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Berber calendar

The Berber calendar (Berber languages: ⵜⴰⵙⵡⴰⵙⵜ ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ, romanized: taswast tamaziɣt, today is :Tuesday 19 April 2973) is the agricultural calendar traditionally used by Berbers, ( Amazigh , Imazighen Plural) . The calendar is utilized to regulate the seasonal agricultural works.

Seasons in North Africa: Atlas Mountains in January and April

The Islamic calendar, a lunar calendar, is not suited for agriculture because it does not relate to seasonal cycles.[1] In other parts of the Islamic world either Iranian solar calendars, the Coptic calendar, the Rumi calendar, or other calendars based on the Julian calendar, were used before the introduction of the Gregorian calendar.[citation needed]

The current Berber calendar is a legacy of the Roman province of Mauretania Caesariensis and the Roman province of Africa, as it is a surviving form of the Julian calendar. The latter calendar was used in Europe before the adoption of the Gregorian calendar, with month names derived from Latin. Berber populations previously used various indigenous calendars, such as that of the indigenous Guanches of the Canary Islands. However, relatively little is known of these ancient calendrical systems.

Current Julian calendar

The agricultural Berber calendar still in use is almost certainly derived from the Julian calendar, introduced in the Roman province of Africa at the time of Roman domination. The names of the months of this calendar are derived from the corresponding Latin names and traces of the Roman calendar denominations of Kalends, Nones and Ides exist: El Qabisi, an Islamic jurisconsult by Kairawan who lived in the 11th century, condemned the custom of celebrating "pagans'" festivals and cited, among traditional habits of North Africa, that of observing January Qalandas ("Kalends").[2] The length of the year and of the individual months is the same as in the Julian calendar: three years of 365 days followed by a leap year of 366, without exceptions, and 30- and 31-day months, except for the second one that has 28 days. The only slight discrepancy lies in that the extra day in leap years is not usually added at the end of February, but at the end of the year. This means that the beginning of the year (the first day of yennayer) corresponds to the 14th day of January in the Gregorian calendar, which coincides with the offset accumulated during the centuries between astronomical dates and the Julian calendar.

Months

There are standard forms for the names of the Amazigh (Berber) calendar. The table below also provides the forms used in Morocco, Algeria, Libya and Tunisia .[3]

Month Riffian (north Morocco) Shilha (south Morocco) Shawiya (Algeria) Kabyle (Algeria) Mzab (Algeria) Moroccan Arabic Tunisian Arabic Libyan Arabic
January Yennayer innayr yennar (ye)nnayer yennar yanayer yenna(ye)r yannayer
February Yebrayer brayr furar furar furar febrayer fura(ye)r febrayer
March Mares marṣ meɣres meghres maraṣ mars marsu mars
April Yebrir ibrir brir (ye)brir yebrir abril abril ibril
May May mayyu(h) mayu maggu mayu mey mayu mayu
June Yunyu yunyu(h) yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyu
July Yulyuz yulyuz yulyu yulyu(z) yulyuz yulyuz yulyu yulyu
August Ɣuct ghusht ɣuct ghusht ɣucet ghucht awussu aghustus
September Cutembir (c=sh) shutambir ctember shtember ctember choutanbir shtamber september
October Ktuber kṭubr tuber (k)tuber tuber uktuber uktuber uktuber
November Nwambir nuwambir numbir nu(ne)mber unembir nuanbir nufember nuvamber
December Dujembir dujambir dujámber bu- (du-)jember uğembir dujanbir dejember december

Seasons and Festivals

In addition to the subdivision by months, within the traditional agricultural calendar there are other partitions, by "seasons" or by "strong periods", characterized by particular festivals and celebrations.

Not all the four seasons have retained a Berber denomination: the words for spring and autumn are used almost everywhere, more sparingly the winter and, among northern Berbers, the Berber name for the autumn has been preserved only in Jebel Nafusa (Libya).

  • Spring tafsut (Ar. er-rbiʿ) – Begins on 15 furar (28 February)
  • Summer anebdu (Ar. es-sif) – Begins on 17 mayu (30 May)
  • Autumn amwal / aməwan[4] ( (Ar. le-xrif) – Begins on 17 ghusht (30 August)
  • Winter tagrest (Ar. esh-shita') - Begins on 16 numbír (29 November)

An interesting element is the existing opposition between two 40-day terms, one representing the allegedly coldest part of winter ("The nights", llyali) and one the hottest period of summer ("The Dog Days", ssmaym, awussu).[5]

Llyali

 
A page from a Tunisian calendar, showing the correspondence of 1 Yennayer ʿajmi (in red on bottom) with 14 January of the Gregorian calendar. The writing on the bottom signals that it is ʿajmi New Year's Day and that al-lyali al-sud ("the black nights") are beginning.

The coldest period is made up by 20 "white nights" (Berber: iḍan imellalen, Arabic: al-lyali al-biḍ), from 12 to 31 dujamber (Gregorian dates: 25 December - 13 January), and 20 "black nights" (Berber: iḍan tiberkanin/isṭṭafen, Arabic al-lyali al-sud), beginning on the first day of yennayer, corresponding to the Gregorian 14 January.

Yennayer

The first day of the year is celebrated in various ways in the different parts of North Africa. A widespread tradition is a meal with particular foods, which vary from region to region (such as a couscous with seven vegetables). In some regions, it is marked by the sacrifice of an animal (usually a chicken). In January 2018, Algeria declared Yennayer a national holiday – a landmark policy considering how the Amazigh are marginalized in Northern Africa.[6]

A characteristic trait of this festivity, which often blurs with the Islamic Day of Ashura, is the presence, in many regions, of ritual invocations with formulas like bennayu, babiyyanu, bu-ini, etc. Such expressions, according to many scholars, may be derived from the ancient bonus annus (happy new year) wishes.[7]

A curious aspect of the Yennayer celebrations concerns the date of New Year's Day. Though once this anniversary fell everywhere on 14 January,[8] because of a likely mistake introduced by some Berber cultural associations very active in recovering customs on the verge of extinction, at present in a wide part of Algeria it is common opinion that the date of "Berber New Year's Day" is 12 January and not the 14th. Previously the celebration at the 12, two days before the traditional one, it had been explicitly signaled in the city of Oran.[9]

El Azara

El Azara (Arabic: العزارة) is the period of the year extending, according to the Berber calendar, from 3 to 13 February and known by a climate sometimes hot, sometimes cold.

Lḥusum/Imbarken

Before the cold ends completely and spring begins fully, there is a period of the year that is very feared. It consists of ten days straddling the months of furar and mars (the last five of the former and the first five of the latter), and it is characterised by strong winds. It is said that, during this term, one should suspend many activities (agricultural and artisan), should not marry nor go out during the night, leaving instead full scope to mysterious powers, which in that period are particularly active and celebrate their weddings. Due to a linguistic taboo, in Djerba these creatures are called imbarken, i.e. "the blessed ones", whence this period takes its name.

Jamrat el Ma (Arabic: جمرة الماء), "embers of the sea", 27 February, is marked by a rise in sea temperature.[10]

Jamrat el Trab (Arabic: جمرة التراب), "land embers" in English, is the period from 6 to 10 March and known to be marked by a mixture of heavy rain and sunny weather. The term jamrat (literally 'coal') is in reference to the warm state of the earth during this period .[11]

Ssmaym

Like the strong winter cold, the Dog Days also last 40 days, from 12 yulyuz (25 July) to 20 ghusht (2 September). The apical moment of the period is the first of ghusht "August" (also the name awussu, widespread in Tunisia and Libya, seems to date back to Latin augustus). On this date, particular rites are performed, which manifestly derive from pre-Islamic, and even pre-Christian, traditions. They consist, in particular, of bonfires (which in many locations take place around the summer solstice: a custom already condemned as Pagan by St. Augustine), or water rituals, like those, common in the coastal towns of Tunisia and Tripolitania, that provide to dive in the seawaters for three nights, in order to preserve one's health. In these ceremonies, whole families used to enter the water, bringing with them even their pets. Though the rite has been revisited in an Islamic frame (in those nights, the water of the Zamzam Well, in Mecca, would spill over, and in the sea there would be beneficial sweet water waves), many call this celebration "the nights of the error". It was in fact usual that, in order to achieve fertility and prosperity, men and women copulated among the flucts.

Iweǧǧiben

Another important period for the agricultural calendar is that of the ploughing. In this context, a date considered fundamental is the 17th of (k)tuber, in which one may start ploughing his fields. In Arabic, this period is called ḥertadem, that is "Adam's ploughing", because in that date the common ancestor of humanity is said to have begun his agricultural works.

Influences from the Islamic calendar

Following centuries-long contacts with the Arab-Islamic culture, the celebrations linked to the Julian calendar have been sometimes integrated into the Islamic calendar, leading to the suppression of some traditional holidays or to the creation of duplicates.

The most evident example are the celebrations for the new year, which in many cases have been transferred to the first Islamic month, i.e. Muḥarram, and more precisely to the ʿĀshūrā’, which falls on the 10th day of that month. This holiday has an important mournful meaning in the Shia Islam, but it is substantially ignored among Sunnis. Many studies have shown the relationships between the joyful celebration of this holiday in North Africa and the ancient New Year's Day celebrations.

Arabic and Berber names of the Islamic months

  Arabic name Berber name
1 Muḥàrram  babiyannu (Ouargla)
 ʿashura' (Djerba)
2 Sàfar u deffer ʿashura'
3 Rabiʿ al-awwal elmilud
4 Rabiʿ al-thani u deffer elmilud
5 Jumada al-awwal melghes (Djerba)
6 Jumada al-thani asgenfu n twessarin "the rest (the waiting) of the old women" (Ouargla)
sh-shaher n Fadma (Djerba)
7 Rajab twessarin "the old women"
8 shaʿaban asgenfu n remdan "the rest (the waiting) of Ramadan" (Ouargla)
9 Ramadan sh-shaher n uzum' "the month of the fasting" (Djerba)
10 Shawwal tfaska tameshkunt "the little holiday" (Djerba)
11 dhu al-qaʿida u jar-asneth "that between the two (holidays)" (Djerba)
12 Dhu al-Hijjah tfaska tameqqart "the big holiday" (Djerba)

Older calendars

The Berber months[12]
Name Meaning
tayyuret tezwaret The first small moon
tayyuret teggwerat The last small moon
yardut ?
sinwa ?
tasra tezwaret The first herd
tasra teggwerat The last herd
awdayeɣet yezwaren The first antelope babies
awdayeɣet yeggweran The last antelope babies
awzimet yezwaren The first gazelle babies
awzimet yeggweran The last gazelle babies
ayssi / aysi ?
nim ?

Not much is known about the division of time among the ancient Berbers. Some elements of a pre-Islamic, and almost certainly a pre-Roman calendar, emerge from some medieval writings, analyzed by Nico van den Boogert. Some correspondences with the traditional Tuareg calendar suggest that in antiquity there existed, with some degree of diffusion, a Berber time computation, organized on native bases.

There are not enough elements to reconstruct this calendar fully, but known characteristics include many month names' appearing in couples (in the Tuareg world, even in triplets), which suggests a time division different from the present one, made up of months of about 30 days.

Some further information, although difficult to specify and correlate with the situation in the rest of North Africa, may be deduced from what is known about time computation among the Guanches of the Canary Islands. According to a 17th-century manuscript by Tomás Marín de Cubas, they

computed their year, called Acano, by lunations of 29 days (suns) beginning from the new moon. It began in summer, when the sun enters in Cancer, on June 21: at the first conjunction (at the first new moon after the Summer solstice) they celebrated nine festival days for the crop.[13]

The same manuscript states (although somewhat obscurely) that graphical-pictorical records of such calendarial events (tara) were made on different supports, and on this basis some modern scholars identified alleged descriptions of astronomical events connected to annual cycles in a series of geometric paintings in some caves of Gran Canaria island, but the results of these studies are for now highly speculative.[14][15]

The name of only one month is known in the native language, handed down as Beñesmet. It seems it was the second month of the year, corresponding to August. Such a name, in case it was made up by something like *wen "that of" + (e)smet (or (e)zmet?), may correspond, in the list of medieval Berber month names, with the ninth and tenth months, awzimet (properly aw "baby of" + zimet "gazelle"). But data are too scarce for this hypothesis to be deepened.[12]

Computation of the years

The traditional Berber calendar was not linked to an era with respect to which years were calculated. Where traditional ways to compute the years have been preserved (Tuareg civilization), years are not expressed with numbers but each of them has a name characterizing it.

Starting from the 1960s, however, on the initiative of the Académie Berbère of Paris, some Berbers have begun computing the years starting from 950 BC, the approximate date of the rising into power of the first Libyan Pharaoh in Egypt, Shoshenq I, whom they identified as the first prominent Berber in history (he is recorded as being of Libyan origin).[16] For example, the Gregorian year 2023 corresponds to the 2973rd year of the Berber calendar.

This innovation has been adopted with conviction by many supporters of the Berber culture and is now a part of the cultural heritage of this people, fully integrated in the system of traditional customs related the North-African calendar.[citation needed]

 
Photo taken on 31 December 2007 near Tafraout (Morocco), with the writings aseggas ameggaz ("good year") in Tifinagh and bonne année 2959 ("good year 2959") in French. Note the 1-year mistake, as 2959 corresponds to the Gregorian year 2009.

References

  1. ^ Gast, M.; Delheur, J.; E.B. (April 1991). Calendrier. Encyclopédie Berbère, 11 (Bracelets – Caprarienses) (in French). OpenEdition. pp. 1713–1720. ISBN 9782857445814. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  2. ^ Idris, 1954
  3. ^ "Les origines du calendrier amazigh". Les Matins d'Algérie.
  4. ^ amwal is the form found in Jebel Nafusa (Jadu); aməwan is the corresponding word in tuareg. Cp. V. Brugnatelli, "Notes d’onomastique jerbienne et mozabite", in K. Naït-Zerrad, R. Voßen, D. Ibriszimow (éd.), Nouvelles études berbères. Le verbe et autres articles. Actes du "2. Bayreuth-Frankfurter Kolloquium zur Berberologie 2002", Köln, R. Köppe Verlag, 2004, pp. 29-39, in particular p. 33.
  5. ^ On this topic, see e.g. chapter "Llyali et Ssmaym" in Genevois (1975, pp. 21-22)
  6. ^ "Happy 2968! Berber New Year becomes holiday in Algeria". The National. 12 January 2018.
  7. ^ The etymology proposed for bu-ini of Aures from Masqueray (1886: 164), was welcomed and extended to other similar terms related to the start of the year festivities by several authors, including Doutté (1909: 550), Laoust (1920: 195), Delheure (1988: 156). Drouin (2000: 115) defines these etymological research as "unconvincing".
  8. ^ In fact, as remarked by Genevois (1975: 11), "the agricultural calendar (ancient Julian calendar) has therefore at present a 13-day delay".
  9. ^ "In Oran the Ennayer parties are made on 11 and 12 January of the Gregorian calendar, that is two days before the common agricultural calendar ..." Mohamed Benhadji Serradj, Fêtes d'Ennâyer aux Beni snus (tlemcénien folklore) in IBLA, vol. 1950, pp. 247-258.
  10. ^ al Haj Ali, Naji. "ماذا تعني هذه المصطلحات الشعبية؟: "العزارة"... "قرة العنز"... و"الليالي"!!". Turess. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  11. ^ "Aujourd'hui marque la descente de la braise de terre " جمرة التراب ", qu'est ce que c'est ?". WEPOST Magazine. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b van den Boogert, Nico (2002). "The Names of the Months in Medieval Berber". In Naït-Zerrad, K (ed.). Articles de linguistique berbère. Mémorial Vycichl. Parigi. pp. 137–152. ISBN 978-2-7475-2706-4.
  13. ^ Barrios García, José (2004). "Investigaciones sobre matemáticas y astronomía guanche. Parte III. El calendario". In Morales Padrón, Francisco (ed.). XVI Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana. Ediciones del Excelentísimo Cabildo Insular de Gran Canaria. pp. 329–344. ISBN 978-84-8103-407-3.
  14. ^ Barrios García, José (1999). "Tara: A Study on the Canarian Astronomical Pictures. Part I. Towards an interpretation of the Gáldar Painted Cave". In Stanescu, F (ed.). Ancient times, modern methods: Proceedings of the III SEAC Conference, Sibiu (Romania), 1–3 September 1995. Lucian Blaga University. ISBN 978-973-651-033-5.
  15. ^ Barrios García, C (2004). "Tara: A Study on the Canarian Astronomical Pictures. Part II. The acano chessboard". In Jaschek; Atrio Barandelas, F (eds.). Proceedings of the IV SEAC Meeting "Astronomy and Culture. University of Salamanca. pp. 47–54. ISBN 978-84-605-6954-1.
  16. ^ Benbrahim, Malha. "La fête de Yennayer: pratiques et présages" (in French). Tamazight.fr. Retrieved 4 September 2007.

Bibliography

  • "Il calendario degli uomini liberi", Africa, Epicentro (Ferrara), year V, no. 16 (January/February 2000), pp. 30–33 (in attachment: a Berber calendar for 2000)
  • Achab, Ramdane (1996). La néologie lexicale berbère: 1945-1995. M.S. — Ussun amazigh (in French). Vol. 9. Paris - Louvain: Peeters Publishers. ISBN 978-9068318104.
  • Saïd Bouterfa, Yannayer - Taburt u swgas, ou le symbole de Janus, Alger, El-Musk, 2002 – ISBN 9961-928-04-0
  • Gioia Chiauzzi, Cicli calendariali nel Magreb, 2 vols., Naples (Istituto Universitario Orientale), 1988
  • Jeannine Drouin, "Calendriers berbères", in: S. Chaker & A. Zaborski (eds.), Études berbères et chamito-sémitiques. Mélanges offerts à K.-G. Prasse, Paris-Louvain, Peeters, 2000, ISBN 90-429-0826-2, pp. 113–128
  • Henri Genevois, Le calendrier agraire et sa composition, "Le Fichier Périodique" no. 125, 1975
  • Henri Genevois, Le rituel agraire, "Le Fichier Périodique" 127, 1975, pp. 1–48
  • Mohand Akli Haddadou, Almanach berbère - assegwes Imazighen, Algiers (Editions INAS) 2002 – ISBN 9961-762-05-3
  • H. R. Idris, "Fêtes chrétiennes célébrées en Ifrîqiya à l'époque ziride", in Revue Africaine 98 (1954), pp. 261–276
  • Emile Laoust, Mots et choses berbères, Paris 1920
  • Umberto Paradisi, "I tre giorni di Awussu a Zuara (Tripolitania)", AION n.s. 14 (1964), pp. 415–9
  • Serra, Luigi (1990). "Awussu". Encyclopédie Berbère (in French). Vol. 8. Aix-en-Provence: Editions Edisud. pp. 1198–1200. ISBN 9782857444619.
  • Jean Servier, Les portes de l'Année. Rites et symboles. L'Algérie dans la tradition méditerranéenne, Paris, R. Laffont, 1962 (new edition: Monaco, Le Rocher, 1985 ISBN 2268003698)
  • Nouh-Mefnoune, Ahmed; Abdessalam, Brahim (2011). Dictionnaire mozabite-français (in French)

External links

  • (in French)
  • (in French)
  • (in Spanish)
  • Number Systems and Calendars of the Berber Populations of Grand Canaray and Tenerife, by Jose Barrios Garca (in English)

berber, calendar, this, article, contains, special, characters, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, other, symbols, berber, languages, ⵜⴰⵙⵡⴰⵙⵜ, ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ, romanized, taswast, tamaziɣt, today, tuesday, april, 2973, agricultural, calendar. This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols The Berber calendar Berber languages ⵜⴰⵙⵡⴰⵙⵜ ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ romanized taswast tamaziɣt today is Tuesday 19 April 2973 is the agricultural calendar traditionally used by Berbers Amazigh Imazighen Plural The calendar is utilized to regulate the seasonal agricultural works Seasons in North Africa Atlas Mountains in January and April The Islamic calendar a lunar calendar is not suited for agriculture because it does not relate to seasonal cycles 1 In other parts of the Islamic world either Iranian solar calendars the Coptic calendar the Rumi calendar or other calendars based on the Julian calendar were used before the introduction of the Gregorian calendar citation needed The current Berber calendar is a legacy of the Roman province of Mauretania Caesariensis and the Roman province of Africa as it is a surviving form of the Julian calendar The latter calendar was used in Europe before the adoption of the Gregorian calendar with month names derived from Latin Berber populations previously used various indigenous calendars such as that of the indigenous Guanches of the Canary Islands However relatively little is known of these ancient calendrical systems Contents 1 Current Julian calendar 1 1 Months 2 Seasons and Festivals 2 1 Llyali 2 2 Yennayer 2 3 El Azara 2 4 Lḥusum Imbarken 2 5 Ssmaym 2 6 Iweǧǧiben 3 Influences from the Islamic calendar 4 Older calendars 5 Computation of the years 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksCurrent Julian calendar EditThe agricultural Berber calendar still in use is almost certainly derived from the Julian calendar introduced in the Roman province of Africa at the time of Roman domination The names of the months of this calendar are derived from the corresponding Latin names and traces of the Roman calendar denominations of Kalends Nones and Ides exist El Qabisi an Islamic jurisconsult by Kairawan who lived in the 11th century condemned the custom of celebrating pagans festivals and cited among traditional habits of North Africa that of observing January Qalandas Kalends 2 The length of the year and of the individual months is the same as in the Julian calendar three years of 365 days followed by a leap year of 366 without exceptions and 30 and 31 day months except for the second one that has 28 days The only slight discrepancy lies in that the extra day in leap years is not usually added at the end of February but at the end of the year This means that the beginning of the year the first day of yennayer corresponds to the 14th day of January in the Gregorian calendar which coincides with the offset accumulated during the centuries between astronomical dates and the Julian calendar Months Edit There are standard forms for the names of the Amazigh Berber calendar The table below also provides the forms used in Morocco Algeria Libya and Tunisia 3 Month Riffian north Morocco Shilha south Morocco Shawiya Algeria Kabyle Algeria Mzab Algeria Moroccan Arabic Tunisian Arabic Libyan ArabicJanuary Yennayer innayr yennar ye nnayer yennar yanayer yenna ye r yannayerFebruary Yebrayer brayr furar furar furar febrayer fura ye r febrayerMarch Mares marṣ meɣres meghres maraṣ mars marsu marsApril Yebrir ibrir brir ye brir yebrir abril abril ibrilMay May mayyu h mayu maggu mayu mey mayu mayuJune Yunyu yunyu h yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyu yunyuJuly Yulyuz yulyuz yulyu yulyu z yulyuz yulyuz yulyu yulyuAugust Ɣuct ghusht ɣuct ghusht ɣucet ghucht awussu aghustusSeptember Cutembir c sh shutambir ctember shtember ctember choutanbir shtamber septemberOctober Ktuber kṭubr tuber k tuber tuber uktuber uktuber uktuberNovember Nwambir nuwambir numbir nu ne mber unembir nuanbir nufember nuvamberDecember Dujembir dujambir dujamber bu du jember ugembir dujanbir dejember decemberSeasons and Festivals EditIn addition to the subdivision by months within the traditional agricultural calendar there are other partitions by seasons or by strong periods characterized by particular festivals and celebrations Not all the four seasons have retained a Berber denomination the words for spring and autumn are used almost everywhere more sparingly the winter and among northern Berbers the Berber name for the autumn has been preserved only in Jebel Nafusa Libya Spring tafsut Ar er rbiʿ Begins on 15 furar 28 February Summer anebdu Ar es sif Begins on 17 mayu 30 May Autumn amwal amewan 4 Ar le xrif Begins on 17 ghusht 30 August Winter tagrest Ar esh shita Begins on 16 numbir 29 November An interesting element is the existing opposition between two 40 day terms one representing the allegedly coldest part of winter The nights llyali and one the hottest period of summer The Dog Days ssmaym awussu 5 Llyali Edit A page from a Tunisian calendar showing the correspondence of 1 Yennayer ʿajmi in red on bottom with 14 January of the Gregorian calendar The writing on the bottom signals that it is ʿajmi New Year s Day and that al lyali al sud the black nights are beginning The coldest period is made up by 20 white nights Berber iḍan imellalen Arabic al lyali al biḍ from 12 to 31 dujamber Gregorian dates 25 December 13 January and 20 black nights Berber iḍan tiberkanin isṭṭafen Arabic al lyali al sud beginning on the first day of yennayer corresponding to the Gregorian 14 January Yennayer Edit The first day of the year is celebrated in various ways in the different parts of North Africa A widespread tradition is a meal with particular foods which vary from region to region such as a couscous with seven vegetables In some regions it is marked by the sacrifice of an animal usually a chicken In January 2018 Algeria declared Yennayer a national holiday a landmark policy considering how the Amazigh are marginalized in Northern Africa 6 A characteristic trait of this festivity which often blurs with the Islamic Day of Ashura is the presence in many regions of ritual invocations with formulas like bennayu babiyyanu bu ini etc Such expressions according to many scholars may be derived from the ancient bonus annus happy new year wishes 7 A curious aspect of the Yennayer celebrations concerns the date of New Year s Day Though once this anniversary fell everywhere on 14 January 8 because of a likely mistake introduced by some Berber cultural associations very active in recovering customs on the verge of extinction at present in a wide part of Algeria it is common opinion that the date of Berber New Year s Day is 12 January and not the 14th Previously the celebration at the 12 two days before the traditional one it had been explicitly signaled in the city of Oran 9 El Azara Edit El Azara Arabic العزارة is the period of the year extending according to the Berber calendar from 3 to 13 February and known by a climate sometimes hot sometimes cold Lḥusum Imbarken Edit Before the cold ends completely and spring begins fully there is a period of the year that is very feared It consists of ten days straddling the months of furar and mars the last five of the former and the first five of the latter and it is characterised by strong winds It is said that during this term one should suspend many activities agricultural and artisan should not marry nor go out during the night leaving instead full scope to mysterious powers which in that period are particularly active and celebrate their weddings Due to a linguistic taboo in Djerba these creatures are called imbarken i e the blessed ones whence this period takes its name Jamrat el Ma Arabic جمرة الماء embers of the sea 27 February is marked by a rise in sea temperature 10 Jamrat el Trab Arabic جمرة التراب land embers in English is the period from 6 to 10 March and known to be marked by a mixture of heavy rain and sunny weather The term jamrat literally coal is in reference to the warm state of the earth during this period 11 Ssmaym Edit Like the strong winter cold the Dog Days also last 40 days from 12 yulyuz 25 July to 20 ghusht 2 September The apical moment of the period is the first of ghusht August also the name awussu widespread in Tunisia and Libya seems to date back to Latin augustus On this date particular rites are performed which manifestly derive from pre Islamic and even pre Christian traditions They consist in particular of bonfires which in many locations take place around the summer solstice a custom already condemned as Pagan by St Augustine or water rituals like those common in the coastal towns of Tunisia and Tripolitania that provide to dive in the seawaters for three nights in order to preserve one s health In these ceremonies whole families used to enter the water bringing with them even their pets Though the rite has been revisited in an Islamic frame in those nights the water of the Zamzam Well in Mecca would spill over and in the sea there would be beneficial sweet water waves many call this celebration the nights of the error It was in fact usual that in order to achieve fertility and prosperity men and women copulated among the flucts Iweǧǧiben Edit Another important period for the agricultural calendar is that of the ploughing In this context a date considered fundamental is the 17th of k tuber in which one may start ploughing his fields In Arabic this period is called ḥertadem that is Adam s ploughing because in that date the common ancestor of humanity is said to have begun his agricultural works Influences from the Islamic calendar EditFollowing centuries long contacts with the Arab Islamic culture the celebrations linked to the Julian calendar have been sometimes integrated into the Islamic calendar leading to the suppression of some traditional holidays or to the creation of duplicates The most evident example are the celebrations for the new year which in many cases have been transferred to the first Islamic month i e Muḥarram and more precisely to the ʿAshura which falls on the 10th day of that month This holiday has an important mournful meaning in the Shia Islam but it is substantially ignored among Sunnis Many studies have shown the relationships between the joyful celebration of this holiday in North Africa and the ancient New Year s Day celebrations Arabic and Berber names of the Islamic months Arabic name Berber name1 Muḥarram babiyannu Ouargla ʿashura Djerba 2 Safar u deffer ʿashura 3 Rabiʿ al awwal elmilud4 Rabiʿ al thani u deffer elmilud5 Jumada al awwal melghes Djerba 6 Jumada al thani asgenfu n twessarin the rest the waiting of the old women Ouargla sh shaher n Fadma Djerba 7 Rajab twessarin the old women 8 shaʿaban asgenfu n remdan the rest the waiting of Ramadan Ouargla 9 Ramadan sh shaher n uzum the month of the fasting Djerba 10 Shawwal tfaska tameshkunt the little holiday Djerba 11 dhu al qaʿida u jar asneth that between the two holidays Djerba 12 Dhu al Hijjah tfaska tameqqart the big holiday Djerba Older calendars EditThe Berber months 12 Name Meaningtayyuret tezwaret The first small moontayyuret teggwerat The last small moonyardut sinwa tasra tezwaret The first herdtasra teggwerat The last herdawdayeɣet yezwaren The first antelope babiesawdayeɣet yeggweran The last antelope babiesawzimet yezwaren The first gazelle babiesawzimet yeggweran The last gazelle babiesayssi aysi nim Not much is known about the division of time among the ancient Berbers Some elements of a pre Islamic and almost certainly a pre Roman calendar emerge from some medieval writings analyzed by Nico van den Boogert Some correspondences with the traditional Tuareg calendar suggest that in antiquity there existed with some degree of diffusion a Berber time computation organized on native bases There are not enough elements to reconstruct this calendar fully but known characteristics include many month names appearing in couples in the Tuareg world even in triplets which suggests a time division different from the present one made up of months of about 30 days Some further information although difficult to specify and correlate with the situation in the rest of North Africa may be deduced from what is known about time computation among the Guanches of the Canary Islands According to a 17th century manuscript by Tomas Marin de Cubas they computed their year called Acano by lunations of 29 days suns beginning from the new moon It began in summer when the sun enters in Cancer on June 21 at the first conjunction at the first new moon after the Summer solstice they celebrated nine festival days for the crop 13 The same manuscript states although somewhat obscurely that graphical pictorical records of such calendarial events tara were made on different supports and on this basis some modern scholars identified alleged descriptions of astronomical events connected to annual cycles in a series of geometric paintings in some caves of Gran Canaria island but the results of these studies are for now highly speculative 14 15 The name of only one month is known in the native language handed down as Benesmet It seems it was the second month of the year corresponding to August Such a name in case it was made up by something like wen that of e smet or e zmet may correspond in the list of medieval Berber month names with the ninth and tenth months awzimet properly aw baby of zimet gazelle But data are too scarce for this hypothesis to be deepened 12 Computation of the years EditThe traditional Berber calendar was not linked to an era with respect to which years were calculated Where traditional ways to compute the years have been preserved Tuareg civilization years are not expressed with numbers but each of them has a name characterizing it Starting from the 1960s however on the initiative of the Academie Berbere of Paris some Berbers have begun computing the years starting from 950 BC the approximate date of the rising into power of the first Libyan Pharaoh in Egypt Shoshenq I whom they identified as the first prominent Berber in history he is recorded as being of Libyan origin 16 For example the Gregorian year 2023 corresponds to the 2973rd year of the Berber calendar This innovation has been adopted with conviction by many supporters of the Berber culture and is now a part of the cultural heritage of this people fully integrated in the system of traditional customs related the North African calendar citation needed Photo taken on 31 December 2007 near Tafraout Morocco with the writings aseggas ameggaz good year in Tifinagh and bonne annee 2959 good year 2959 in French Note the 1 year mistake as 2959 corresponds to the Gregorian year 2009 References Edit Gast M Delheur J E B April 1991 Calendrier Encyclopedie Berbere 11 Bracelets Caprarienses in French OpenEdition pp 1713 1720 ISBN 9782857445814 Retrieved 5 July 2018 Idris 1954 Les origines du calendrier amazigh Les Matins d Algerie amwal is the form found in Jebel Nafusa Jadu amewan is the corresponding word in tuareg Cp V Brugnatelli Notes d onomastique jerbienne et mozabite in K Nait Zerrad R Vossen D Ibriszimow ed Nouvelles etudes berberes Le verbe et autres articles Actes du 2 Bayreuth Frankfurter Kolloquium zur Berberologie 2002 Koln R Koppe Verlag 2004 pp 29 39 in particular p 33 On this topic see e g chapter Llyali et Ssmaym in Genevois 1975 pp 21 22 Happy 2968 Berber New Year becomes holiday in Algeria The National 12 January 2018 The etymology proposed for bu ini of Aures from Masqueray 1886 164 was welcomed and extended to other similar terms related to the start of the year festivities by several authors including Doutte 1909 550 Laoust 1920 195 Delheure 1988 156 Drouin 2000 115 defines these etymological research as unconvincing In fact as remarked by Genevois 1975 11 the agricultural calendar ancient Julian calendar has therefore at present a 13 day delay In Oran the Ennayer parties are made on 11 and 12 January of the Gregorian calendar that is two days before the common agricultural calendar Mohamed Benhadji Serradj Fetes d Ennayer aux Beni snus tlemcenien folklore in IBLA vol 1950 pp 247 258 al Haj Ali Naji ماذا تعني هذه المصطلحات الشعبية العزارة قرة العنز و الليالي Turess Retrieved 6 July 2018 Aujourd hui marque la descente de la braise de terre جمرة التراب qu est ce que c est WEPOST Magazine Retrieved 6 July 2018 a b van den Boogert Nico 2002 The Names of the Months in Medieval Berber In Nait Zerrad K ed Articles de linguistique berbere Memorial Vycichl Parigi pp 137 152 ISBN 978 2 7475 2706 4 Barrios Garcia Jose 2004 Investigaciones sobre matematicas y astronomia guanche Parte III El calendario In Morales Padron Francisco ed XVI Coloquio de Historia Canario Americana Ediciones del Excelentisimo Cabildo Insular de Gran Canaria pp 329 344 ISBN 978 84 8103 407 3 Barrios Garcia Jose 1999 Tara A Study on the Canarian Astronomical Pictures Part I Towards an interpretation of the Galdar Painted Cave In Stanescu F ed Ancient times modern methods Proceedings of the III SEAC Conference Sibiu Romania 1 3 September 1995 Lucian Blaga University ISBN 978 973 651 033 5 Barrios Garcia C 2004 Tara A Study on the Canarian Astronomical Pictures Part II The acano chessboard In Jaschek Atrio Barandelas F eds Proceedings of the IV SEAC Meeting Astronomy and Culture University of Salamanca pp 47 54 ISBN 978 84 605 6954 1 Benbrahim Malha La fete de Yennayer pratiques et presages in French Tamazight fr Retrieved 4 September 2007 Bibliography Edit Il calendario degli uomini liberi Africa Epicentro Ferrara year V no 16 January February 2000 pp 30 33 in attachment a Berber calendar for 2000 Achab Ramdane 1996 La neologie lexicale berbere 1945 1995 M S Ussun amazigh in French Vol 9 Paris Louvain Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 9068318104 Said Bouterfa Yannayer Taburt u swgas ou le symbole de Janus Alger El Musk 2002 ISBN 9961 928 04 0 Gioia Chiauzzi Cicli calendariali nel Magreb 2 vols Naples Istituto Universitario Orientale 1988 Jeannine Drouin Calendriers berberes in S Chaker amp A Zaborski eds Etudes berberes et chamito semitiques Melanges offerts a K G Prasse Paris Louvain Peeters 2000 ISBN 90 429 0826 2 pp 113 128 Henri Genevois Le calendrier agraire et sa composition Le Fichier Periodique no 125 1975 Henri Genevois Le rituel agraire Le Fichier Periodique 127 1975 pp 1 48 Mohand Akli Haddadou Almanach berbere assegwes Imazighen Algiers Editions INAS 2002 ISBN 9961 762 05 3 H R Idris Fetes chretiennes celebrees en Ifriqiya a l epoque ziride in Revue Africaine 98 1954 pp 261 276 Emile Laoust Mots et choses berberes Paris 1920 Umberto Paradisi I tre giorni di Awussu a Zuara Tripolitania AION n s 14 1964 pp 415 9 Serra Luigi 1990 Awussu Encyclopedie Berbere in French Vol 8 Aix en Provence Editions Edisud pp 1198 1200 ISBN 9782857444619 Jean Servier Les portes de l Annee Rites et symboles L Algerie dans la tradition mediterraneenne Paris R Laffont 1962 new edition Monaco Le Rocher 1985 ISBN 2268003698 Nouh Mefnoune Ahmed Abdessalam Brahim 2011 Dictionnaire mozabite francais in French External links EditAn article about traditional customs in Berber New Year s Day in French A page with a Berber zodiac a modern creation based upon traditional elements in French An essays on the calendars used by Guanches of Canaries pdf in Spanish Number Systems and Calendars of the Berber Populations of Grand Canaray and Tenerife by Jose Barrios Garca in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Berber calendar amp oldid 1148412496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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