'Regnal year:' the year of the reign of a
sovereign. From Latin ''regnum'' meaning kingdom, rule.
In ancient times,
calendars were counted in terms of the number of years of the reign of the current
monarch. The oldest such reckoning is preserved in the
Sumerian king list.
In England, and later the
United Kingdom, until 1963, each
Act of Parliament was defined by its serial number within the regnal year in which it was enacted. Each regnal year begins on the anniversary of the day the sovereign succeeded to the throne. A table of English regnal years, from 1066 to 1962, is given
here.
The official
Japanese system or ''Nengo'' numbers years from the accession of the current
emperor, regarding the calendar year during which the accession occurred as the first year. The current emperor is
Heisei Akihito, whose reign began in 1989. Thus that year corresponds to . The system was in use sporadically from
645 and continuously from
701. Until
1867 several were used during each emperor's reign. From
1868 only one era name has been used by each emperor. Since 1868, each emperor has been known posthumously by his era name.
The
Chinese eras or ''Nian Hao'' were used sporadically from
156 BC and continuously from
140 BC. Until
1367 several were used during each emperor's reign. From
1368 until
1912 only one era name was used by each emperor, who was posthumously known by his era name.
'
Korean eras' were used from
536 to
963 and from
1894 to
1910. At least from 1894 to 1897, years were also numbered from the founding of the
Joseon Dynasty in 1393, hence with years numbered 5nn. From 1952 until 1961 years were numbered via ''
Dangi'' years, where 2333 BC was regarded as the first such year.
The
Zoroastrian calendar also operated with regnal years following the reform of
Ardashir I (3rd century).
notable king lists:
★
Sumerian king list
★
Abydos King List
★
Turin King List
★
Assyrian king list
★
Babylonian king list
★
Canon of Kings
★
Liberian Catalogue
See also
★
Era name
★
Calendar era
★
sacral king