The 'Ethiopian calendar' (
Amharic: የኢትዮጵያ ዘመን አቆጣጠር ''), also called the 'Ge'ez calendar', is the principal calendar used in
Ethiopia and is also the
liturgical year of Christians in Eritrea belonging to the
Eritrean Orthodox Tewahdo Church,
Eastern Catholic Church of Eritrea and
Lutheran (Evangelical Church of Eritrea), where it is commonly known as the 'Ge'ez calendar.' It is based on the older Alexandrian or
Coptic calendar, which is based on the even older
Egyptian calendar, but like the
Julian calendar, it adds a leap day every four years without exception, and begins the year on
August 29 or
August 30 in the Julian calendar.
Like the Coptic calendar, the Ethiopian/Ge'ez calendar has twelve months of 30 days each plus five or six
epagomenal days (usually called a thirteenth month). Furthermore, its months begin on the same days as those of the Coptic calendar, but they have different names, that are in
Ge'ez. The sixth epagomenal day is added every four years without exception on August 29 in the Julian calendar, six months before the Julian leap day. Thus the first day of the Ethiopian year, 1 Mäskäräm, for years between
1901 and 2099 (inclusive), is usually
September 11 (
Gregorian), but falls on
September 12 (Gregorian), in years before the Gregorian leap year.
Current year
The current year according to the Ethiopian calendar is '1999'. The year 2000 will begin on
September 12,
2007 of the Gregorian calendar.
New Year's Day
Enkutatash is the word for the Ethiopian
new year in the official language of Ethiopia:
Amharic, while it is called 'Ri'se Awde Amet' (Head Anniversary) in
Ge'ez, the term preferred by the
Eritrean Tewahedo Orthodox Church. It occurs on September 11 in the
Gregorian calendar, except for leap years when it occurs on September 12. The Ethiopian calendar year 1998 ''Amätä Məhrät'' ("Year of Mercy") began on
11 September,
2005. However, the Ethiopian years 1996 and 1992 ''AM'' began on
12 September 2003 and 1999, respectively.
The new years begin on September 11 or 12 as described above from Gregorian
1900 to 2099, but differently in other Gregorian centuries, because every fourth Ethiopian/Ge'ez year is a leap year without exception.
Eras
To indicate the year, Ethiopians and followers of the Eritrean churches today use the ''Incarnation Era'', which dates from the
Annunciation or Incarnation of
Jesus on
25 March,
9 (Julian), as calculated by
Annianus of Alexandria ''c.'' 400; thus its first civil year began seven months earlier on
29 August,
8 (Julian). Meanwhile, Europeans eventually adopted the calculations made by
Dionysius Exiguus in AD 525 instead, which placed the Annunciation exactly eight years earlier than had Annianus. This causes the Ethiopian year number to be eight years less than the Gregorian year number from January 1 until September 10 or 11, then seven years less for the remainder of the Gregorian year.
In the past, a number of other
eras for numbering years were also widely used in Ethiopia and the Axumite Kingdom:
Era of Martyrs
The most important era – once widely used by the
Eastern Churches, and still used by the
Coptic Church - was the
Era of Martyrs, also known as the
Diocletian Era, whose first year began on
29 August 284.
Respectively to the western and Julian New Year's Days about three months later, the difference between the Era of Martyrs and the
Anni Domini is 285 (= 15x19) years. This is because in AD
525,
Dionysius Exiguus decided to add 15
Metonic cycles to the existing 13 Metonic cycles of the
Diocletian Era (15x19 + 13x19 = 532) to obtain an entire 532-year medieval
Easter cycle, whose first cycle ended with the year Era of Martyrs 247 (= 13x19) equal to year DXXXI. It is also because 532 is the product of the Metonic cycle of 19 years and the
Solar cycle of 28 years.
Anno Mundi according to Panodoros
Around AD 400, an Alexandrine monk called Panodoros fixed the Alexandrian Era (
Anno Mundi = in the year of the world), the
date of creation, on 29 August
5493 BC. After the 6th century AD, the era was used by Egyptian and Ethiopian chronologists. The twelfth 532-year-cycle of this era began on 29 August 360 AD, and so 4x19 years after the Era of Martyrs.
Anno Mundi according to Anianos
Bishop
Anianos preferred the Annunciation style as New Year's Day, the 25 March ''(see above)''. Thus he shifted the Panodoros era by about six months, to begin on 25 March 5492 BC.
Leap year cycle
The four year leap-year cycle is associated with the four Evangelists: the first year after an Ethiopian leap year is named in honour of
John, followed by the
Matthew-year and then the
Mark-year. The year with the sixth epagomenal day is traditionally designated as the
Luke-year.
There are no exceptions to the four year leap-year cycle, unlike the
Gregorian calendar.
Months
| Ge'ez, Amharic, and Tigrinya (with Tigrinya suffixes in parenthesis) | Coptic | Gregorian start date | Start date in year after sixth epagomenal day |
|---|
| Mäskäräm (መስከረም) | Tut | September 11 | September 12 |
| Ṭəqəmt(i) (ጥቅምት) | Babah | October 11 | October 12 |
| Ḫədar (ኅዳር) | Hatur | November 10 | November 11 |
| Taḫśaś ( ታኅሣሥ) | Kiyahk | December 10 | December 11 |
| Ṭərr(i) (ጥር) | Tubah | January 9 | January 10 |
| Yäkatit (Tn. Läkatit) (የካቲት) | Amshir | February 8 | February 9 |
| Mägabit (መጋቢት) | Baramhat | March 10 | March 10 |
| Miyazya (ሚያዝያ) | Baramundah | April 9 | April 9 |
| Gənbot (ግንቦት) | Bashans | May 9 | May 9 |
| Säne (ሰኔ) | Ba'unah | June 8 | June 8 |
| Ḥamle (ሓምሌ) | Abib | July 8 | July 8 |
| Nähase (ነሓሴ) | Misra | August 7 | August 7 |
| Ṗagʷəmen/Ṗagumen (ጳጐሜን/ጳጉሜን) | Nasi | September 6 | September 6 |
Note that these dates are valid only from March 1900 to February 2100.
Sources
★ "The Ethiopian Calendar", Appendix IV, C.F. Beckingham and G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The Prester John of the Indies'' (Cambridge:
Hakluyt Society, 1961).
★ Ginzel, Friedrich Karl, "Handbuch der matematischen und technischen Chronologie", Leipzig, 3 vol., 1906-1914
External links
★ Warning: In the following two links, dates in the "Ethiopian calendar" have been converted into a pseudo-Julian calendar by replacing the true Amharic Ethiopian month names by close, but not coincident, Julian names. For example, Mäskäräm is called "September" even though Mäskäräm actually begins on August 29/30 Julian (and September 11th Gregorian, the most common calendar). When they state that the Ethopian year begins on "September 1", they mean it begins on Mäskäräm 1. Similarly, when they state that Christmas occurs on "December 29" in the Ethiopian calendar, they mean it occurs on Tahsas 29.
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Ethiopian Calendar - Christian, Islamic, Jewish & Public Holidays
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Ethiopian Religious Festivals
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The Ethiopic Calendar by Aberra Molla
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Ethiopian Calendar Converter
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Ethiopian Perpetual Calendar Software
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Ethiopian Online Calendar