Stylesheet style.css not found, please contact the developer of "arctic" template.

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
ur_iii_calendars [2016/10/29 15:42] dahlur_iii_calendars [2017/04/25 13:41] (current) lafont
Line 5: Line 5:
 All calendars intercalated by adding an extra month ([iti] diri [mn], or [mn] min<sub>[3]</sub>), but this was not done in regular intervals, nor consistently across the empire. Though not demonstrated with certainty, very probably intercalation was employed, on average every three years, in an attempt to synchronize solar and lunar calendars.\\ All calendars intercalated by adding an extra month ([iti] diri [mn], or [mn] min<sub>[3]</sub>), but this was not done in regular intervals, nor consistently across the empire. Though not demonstrated with certainty, very probably intercalation was employed, on average every three years, in an attempt to synchronize solar and lunar calendars.\\
  
-Go [[http://cdli.ucla.edu/tools/ur3months/month.html|here]] for a tabular view of Ur III month names in Drehem, Girsu, Nippur, Ur, Umma and Irisagrig (click on the head of columns to sort the names according to the named local calendars).+Go [[http://cdli.ucla.edu/tools/ur3months/month.html|here for a tabular view of Ur III month names]] in Drehem, Girsu, Nippur, Ur, Umma and Irisagrig (click on the head of columns to sort the names according to the named local calendars).
  
 No generally accepted sub-divisions of the month into weeks are known from Ur III texts; the designations u<sub>4</sub>-sakar gu-la (“great crescent”), u<sub>4</sub>-sakar u<sub>4</sub> 1(u)-5(diš) (“crescent of day 15”), e<sub>2</sub>-u<sub>4</sub>-1(u)-5(diš) (“house of day 15”), and e<sub>2</sub>-u<sub>4</sub>-7(diš) (“house of day 7”), and variants of these qualifications, are suggestive of a simple division of the administrative 30-day month into two 15-day halves, and of each half into two “weeks” of 7-8 days.\\ No generally accepted sub-divisions of the month into weeks are known from Ur III texts; the designations u<sub>4</sub>-sakar gu-la (“great crescent”), u<sub>4</sub>-sakar u<sub>4</sub> 1(u)-5(diš) (“crescent of day 15”), e<sub>2</sub>-u<sub>4</sub>-1(u)-5(diš) (“house of day 15”), and e<sub>2</sub>-u<sub>4</sub>-7(diš) (“house of day 7”), and variants of these qualifications, are suggestive of a simple division of the administrative 30-day month into two 15-day halves, and of each half into two “weeks” of 7-8 days.\\
 +
 +We list below the month names from the different cities, with links to texts in the CDLI referencing these months names. The month names are listed in chronological order, with changes in placement noted in the comments.
  
 ===Drehem month names=== ===Drehem month names===
Line 138: Line 140:
  
 ===Irisagrig month names=== ===Irisagrig month names===
 +
 +**šu-gar(-gal)**\\
 +
 +**<sup>geš</sup>apin**\\
 +
 +**kir<sub>11</sub>-si-ak**\\
 +
 +**ses-da-gu<sub>7</sub>**\\
 +
 +**ezem-<sup>d</sup>li<sub>9</sub>-si<sub>4</sub>**\\
 +
 +**ezem-a-bi**\\
 +
 +**gi-sig-ga**\\
 +
 +**ezem-<sup>d</sup>šul-gi**\\
 +
 +**nig<sub>2</sub>-<sup>d</sup>en-lil<sub>2</sub>-la<sub>2</sub>**\\
 +
 +**ezem-a-dara<sub>4</sub>**\\
 +
 +**nig<sub>2</sub>-e-ga**\\
 +
 +**ezem-an-na**\\
 +
 +**še-sag<sub>(11)</sub>-ku<sub>5</sub>**\\
 +
 +**diri**\\
 +
  
 ===Adab month names=== ===Adab month names===
ur_iii_calendars.1477752179.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/10/29 15:42 by dahl
CC Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 International
Driven by DokuWiki Recent changes RSS feed Valid CSS Valid XHTML 1.0