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Intercalary month (Egypt)

The intercalary month or epagomenal days[1] of the ancient Egyptian, Coptic, and Ethiopian calendars are a period of five days in common years and six days in leap years in addition to those calendars' 12 standard months, sometimes reckoned as their thirteenth month. They originated as a periodic measure to ensure that the heliacal rising of Sirius would occur in the 12th month of the Egyptian lunar calendar but became a regular feature of the civil calendar and its descendants. Coptic and Ethiopian leap days occur in the year preceding Julian and Gregorian leap years.

Names Edit


Those upon the Year[2][a]
Ḥryw Rnpt[3]
in hieroglyphs


The Five upon the Year[2][b]
5 Ḥryw Rnpt[3]

in hieroglyphs

The English names "intercalary month" and "epagomenal days" derive from Latin intercalārius ("proclaimed between")[4] and Greek epagómenoi (ἐπαγόμενοι)[5] or epagómenai (ἐπαγόμεναι, "brought in" or "added on"),[6] Latinized as epagomenae. The period is also sometimes known as the "monthless days".[7]

In ancient Egypt, the period was known as the "Five Days upon the Year" (Ancient Egyptian: Hrw 5 Ḥry Rnpt),[8] the "Five Days" (Hrw 5)[8] or "Those upon the Year" (Ḥryw Rnpt), the last of which is transliterated as Heriu Renpet.[9] Parker also proposed that in some cases the intercalary month was known by the name Thoth (Ḏḥwtyt) after the festival that gave its name to the following month.[10]

In modern Egypt, the period is known as Kouji Nabot[5] or Pi Kogi Enavot[11] (Coptic: Ⲡⲓⲕⲟⲩϫⲓ ⲛ̀ⲁⲃⲟⲧ, Pikouji n'Abot, lit. "The Little Month") and Al-Nasi (Egyptian Arabic: النسيء, en-Nasiʾ, lit. "The Postponement"), after Nasi' of the Pre-Islamic calendar. The Arabic name is also romanized as Nasie.[11]

In Ethiopia, the period is known as Paguemain,[12] Phagumien (Amharic: ጳጐሜን, Ṗagʷəmen),[13] Pagume,[14] or Pagumay[15] (ጳጉሜ, Ṗagume).

Egyptian calendars Edit

Ancient Edit


Birth of Osiris
Mswt Wsı͗r Ḥb[3]
in hieroglyphs
Birth of Horus[c]
Mswt Ḥr
in hieroglyphs
Birth of Set
Mswt Stẖ[3]
in hieroglyphs


Birth of Isis
Mswt Ꜣst Ḥb[3]
in hieroglyphs


Birth of Nephthys
Sw n Mswt Nbt Ḥwt[3]
in hieroglyphs

Until the 4th century BC, the beginnings of the months of the lunar calendar were based on observation,[16] beginning at dawn on the morning when a waning crescent moon could no longer be seen.[17] The intercalary month was added every two or three years as needed to maintain the heliacal rising of Sirius within the fourth month of the season of Low Water.[18] This month may have had as many as 30 days.[19] According to the civil calendar, the months fell in order with the rest regardless of the state of the moon. They always consisted of 30 days, each individually named and devoted to a particular patron deity, but the year was always followed by an intercalary month of only five days. Owing to the lack of a leap day, the calendar slowly cycled relative to the solar year and Gregorian date until the Ptolemaic and Roman eras.

The period of the intercalary month was considered spiritually dangerous[20] and the pharaoh performed a ritual known as "Pacifying Sekhmet" (Sḥtp Sḫmt) to protect himself and the world[21] from that god's plague.[8] The period seems to have usually been a time of rest, placed between the New Year's Eve celebrations on 30 Wep Renpet and the New Year's celebrations beginning on 1 Thoth.[22] Scribes sometimes omitted the entire period from their records of the year.[23] Torches were carried[24] and apotropaic charms were drawn on linen and worn around the neck.[8]

The period was known as the "birthdays of the gods" as early as the Pyramid Texts.[25] By the early Middle Kingdom, the days were specified and ordered:[25]

  • The first day was the Birth of Osiris (Mswt Wsı͗r).[26] It was also originally known as the "Pure Bull in His Field"[27] (Ngꜣ Wꜥb m Sḫt.f.), although that aspect of the intercalary festivities was later moved to the second day as Horus grew in importance.[28]
  • The second was the Birth of Horus (Mswt Ḥr).[26]
  • The third was the Birth of Set (Mswt Stẖ).[26]
  • The fourth was the Birth of Isis (Mswt Ꜣst or Mswt n Ꜣst).[26]
  • The last day was the Birth of Nephthys (Mswt Nbt-Ḥwt).[29] It was originally the most important, heralding in the New Year's festival and celebrating a "child in his nest" (ḥwn ı͗my sš.f),[20] but these aspects shifted to the fourth night in the Ptolemaic and Roman period owing to the greater importance of Isis and her longstanding connection with the star Sirius.[30]

Throughout the days, their connections to the solar boat of Ra, fish, and a "creator of terror" (ı͗r ḥrywt) were also stressed.[31] In all but a handful of texts, however, the days are merely numbered as "Day ~ of the Five Days upon the Year".[32]

Ptolemy III's Canopus Decree was an attempted calendrical reform in 239 BC which would have inserted a sixth day into the intercalary month, but it was abandoned due to the hostility of the priests[33] and people of Egypt. The leap day was finally established by Augustus in 30, 26,[34] or 25 BC.[33] Under this "Alexandrian calendar", the epagomenal days ran from Julian 24 August to 28 August in common years and to 29 August in leap years.[34][d]

Coptic Edit

In the present-day Coptic calendar, the intercalary month remains the same as the Alexandrian dates in the Julian calendar. In terms of the Gregorian calendar, it has begun on 6 September[1] and ended on 10 September in common years and 11 September in leap years since AD 1900 (AM 1616)[35] and will continue to do so until AD 2100 (AM 1816).[36] In that year, the Gregorian calendar's lack of a leap day will cause the Coptic month to advance another day relative to it[37] and it will run from 7 September to 11 September. Coptic leap years are not computed as divisors of four in that calendar's Diocletian era but occur in the year prior to the Gregorian leap year.[e]

The Coptic liturgical calendar of the month consists of:[11]

Coptic Julian Gregorian Commemorations
Intercalary

1

24 August 6 September
2 25 August 7 September
  • Departure of St. Titus, the Apostle.
  • Martyrdom of St. Isaiah, brother of Apa Hor
3 26 August 8 September
  • Commemoration of Raphael, the Archangel.
  • Martyrdom of St. Andrianus.
  • Departure of St. John XIV, the 96th Pope of Alexandria.
4 27 August 9 September
5 28 August 10 September
  • Departure of St. James, Bishop of Cairo.
  • Departure of Amos, the Prophet.
  • Departure of St. Parsoma, the "Naked".
  • Departure of St. John XV, the 99th Pope of Alexandria.
only in years before Julian leap years
(6) (29 August) (11 September)
  • Thanksgiving to God the Exalted.

Ethiopian calendar Edit

In the present-day Ethiopian calendar, Paguemain or Pagume is identical to the Coptic intercalary month, beginning on 6 September and ending on 10 September in common years and 11 September in leap years.[14] Its leap years occur at the same time[40][13] and its dates will also shift forward one day relative to the Gregorian calendar in AD 2100[15] (2092 EC).[41]

The unusual calendar is notably used in Ethiopian tourist information to advertise the country's "thirteen months of sunshine".[14][12]

Mandaean calendar Edit

The Mandaean calendar consisting of 12 30-day months, with 5 epagomenals inserted at the end of every 8th month (Mandaic: Šumbulta). These 5 extra days constitute the Parwanaya (or Panja) festival in the Mandaean calendar.[42]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Alternative representations of Those upon the Year include


    .[3]
  2. ^ Alternative representations of the Five upon the Year include

    .[3]
  3. ^ For variant hieroglyphic representations of this god, see Horus.
  4. ^ For a chart of conversions from Julian to Gregorian dates from 3701 BC to AD 1900, see Parker.[34]
  5. ^ For example, the Coptic leap day occurred on 11 September AD 2015 (6 Epag. AM 1731)[38] and its Gregorian equivalent on 29 February AD 2016 (21 Meshir AM 1732).[39]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Gabra, Gawdat (2008), "Coptic Calendar", The A to Z of the Coptic Church, A to Z Guide Series, No. 107, Plymouth: The Scarecrow Press, pp. 70–1, ISBN 9780810870574.
  2. ^ a b Clagett (1995), p. 29.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Vygus, Mark (2015), Middle Egyptian Dictionary (PDF).
  4. ^ "intercalary, adj.", and "intercalate, v.", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1900.
  5. ^ a b Dawood (2007), p. 3.
  6. ^ "epagomenal, adj.", "epagomenic, adj.", and "epagoge, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1933.
  7. ^ "Middle Eastern Calendars" (PDF), Educational Resources, Chicago: Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago, p. 3, retrieved 7 February 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d Jauhiainen (2009), p. 196.
  9. ^ Watrall, Ethan (2016), Understanding Egyptian Chronology (PDF), Michigan State University, p. 8.
  10. ^ Parker (1950), p. 46.
  11. ^ a b c "13: Nasie Month", Coptic Synaxarium, Alexandria: St Takla Haymanout, retrieved 6 February 2017.
  12. ^ a b Mebratu, Belete K. (2009), "Ethiopian Calendar", Encyclopedia of Time: Science, Philosophy, Theology, & Culture, Vol. I, Los Angeles: Sage, p. 128, ISBN 9781412941648.
  13. ^ a b "Ethiopian Calendar", Selamta, 2015.
  14. ^ a b c Shinn & al. (2013).
  15. ^ a b "Ethiopian Calendar", Official site, Tesfa Community Treks, retrieved 6 February 2017.
  16. ^ Parker (1950), p. 29.
  17. ^ Parker (1950), p. 23.
  18. ^ Parker (1950), p. 32.
  19. ^ Parker (1950), p. 64.
  20. ^ a b Spalinger (1995), p. 35.
  21. ^ Jauhiainen (2009), p. 77.
  22. ^ Jauhiainen (2009), pp. 81–2 & 198.
  23. ^ Jauhiainen (2009), p. 56.
  24. ^ Jauhiainen (2009), pp. 78 & 198.
  25. ^ a b Spalinger (1995), p. 33.
  26. ^ a b c d Jauhiainen (2009), pp. 197 & 223.
  27. ^ Spalinger (1995), p. 38.
  28. ^ Spalinger (1995), p. 46.
  29. ^ Jauhiainen (2009), pp. 82, 197, & 223.
  30. ^ Spalinger (1995), pp. 42 & 44.
  31. ^ Spalinger (1995), pp. 45–7.
  32. ^ Spalinger (1995), p. 34.
  33. ^ a b Dawood, K.R. (2007), "The Coptic Calendar" (PDF), Coptic Heritage, p. 7.
  34. ^ a b c Parker (1950), p. 8.
  35. ^ Reingold, Edward M.; et al. (2002), Calendrical Tabulations, 1900–2200, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 2, ISBN 9780521782531.
  36. ^ Reingold & al. (2002), p. 402.
  37. ^ Von Staufer, Maria Hubert (2002), "Christmas in Egypt", The Christmas Archives.
  38. ^ Reingold & al. (2002), p. 232.
  39. ^ Reingold & al. (2002), p. 234.
  40. ^ Reingold & al. (2002), pp. xx–xxii.
  41. ^ Reingold & al. (2002), p. 402.
  42. ^ Aldihisi, Sabah (2008). The story of creation in the Mandaean holy book in the Ginza Rba (PhD). University College London.

Bibliography Edit

  • Clagett, Marshall (1995), Ancient Egyptian Science: A Source Book, Vol. II: Calendars, Clocks, and Astronomy, Memoirs of the APS, No. 214, Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, ISBN 9780871692146.
  • Jauhiainen, Heidi (2009), Do Not Celebrate Your Feast without Your Neighbors: A Study of References to Feasts and Festivals in Non-Literary Documents from Ramesside Period Deir el-Medina (PDF), Publications of the Institute for Asian and African Studies, No. 10, Helsinki: University of Helsinki.
  • Parker, Richard Anthony (1950), The Calendars of Ancient Egypt (PDF), Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization, No. 26, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Shinn, David H.; et al. (2013), "Calendar", Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia, Plymouth: Scarecrow Press, p. 91, ISBN 9780810874572.
  • Spalinger, Anthony (January 1995), "Some Remarks on the Epagomenal Days in Ancient Egypt", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp. 33–47.
Preceded by Egyptian Seasons
Days over the Year
Ḥryw Rnpt

days: 5 or 6 days
Succeeded by

intercalary, month, egypt, confused, with, islamic, concept, mentioned, quran, known, nasi, also, intercalation, timekeeping, intercalary, month, epagomenal, days, ancient, egyptian, coptic, ethiopian, calendars, period, five, days, common, years, days, leap, . Not to be confused with the pre Islamic concept mentioned in the Quran known as Nasi See also Intercalation timekeeping The intercalary month or epagomenal days 1 of the ancient Egyptian Coptic and Ethiopian calendars are a period of five days in common years and six days in leap years in addition to those calendars 12 standard months sometimes reckoned as their thirteenth month They originated as a periodic measure to ensure that the heliacal rising of Sirius would occur in the 12th month of the Egyptian lunar calendar but became a regular feature of the civil calendar and its descendants Coptic and Ethiopian leap days occur in the year preceding Julian and Gregorian leap years Contents 1 Names 2 Egyptian calendars 2 1 Ancient 2 2 Coptic 3 Ethiopian calendar 4 Mandaean calendar 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 BibliographyNames EditThose upon the Year 2 a Ḥryw Rnpt 3 in hieroglyphsThe Five upon the Year 2 b 5 Ḥryw Rnpt 3 in hieroglyphsThe English names intercalary month and epagomenal days derive from Latin intercalarius proclaimed between 4 and Greek epagomenoi ἐpagomenoi 5 or epagomenai ἐpagomenai brought in or added on 6 Latinized as epagomenae The period is also sometimes known as the monthless days 7 In ancient Egypt the period was known as the Five Days upon the Year Ancient Egyptian Hrw 5 Ḥry Rnpt 8 the Five Days Hrw 5 8 or Those upon the Year Ḥryw Rnpt the last of which is transliterated as Heriu Renpet 9 Parker also proposed that in some cases the intercalary month was known by the name Thoth Ḏḥwtyt after the festival that gave its name to the following month 10 In modern Egypt the period is known as Kouji Nabot 5 or Pi Kogi Enavot 11 Coptic Ⲡⲓⲕⲟⲩϫⲓ ⲛ ⲁⲃⲟⲧ Pikouji n Abot lit The Little Month and Al Nasi Egyptian Arabic النسيء en Nasiʾ lit The Postponement after Nasi of the Pre Islamic calendar The Arabic name is also romanized as Nasie 11 In Ethiopia the period is known as Paguemain 12 Phagumien Amharic ጳጐሜን Ṗagʷemen 13 Pagume 14 or Pagumay 15 ጳጉሜ Ṗagume Egyptian calendars EditAncient Edit Birth of Osiris Mswt Wsi r Ḥb 3 in hieroglyphsBirth of Horus c Mswt Ḥrin hieroglyphsBirth of Set Mswt Stẖ 3 in hieroglyphsBirth of Isis Mswt Ꜣst Ḥb 3 in hieroglyphsBirth of Nephthys Sw n Mswt Nbt Ḥwt 3 in hieroglyphsFurther information Egyptian calendar and Decree of Canopus Until the 4th century BC the beginnings of the months of the lunar calendar were based on observation 16 beginning at dawn on the morning when a waning crescent moon could no longer be seen 17 The intercalary month was added every two or three years as needed to maintain the heliacal rising of Sirius within the fourth month of the season of Low Water 18 This month may have had as many as 30 days 19 According to the civil calendar the months fell in order with the rest regardless of the state of the moon They always consisted of 30 days each individually named and devoted to a particular patron deity but the year was always followed by an intercalary month of only five days Owing to the lack of a leap day the calendar slowly cycled relative to the solar year and Gregorian date until the Ptolemaic and Roman eras The period of the intercalary month was considered spiritually dangerous 20 and the pharaoh performed a ritual known as Pacifying Sekhmet Sḥtp Sḫmt to protect himself and the world 21 from that god s plague 8 The period seems to have usually been a time of rest placed between the New Year s Eve celebrations on 30 Wep Renpet and the New Year s celebrations beginning on 1 Thoth 22 Scribes sometimes omitted the entire period from their records of the year 23 Torches were carried 24 and apotropaic charms were drawn on linen and worn around the neck 8 The period was known as the birthdays of the gods as early as the Pyramid Texts 25 By the early Middle Kingdom the days were specified and ordered 25 The first day was the Birth of Osiris Mswt Wsi r 26 It was also originally known as the Pure Bull in His Field 27 Ngꜣ Wꜥb m Sḫt f although that aspect of the intercalary festivities was later moved to the second day as Horus grew in importance 28 The second was the Birth of Horus Mswt Ḥr 26 The third was the Birth of Set Mswt Stẖ 26 The fourth was the Birth of Isis Mswt Ꜣst or Mswt n Ꜣst 26 The last day was the Birth of Nephthys Mswt Nbt Ḥwt 29 It was originally the most important heralding in the New Year s festival and celebrating a child in his nest ḥwn i my ss f 20 but these aspects shifted to the fourth night in the Ptolemaic and Roman period owing to the greater importance of Isis and her longstanding connection with the star Sirius 30 Throughout the days their connections to the solar boat of Ra fish and a creator of terror i r ḥrywt were also stressed 31 In all but a handful of texts however the days are merely numbered as Day of the Five Days upon the Year 32 Ptolemy III s Canopus Decree was an attempted calendrical reform in 239 BC which would have inserted a sixth day into the intercalary month but it was abandoned due to the hostility of the priests 33 and people of Egypt The leap day was finally established by Augustus in 30 26 34 or 25 BC 33 Under this Alexandrian calendar the epagomenal days ran from Julian 24 August to 28 August in common years and to 29 August in leap years 34 d Coptic Edit Further information Coptic calendar In the present day Coptic calendar the intercalary month remains the same as the Alexandrian dates in the Julian calendar In terms of the Gregorian calendar it has begun on 6 September 1 and ended on 10 September in common years and 11 September in leap years since AD 1900 AM 1616 35 and will continue to do so until AD 2100 AM 1816 36 In that year the Gregorian calendar s lack of a leap day will cause the Coptic month to advance another day relative to it 37 and it will run from 7 September to 11 September Coptic leap years are not computed as divisors of four in that calendar s Diocletian era but occur in the year prior to the Gregorian leap year e The Coptic liturgical calendar of the month consists of 11 Coptic Julian Gregorian CommemorationsIntercalary 1 24 August 6 September Departure of St Eutychus Martyrdom of St Pishay Abshai the Antiochian 2 25 August 7 September Departure of St Titus the Apostle Martyrdom of St Isaiah brother of Apa Hor3 26 August 8 September Commemoration of Raphael the Archangel Martyrdom of St Andrianus Departure of St John XIV the 96th Pope of Alexandria 4 27 August 9 September Departure of St Liberius Bishop of Rome Departure of St Poimen the Hermit St Inianamon5 28 August 10 September Departure of St James Bishop of Cairo Departure of Amos the Prophet Departure of St Parsoma the Naked Departure of St John XV the 99th Pope of Alexandria only in years before Julian leap years 6 29 August 11 September Thanksgiving to God the Exalted Ethiopian calendar EditFurther information Ethiopian calendar In the present day Ethiopian calendar Paguemain or Pagume is identical to the Coptic intercalary month beginning on 6 September and ending on 10 September in common years and 11 September in leap years 14 Its leap years occur at the same time 40 13 and its dates will also shift forward one day relative to the Gregorian calendar in AD 2100 15 2092 EC 41 The unusual calendar is notably used in Ethiopian tourist information to advertise the country s thirteen months of sunshine 14 12 Mandaean calendar EditFurther information Mandaean calendar The Mandaean calendar consisting of 12 30 day months with 5 epagomenals inserted at the end of every 8th month Mandaic Sumbulta These 5 extra days constitute the Parwanaya or Panja festival in the Mandaean calendar 42 See also EditEgyptian Coptic and Ethiopian calendars Babylonian Zoroastrian and Armenian calendars Persian and Hebrew calendars Islamic calendar SansculottidesNotes Edit nbsp This article contains Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Egyptian hieroglyphs nbsp This article contains Coptic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Coptic letters nbsp This article contains Ethiopic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Ethiopic characters Alternative representations of Those upon the Year include 3 Alternative representations of the Five upon the Year include 3 For variant hieroglyphic representations of this god see Horus For a chart of conversions from Julian to Gregorian dates from 3701 BC to AD 1900 see Parker 34 For example the Coptic leap day occurred on 11 September AD 2015 6 Epag AM 1731 38 and its Gregorian equivalent on 29 February AD 2016 21 Meshir AM 1732 39 References EditCitations Edit a b Gabra Gawdat 2008 Coptic Calendar The A to Z of the Coptic Church A to Z Guide Series No 107 Plymouth The Scarecrow Press pp 70 1 ISBN 9780810870574 a b Clagett 1995 p 29 a b c d e f g h Vygus Mark 2015 Middle Egyptian Dictionary PDF intercalary adj and intercalate v Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press 1900 a b Dawood 2007 p 3 epagomenal adj epagomenic adj and epagoge n Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press 1933 Middle Eastern Calendars PDF Educational Resources Chicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago p 3 retrieved 7 February 2017 a b c d Jauhiainen 2009 p 196 Watrall Ethan 2016 Understanding Egyptian Chronology PDF Michigan State University p 8 Parker 1950 p 46 a b c 13 Nasie Month Coptic Synaxarium Alexandria St Takla Haymanout retrieved 6 February 2017 a b Mebratu Belete K 2009 Ethiopian Calendar Encyclopedia of Time Science Philosophy Theology amp Culture Vol I Los Angeles Sage p 128 ISBN 9781412941648 a b Ethiopian Calendar Selamta 2015 a b c Shinn amp al 2013 a b Ethiopian Calendar Official site Tesfa Community Treks retrieved 6 February 2017 Parker 1950 p 29 Parker 1950 p 23 Parker 1950 p 32 Parker 1950 p 64 a b Spalinger 1995 p 35 Jauhiainen 2009 p 77 Jauhiainen 2009 pp 81 2 amp 198 Jauhiainen 2009 p 56 Jauhiainen 2009 pp 78 amp 198 a b Spalinger 1995 p 33 a b c d Jauhiainen 2009 pp 197 amp 223 Spalinger 1995 p 38 Spalinger 1995 p 46 Jauhiainen 2009 pp 82 197 amp 223 Spalinger 1995 pp 42 amp 44 Spalinger 1995 pp 45 7 Spalinger 1995 p 34 a b Dawood K R 2007 The Coptic Calendar PDF Coptic Heritage p 7 a b c Parker 1950 p 8 Reingold Edward M et al 2002 Calendrical Tabulations 1900 2200 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 2 ISBN 9780521782531 Reingold amp al 2002 p 402 Von Staufer Maria Hubert 2002 Christmas in Egypt The Christmas Archives Reingold amp al 2002 p 232 Reingold amp al 2002 p 234 Reingold amp al 2002 pp xx xxii Reingold amp al 2002 p 402 Aldihisi Sabah 2008 The story of creation in the Mandaean holy book in the Ginza Rba PhD University College London Bibliography Edit Clagett Marshall 1995 Ancient Egyptian Science A Source Book Vol II Calendars Clocks and Astronomy Memoirs of the APS No 214 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society ISBN 9780871692146 Jauhiainen Heidi 2009 Do Not Celebrate Your Feast without Your Neighbors A Study of References to Feasts and Festivals in Non Literary Documents from Ramesside Period Deir el Medina PDF Publications of the Institute for Asian and African Studies No 10 Helsinki University of Helsinki Parker Richard Anthony 1950 The Calendars of Ancient Egypt PDF Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization No 26 Chicago University of Chicago Press Shinn David H et al 2013 Calendar Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Plymouth Scarecrow Press p 91 ISBN 9780810874572 Spalinger Anthony January 1995 Some Remarks on the Epagomenal Days in Ancient Egypt Journal of Near Eastern Studies Vol 54 No 1 pp 33 47 Preceded bySeason of the Harvest Smw Egyptian SeasonsDays over the Year Ḥryw Rnptdays 5 or 6 days Succeeded bySeason of the Inundation Ꜣḫt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intercalary month Egypt amp oldid 1145722381, wikipedia, 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