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| Wide use | Astronomical · Gregorian · Islamic · ISO |
| Calendar Types | |
| Lunisolar · Solar · Lunar | |
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| Selected use | Assyrian · Armenian · Attic · Aztec (Tonalpohualli – Xiuhpohualli) · Babylonian · Bahá'í · Bengali · Berber · Bikram Samwat · Buddhist · Celtic · Chinese · Coptic · Egyptian · Ethiopian · Calendrier Républicain · Germanic · Hebrew · Hellenic · Hindu · Indian · Iranian · Irish · Japanese · Javanese · Juche · Julian · Korean · Lithuanian · Malayalam · Maya (Tzolk'in – Haab') · Minguo · Nanakshahi · Nepal Sambat · Pawukon · Pentecontad calendar · Rapa Nui · Roman · Rumi · Soviet · Tamil · Thai (Lunar – Solar) · Tibetan · Burmese . Vietnamese· Xhosa · Zoroastrian |
| Calendar Types | |
| Runic · Mesoamerican (Long Count – Calendar Round) | |
| Christian variants | |
| Julian calendar · Calendar of saints · Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar · Liturgical year | |
| Rarely used | Darian calendar · Discordian calendar |
| Display types and applications | Perpetual calendar · Wall calendar · Economic calendar |
The Berber calendar is the annual calendar used by Berber people in North Africa. This calendar is also known in Arabic under the name of فلاحي fellāḥī "agricultural" or عجمي ajamī "not Arabic". It is employed to regulate the seasonal agricultural work.
The names of the months in the modern Berber calendar are derived from the ancient Julian calendar or from the Gregorian Calendar.
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The modern Berber calendar is composed of 4 seasons with 3 months for each season. The corresponding forms in English (the Gregorian calendar uses the same month names) are noted in parenthesis:
Yennayer 1 (commonly called "Yennayer") is celebrated as the Berber New Year. It was celerated on 12, 13 or 14th day of January by temporary rural Berbers from unknown times which may be very old although there is no clear certitude concering the first time of this celebration.
The Berber new year is known as "Agricultural new year" to Maghrebians. It is therefore also celebrated by some Arabic speaking tribes in the Maghreb. They would have maintained some Berber traditions without mainatining their Berber tongue.
Today, the celebration of the Berber new year is encouraged for cultural en politic reasons. In 2008 Libya has officially celebrated the Berber new year. The Libyan Berber activists calim that El Qaddafi has manipulated the celebration of the Berber New Year.
In 1968, the Paris-based Berberist group the Académie berbère (also responsible for the Neo-Tifinagh alphabet) affirmed a calendar era for the Berber calendar fixed to the accession year of the 10th century BC Egyptian Pharaoh Shoshenq I, who they identified as the first prominent Berber in history (he is recorded as being of Libyan origin).[1] The Académie berbère set the zero year at 950 BC (a common estimate of the accession year of Shoshenq), which allows a convenient conversion of AD years by the addition of 950—thus 2000 AD was the year 2950 in this system.
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