A Compendium of Calendars

A Compendium of Calendars

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Book Specification

Item Code: AZE617
Author: Shahabuddin Ansari
Publisher: B.R. PUBLISHING CORPORATION
Language: ENGLISH
Edition: 1999
ISBN: 9788176460880
Pages: 206
Cover: HARDCOVER
Other Details 11.00x9.00
Weight 780 gm

Book Description

About the Book
A Compendium of Calendars is an encyclopedic work on the topic of the Christian, Saka and Hijrah Calendars. It in very comprehensive and elaborate. It consists of mainly three parts, exclusively dealing with the Christian, Saka (Indian National) and Hijrah Calendars.

The author is of the view that the extant books on the topic are not very comprehensive and analytical. Moreover, the method adopted is more problematical and time-taking too. For the sake of making it comparatively more informative, easy-to-use and time-saving, author thought it worthwhile to construct a completely new work to meet all the desiderata.

This Compendium of Calendars has been prepared after considerable study and labour with the hope that it will be useful to the students and the scholars as well as the layman alike.

About the Author
Shahabuddin Ansari having gained an M.A. degree in English in 1978 started writing articles on Islamic matters, specially on Islamic Calendar published in India and abroad His initial leaning has been towards studying various dating systems. So, since 1984 he has been fully occupied in studying various calendrical systems and tried to evolve a simple and easy method of presenting Christian, Indian National (Saka Sambat) and Hijrah Calendars and method of conversion of dates. For this cause he devoted a period of more than ten years and could complete three volumes The Compendium of Calendars; Conversion Tables and An Easy Method of Interchanging Hijrah and Christian Dates.

So far a series of articles, exclusively based on these volumes have appeared in the MWL Journal, Saudi Arabia; Hamdard Islamicus, Pakistan and Islamic Culture, Hyderabad. Moreover, the author has been associated with International Islamic Calendar Programme (IICP), conducted by Associate Prof. Dr. Mohammed Ilyas, Astronomical Research Unit, University of Malaysia. In 1989, the author got a chance to participate in a Conference-cum-Workshop on Internationa lisation of Islamic Calendar held at Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi, convened by Dr. Mohammed Ilyas.

The author is also an ordinary member of the Muslim Association for the Advancement of Science, Aligarh. In June 1994, he was invited to participate in a Science Oriented Camp held at Khandala, Pune.

In 1997, he was chosen for his disting uished standing and has been conferred with an Honorary appointment to the Research Board of Advisers by the Governing Board of Editors, and Publications Board of the American Biographical Institute, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.

The author is also an Editor of Weekly Al Hijr. Amongst his varied activities he is also a bibliophile.

Preface
It is the who made the s To being dory And the moon to be a ligh (Or beauty), and measured mit mages for that ye might Know the number of years And the count bot ume). Nowise did Allah create this But by truth and righteousness (us) doth He explain His Big In details, for those who know.

The contradictory versions of the historians in respect of the date of birth of the Holy Prophe (peace be upon him) in Hirah as well as in the Christian Era date prompted me to study various dating systems to search for the truth. But I thought that this task cannot be accomplished without a thorough knowledge and study of the related calendrical systems. Therefore, presently for my intended andy I have ninded out mainly two dating systems-the Christian Calendar consisting of Old and New style, and the Muslim Lunar or Hijrah Calendar. Though the Saka or Indian National Calendar is not a part of my study, but being a National Calendar of India have also dealt with it in detail.

Source of Information

The Information on which the present study is based has been derived mainly from primary and authentic sources. The most important of these are Encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume IV and V. Miftahut Taqweem. Comparative Tables of Christian and Islamic Dates and the Muslim and Christian Calendars. During the course of my study I could discover that these books are not very comprehensive and analytical, Moreover, close examination revealed that the extant books had very inadequate information.

On a number of material points and had considerable printing errors and several inaccuracies, which put a question mark on the credibility of these works.

Moreover, the method adopted is more problematical and time-consuming and difficult to be followed by the common man. For the sake of making it comparatively more informative, interesting. easy-to-use, and time-saving I thought it worthwhile to construct a completely new system to meet all the desiderata. Therefore, towards the fulfilment of these objectives I have evolved my own methods of presentation of facts and also designed all calendrical and allied tables in my own way on the basis of empirical knowledge attained during the course of my study.

Plan of Study For the purpose of an analytical study, the whole gamut of the subject matter is completed in five parts. The first three parts are exclusively devoted to the Christian, Saka and Hijrah Calendars consisting of 22 chapters in all. These three parts consist of in one volume THE COMPENDIUM OF CALENDARS The remaining two parts exclusively deal with the conversion of the Hijrah and the Christian dates, which I intend to put in another separate volume.

Introduction
The Chrtisan Calender, errently in use and known as the Gregion Calendar, has red fr 13 BC AD 141, and finally reformed fry the der of ge firegory XI in the your 15 Quite early to their history the Romans devised a evil year of 355 days duratim, but the depended on the solar year, which is approximately eleven days longer than the Larar Year To bring the two years into harmony additional days were intercalated. However, the intercalations were uniformally observed; sometimes additional days were intercalated and sometimes missed in consequence of such an irregularly in observing the intercalations, the harmony between the end astronomical equinoxes got entirely out of gear, and eventually, at the time of Julius Caesar, the car equinox differed from the astronomical by three months and that the winter months were carried back into autumn and the autumnal into summer.

In order to restore harmony between the civil and astronomical equerries Julius Caesar abolished the use of the Lunar Year, and the intercalary month, and regulated the civil year entirely according to the sun, and on the advice of an Alexandrian astronomer, Sustgenes, he fixed the mean length of the year at 365 days, and 6 hours, which in those days was in practice in Egypt. He further decreed that every fourth year should be of 360 days. The additional day, which occurred every fourth year was given to February, as being the shortest months, and this additional or intercalary day was called bessecto calendars.

This first reform in the present Christian Calendar was made by Julius Caesar in 700th year from the foundation of the city, Rome, and the 45th year before the birth of Jesus Christ The first Julian year commenced with the 1st of January 45 B.C. and henceforward it was styled as Julian Calendar During the reign of Julius Caesar (49-44 B.C), the system of numbering the year in Rome was AU.C. But after the birth of Jesus Christ (753 A.U.C) gradually a change was made in the era: the supposed date of the birth of Christ replacing that of the A.U.C., Foundation of the city of Rome.

The present AD system for numbering the years was not prepared at that time. People simply used to reckon the years from the birth of Jesus Christ, and Christian chronologists used frequently to reckon in years of Abraham, i.e. from his birth, which was placed by Eusebius at a date corresponding to October 2016 B.C.

This reformed calendar initially could not win the favour of the people of Rome, and consequently it was not imposed by Rome on her empire. However, it became the calendar of Christian Rome and also of Constantinople. This was, however, very slow to win official recognition, despite its convenience: Charlemagne (768-771 A.D.) appears to have been the first secular authority to use it." Discrepancy in Julian Year Discovered.

**Contents and Sample Pages**










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