahura Mazda and six dedications to the
Amesha Spentas, the remaining five are considered to be the most significant of the
Yazatas: Farvadin (
Avestan:
Fravashi), Tir (
Tishtrya), Mehr (
Mithra),
Aban (
Apo), and Adar (
Atar).
There is some evidence that suggests that in ancient practice
Dae, and not
Fravardin, was the first month of the year. In a 9th century text, Zoroaster's age at the time of his death is stated to have been 77 years and 40 days (
Zadspram 23.9), but this age can't be verified unless
Dae was the first month of the year. It is also worth noting that
Pateti - the day of introspection - is on the first day of the month of
Fravardin - which, as New Year's day, is a day of celebration.
Further Information
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