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Tibetan calendar

The Tibetan calendar (Tibetan: ལོ་ཐོ, Wylie: lo-tho), or Tibetan lunar calendar, is a lunisolar calendar, that is, the Tibetan year is composed of either 12 or 13 lunar months, each beginning and ending with a new moon. A thirteenth month is added every two or three years, so that an average Tibetan year is equal to the solar year.

The Tibetan New Year celebration is Losar (Tibetan: ལོ་གསར་, Wylie: lo-gsar). According to almanacs the year starts with the third Hor month. There were many different traditions in Tibet to fix the beginning of the year.[which?] The dates of Mongolian calendar are the same as the Tibetan calendar.

Every month, certain dates in the Tibetan calendar have special significance for Buddhist practices. Likewise, certain months also have significance.

Years edit

There were different traditions of naming years (Tibetan: ལོ་, Wylie: lo) in Tibet. From the 12th century onwards, we observe the usage of two sixty-year cycles. The 60-year cycle is known as the Vṛhaspati cycle and was first introduced into Tibet by an Indian Buddhist by the name of Chandranath and Tsilu Pandit in 1025 CE.[1] The first cycle is the rabjyung (Tibetan: རབ་བྱུང༌།, Wylie: rab byung) cycle. The first year of the first rabjyung cycle started in 1027. This cycle was adopted from India. The second cycle was derived from China and was called Drukchu kor (Tibetan: དྲུག་ཅུ་སྐོར།, Wylie: drug cu skor, Sanskrit Vrhaspati). The first year of the first Drukchu kor cycle started in 1024. The cycles were counted by ordinal numbers, but the years within the cycles were never counted but referred to by special names. The structure of the drukchu kor was as follows: Each year is associated with an animal and an element, similar to the Chinese zodiac. Animals have the following order:

Elements have the following order:

Fire Earth Iron Water Wood

Each element is associated with two consecutive years, first in its male aspect, then in its female aspect. For example, a male Earth-Dragon year is followed by a female Earth-Snake year, then by a male Iron-Horse year. The sex may be omitted, as it can be inferred from the animal.

The element-animal designations recur in cycles of 60 years (a Sexagenary cycle), starting with a (male) Wood-Rat year. These large cycles are numbered, the first cycle starting in 1024. Therefore, 2005 roughly corresponds to the (female) Wood-Rooster year of the 17th cycle. The first year of the sixty-year cycle of Indian origin (1027) is called rab-byung (same name as the designation of the cycle) and is equivalent to the (female) fire-Rabbit year.

Year (Gregorian) Year according to rabjyung Wylie Element Animal Sex
2008 rabjyung 17 lo 22 sa mo glang Earth Rat male
2009 rabjyung 17 lo 23 sa pho khyi Earth Ox female
2010 rabjyung 17 lo 24 lcags pho stag Iron Tiger male
2011 rabjyung 17 lo 25 lcags mo yos Iron Hare female
2012 rabjyung 17 lo 26 chu pho 'brug Water Dragon male
2013 rabjyung 17 lo 27 chu mo sbrul Water Snake female
2014 rabjyung 17 lo 28 shing pho rta Wood Horse male
2015 rabjyung 17 lo 29 shing mo lug Wood Sheep female

Years with cardinal numbers edit

Three relatively modern notations of cardinal numbers are used for Tibetan years.

On Tibetan banknotes from the first half of the 20th century cardinal numbers can be seen, with year 1 in 255 CE, which is a reference to the legendary 28th Emperor of Tibet, Thothori Nyantsen.

Since the second half of the 20th century another year notation has been used, where the year of, for example, 2023 A.D. coincides with the Tibetan year of 2150. This relatively modern year notation is referred to as Bö Gyello (bod rgyal lo). In this era the first year is 127 BCE, dated to the legendary progenitor of the Yarlung dynasty, Nyatri Tsenpo.

In Tibetan calendars of the second half of the 20th century and on Tibetan coins cardinal year numbers are found with the indication of raplo, where the first year coincides with the first year of the rabjyung-cycle, that is 1027. Rab lo 928, for example, is the year of 1954 on the western Gregorian calendar.

Year (Gregorian) Epoch
127 BCE
Epoch
255
Epoch
1027
From about February/March 2009 2136 1755 983
From about February/March 2010 2137 1756 984
From about February/March 2011 2138 1757 985
From about February/March 2012 2139 1758 986

Months edit

During the time of the Tibetan Empire (7th – 9th century) Tibetan months (Tibetan: ཟླ་བ་, Wylie: zla ba, THL: dawa) were named according to the four seasons:

First spring month (dpyid zla ra ba), middle spring month (dpyid zla 'bring po), last spring month (dpyid zla mtha' chung),
first summer month (dbyar zla ra ba), middle summer month (dbyar zla 'bring po), last summer month (dbyar zla mtha' chung),
first autumn month (ston zla ra ba), middle autumn month (ston-zla 'bring-po), last autumn month (ston zla mtha' chung),
first winter month (dgun zla ra ba), middle winter month (dgun-zla 'bring-po) and last winter month (dgun zla mtha' chung).

From the 12th century onwards each month has been named by the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac:

stag, (Tiger), yos (Hare), brug (Dragon), sbrul (Snake), rta (Horse), lug (Sheep), sprel (Monkey), bya (Bird), khyi (Dog), phag (Boar), byi ba (Rat), and glang (Ox).

With the introduction of the calendar of the Kalacakratantra in the second half of the 11th century, months were also named via lunar mansions within which, roughly speaking, a full moon took place each month:

1st: Chu (mchu, Skt. māgha)
2nd: Wo (dbo, Skt. phālguna)
3rd: Nagpa (nag pa, Skt. caitra)
4th: Saga (sa ga, Skt. vaiśākha)
5th: Nön (snron, Skt. jyeṣṭha)
6th: Chutö (chu stod, Skt. āṣāḍha)
7th: Drozhin (gro bzhin, Skt. śrāvaṇa)
8th: Trum (khrums, Skt. bhādrapada)
9th: Takar (tha skar, Skt. āśvina)
10th: Mindrug (smin drug, Skt. kārttika)
11th: Go (mgo, Skt. mārgaśīrṣa)
12th: Gyal (rgyal, Skt. pauṣa)

In the second half of the 13th century the famous ruler Drogön Chögyal Phagpa introduced the system of counting the month by ordinal numbers, the so-called Hor "Mongolian" month:

1st Hor month (hor-zla dang-po)
2nd Hor month (hor-zla gnyis-pa)
3rd Hor month (hor-zla gsum-pa)
4th Hor month (hor-zla bzhi-pa)
5th Hor month (hor-zla lnga-pa)
6th Hor month (hor-zla drug-pa)
7th Hor month (hor-zla bdun-pa)
8th Hor month (hor-zla brgyad-pa)
9th Hor month (hor-zla dgu-pa)
10th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-pa)
11th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-gcig-pa)
12th Hor month (hor-zla bcu-gnyis-pa)

All these systems of counting or naming months were used up to modern times.

Days edit

There are three different types of days (zhag), the khyim zhag, the tshes zhag and the nyin zhag.

The first two of these days are astronomical days. The time needed for the mean Sun to pass through one of the twelve traditional signs of the zodiac (the twelve khyim) is called khyim zla (solar month). One-thirtieth of one solar month (khyim zla) is one khyim zhag, which might be called a zodiacal day, because there is no equivalent name in Western terminology.

The time needed by the Moon to elongate 12 degrees from the Sun and every 12 degrees thereafter is one tithi (tshes zhag, "lunar day"). The lengths of such lunar days vary considerably due to variations in the movements of the Moon and Sun.

Thirty lunar days form one lunar or synodic month (tshes zla), the period from new moon to new moon. This is equal to the time needed for the Moon to elongate 360 degrees from the Sun (sun to sun). The natural day (nyin zhag) is defined by Tibetans as the period from dawn to dawn. Strictly speaking, the months appearing in a Tibetan almanac, called by us Tibetan calendar months, are not the same as lunar or synodic months (tshes zla), which can begin and end at any time of day. In Tibetan, there is no special term for a calendar month containing whole days. These calendar months are just called zla ba (month).

A Tibetan calendar month normally starts with the week day or natural day (gza' or nyin zhag) in which the first tithi (tshes zhag) ends. A Tibetan calendar month normally ends with the week day or natural day (gza' or nyin zhag) in which the 30th tithi (tshes zhag) ends. In consequence, a Tibetan calendar month (zla ba) comprises 29 or 30 natural days. In the sequence of natural days or week days, there are no omitted days or days that occur twice. But since these days are also named by the term tshes together with a cardinal number, it happens that certain numbers or dates (the corresponding tithi) do not occur at all (chad) or appear twice (lhag). The tithi are counted from 1 to 30 and it can happen that a Monday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig) is followed by a Tuesday with the moon day number 3 (tshes gsum). On the other hand, a Monday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig) may be followed by a Tuesday with the lunar day number 1 (tshes gcig). In other words, it happens quite often that certain dates do not appear in the Tibetan almanac and certain dates occur twice. But there are no natural days or week days that occur twice or which are omitted.

The days of the week (Tibetan: གཟའ, Wylie: gza') are named for astronomical objects.[citation needed]

Day Tibetan (Wylie) Phonetic transcription Object
Sunday གཟའ་ཉི་མ་ (gza' nyi ma) nyima Sun
Monday གཟའ་ཟླ་བ་ (gza' zla wa) dawa Moon
Tuesday གཟའ་མིག་དམར་ (gza' mig dmar) Mikmar Mars
Wednesday གཟའ་ལྷག་པ་ (gza' lhak pa) Lhakpa Mercury
Thursday གཟའ་ཕུར་བུ། (gza' phur bu) Purbu Jupiter
Friday གཟའ་པ་སངས་ (gza' pa sangs) Pasang Venus
Saturday གཟའ་སྤེན་པ་ (gza' spen ba) Penba Saturn

Nyima "Sun", Dawa "Moon" and Lhakpa "Mercury" are common personal names for people born on Sunday, Monday or Wednesday respectively.

History edit

During the time of the Yarlung dynasty, years were named after the 12 animals common in the Chinese zodiac. The months were named according to the four seasons of a year and the year started in summer.

The translation of the Kalachakratantra in the second half of the 11th century CE marked the beginning of a complete change for the calendar in Tibet. The first chapter of this book contains among others a description of an Indian astronomical calendar and descriptions of the calculations to determine the progression of the five planets and the sun and moon eclipses.

According to the Buddhist tradition, the original teachings of the Kalacakra were taught by Buddha himself. Nevertheless, it took more than two hundred years until the Kalacakra calendar was officially introduced as the Tibetan calendar by the ruler Drogön Chögyal Phagpa in the second half of the 13th century. Although this calendar was changed many times during the subsequent centuries, it kept its original character as a luni-solar calendar of Indian origin.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sarat Chandra Das, A Tibetan-English dictionary: with Sanskrit synonyms, p. viii (accessed: October 25, 2009).

Primary sources edit

  • (Sanskrit) Kalacakratantra. (Tibetisch) mChog gi dang-po sangs-rgyas las phyung-ba rgyud kyi rgyal-po dus kyi 'khor-lo.
  • Grags-pa rgyal-mchan: Dus-tshod bzung-ba'i rtsis-yig
  • sde-srid Sangs-rgyas rgya-mtsho: Phug-lugs rtsis kyi legs-bshad mkhas-pa'i mgul-rgyan vaidur dkar-po'i do-shal dpyod-ldan snying-nor
  • karma Nges-legs bstan-'jin: gTsug-lag rtsis-rigs tshang-ma'i lag-len 'khrul-med mun-sel nyi-ma ñer-mkho'i 'dod-pa 'jo-ba'i bum-bzang

Secondary sources edit

  • Svante Janson, Tibetan Calendar Mathematics, accessed December 16, 2009
  • Norbu, Thubten & Harrer, Heinrich (1960). Tibet Is My Country. London: Readers Union, Rupert Hart-Davis.
  • de Körős; Alexander Csoma (1834). A Grammar of the Tibetan Language. Calcutta.
  • Henning, Edward (2007). Kalacakra and the Tibetan Calendar. Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences. NY: Columbia University Press. p. 408. ISBN 978-0-9753734-9-1.
  • Laufer, Berthold (1913). The Application of the Tibetan Sexagenary Cycle. T´oung Pao, Vol. 14, pp. 569–596.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Petri, Winfried (1966). Indo-tibetische Astronomie. Habilitationsschrift zur Erlangung der venia legendi für das Fach Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften an der Hohen Naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Ludwig Maximilians Universität zu München. München.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Pelliot, Paul (1913). Le Cycle Sexagénaire dans la Chronologie Tibétaine. Paris: Journal Asiatique 1, pp. 633–667.
  • Schuh, Dieter (1973). Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung. Wiesbaden: Steiner Verlag.
  • Schuh, Dieter (1974). Grundzüge der Entwicklung der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, Supplement II. XVIII. Deutscher Orientalistentag vom 1. bis 5. Oktober 1972 in Lübeck. Vorträge, pp. 554–566.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Tsepon W.D. Shakabpa (1967). Tibet: A Political History. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  • Tournadre, Nicolas & Sangda Dorje (2003). Manual of Standard Tibetan: Language and Civilization. trans. Ramble, Charles. Ithaca: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-189-8.
  • Yamaguchi, Zuiho (1973). Chronological Studies in Tibet. Chibetto no rekigaku: Annual Report of the Zuzuki Academic foundation X, pp. 77–94.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Yamaguchi, Zuiho (1992). The Significance of Intercalary Constants in the Tibetan Calendar and Historical Tables of Intercalary Month. Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the 5th Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vol. 2, pp. 873–895: Narita.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)

External links edit

tibetan, calendar, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citatio. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is missing information about methods to determine new year Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tibetan calendar Tibetan ལ ཐ Wylie lo tho or Tibetan lunar calendar is a lunisolar calendar that is the Tibetan year is composed of either 12 or 13 lunar months each beginning and ending with a new moon A thirteenth month is added every two or three years so that an average Tibetan year is equal to the solar year The Tibetan New Year celebration is Losar Tibetan ལ གསར Wylie lo gsar According to almanacs the year starts with the third Hor month There were many different traditions in Tibet to fix the beginning of the year which The dates of Mongolian calendar are the same as the Tibetan calendar Every month certain dates in the Tibetan calendar have special significance for Buddhist practices Likewise certain months also have significance Contents 1 Years 1 1 Years with cardinal numbers 2 Months 3 Days 4 History 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Primary sources 8 Secondary sources 9 External linksYears editThere were different traditions of naming years Tibetan ལ Wylie lo in Tibet From the 12th century onwards we observe the usage of two sixty year cycles The 60 year cycle is known as the Vṛhaspati cycle and was first introduced into Tibet by an Indian Buddhist by the name of Chandranath and Tsilu Pandit in 1025 CE 1 The first cycle is the rabjyung Tibetan རབ བ ང Wylie rab byung cycle The first year of the first rabjyung cycle started in 1027 This cycle was adopted from India The second cycle was derived from China and was called Drukchu kor Tibetan ད ག ཅ ས ར Wylie drug cu skor Sanskrit Vrhaspati The first year of the first Drukchu kor cycle started in 1024 The cycles were counted by ordinal numbers but the years within the cycles were never counted but referred to by special names The structure of the drukchu kor was as follows Each year is associated with an animal and an element similar to the Chinese zodiac Animals have the following order Hare Dragon Snake Horse Sheep Monkey Bird Dog Boar Rat Ox TigerElements have the following order Fire Earth Iron Water WoodEach element is associated with two consecutive years first in its male aspect then in its female aspect For example a male Earth Dragon year is followed by a female Earth Snake year then by a male Iron Horse year The sex may be omitted as it can be inferred from the animal The element animal designations recur in cycles of 60 years a Sexagenary cycle starting with a male Wood Rat year These large cycles are numbered the first cycle starting in 1024 Therefore 2005 roughly corresponds to the female Wood Rooster year of the 17th cycle The first year of the sixty year cycle of Indian origin 1027 is called rab byung same name as the designation of the cycle and is equivalent to the female fire Rabbit year Year Gregorian Year according to rabjyung Wylie Element Animal Sex2008 rabjyung 17 lo 22 sa mo glang Earth Rat male2009 rabjyung 17 lo 23 sa pho khyi Earth Ox female2010 rabjyung 17 lo 24 lcags pho stag Iron Tiger male2011 rabjyung 17 lo 25 lcags mo yos Iron Hare female2012 rabjyung 17 lo 26 chu pho brug Water Dragon male2013 rabjyung 17 lo 27 chu mo sbrul Water Snake female2014 rabjyung 17 lo 28 shing pho rta Wood Horse male2015 rabjyung 17 lo 29 shing mo lug Wood Sheep femaleYears with cardinal numbers edit Three relatively modern notations of cardinal numbers are used for Tibetan years On Tibetan banknotes from the first half of the 20th century cardinal numbers can be seen with year 1 in 255 CE which is a reference to the legendary 28th Emperor of Tibet Thothori Nyantsen Since the second half of the 20th century another year notation has been used where the year of for example 2023 A D coincides with the Tibetan year of 2150 This relatively modern year notation is referred to as Bo Gyello bod rgyal lo In this era the first year is 127 BCE dated to the legendary progenitor of the Yarlung dynasty Nyatri Tsenpo In Tibetan calendars of the second half of the 20th century and on Tibetan coins cardinal year numbers are found with the indication of raplo where the first year coincides with the first year of the rabjyung cycle that is 1027 Rab lo 928 for example is the year of 1954 on the western Gregorian calendar Year Gregorian Epoch127 BCE Epoch255 Epoch1027From about February March 2009 2136 1755 983From about February March 2010 2137 1756 984From about February March 2011 2138 1757 985From about February March 2012 2139 1758 986Months editDuring the time of the Tibetan Empire 7th 9th century Tibetan months Tibetan ཟ བ Wylie zla ba THL dawa were named according to the four seasons First spring month dpyid zla ra ba middle spring month dpyid zla bring po last spring month dpyid zla mtha chung first summer month dbyar zla ra ba middle summer month dbyar zla bring po last summer month dbyar zla mtha chung first autumn month ston zla ra ba middle autumn month ston zla bring po last autumn month ston zla mtha chung first winter month dgun zla ra ba middle winter month dgun zla bring po and last winter month dgun zla mtha chung From the 12th century onwards each month has been named by the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac stag Tiger yos Hare brug Dragon sbrul Snake rta Horse lug Sheep sprel Monkey bya Bird khyi Dog phag Boar byi ba Rat and glang Ox With the introduction of the calendar of the Kalacakratantra in the second half of the 11th century months were also named via lunar mansions within which roughly speaking a full moon took place each month 1st Chu mchu Skt magha 2nd Wo dbo Skt phalguna 3rd Nagpa nag pa Skt caitra 4th Saga sa ga Skt vaisakha 5th Non snron Skt jyeṣṭha 6th Chuto chu stod Skt aṣaḍha 7th Drozhin gro bzhin Skt sravaṇa 8th Trum khrums Skt bhadrapada 9th Takar tha skar Skt asvina 10th Mindrug smin drug Skt karttika 11th Go mgo Skt margasirṣa 12th Gyal rgyal Skt pauṣa In the second half of the 13th century the famous ruler Drogon Chogyal Phagpa introduced the system of counting the month by ordinal numbers the so called Hor Mongolian month 1st Hor month hor zla dang po 2nd Hor month hor zla gnyis pa 3rd Hor month hor zla gsum pa 4th Hor month hor zla bzhi pa 5th Hor month hor zla lnga pa 6th Hor month hor zla drug pa 7th Hor month hor zla bdun pa 8th Hor month hor zla brgyad pa 9th Hor month hor zla dgu pa 10th Hor month hor zla bcu pa 11th Hor month hor zla bcu gcig pa 12th Hor month hor zla bcu gnyis pa All these systems of counting or naming months were used up to modern times Days editThere are three different types of days zhag the khyim zhag the tshes zhag and the nyin zhag The first two of these days are astronomical days The time needed for the mean Sun to pass through one of the twelve traditional signs of the zodiac the twelve khyim is called khyim zla solar month One thirtieth of one solar month khyim zla is one khyim zhag which might be called a zodiacal day because there is no equivalent name in Western terminology The time needed by the Moon to elongate 12 degrees from the Sun and every 12 degrees thereafter is one tithi tshes zhag lunar day The lengths of such lunar days vary considerably due to variations in the movements of the Moon and Sun Thirty lunar days form one lunar or synodic month tshes zla the period from new moon to new moon This is equal to the time needed for the Moon to elongate 360 degrees from the Sun sun to sun The natural day nyin zhag is defined by Tibetans as the period from dawn to dawn Strictly speaking the months appearing in a Tibetan almanac called by us Tibetan calendar months are not the same as lunar or synodic months tshes zla which can begin and end at any time of day In Tibetan there is no special term for a calendar month containing whole days These calendar months are just called zla ba month A Tibetan calendar month normally starts with the week day or natural day gza or nyin zhag in which the first tithi tshes zhag ends A Tibetan calendar month normally ends with the week day or natural day gza or nyin zhag in which the 30th tithi tshes zhag ends In consequence a Tibetan calendar month zla ba comprises 29 or 30 natural days In the sequence of natural days or week days there are no omitted days or days that occur twice But since these days are also named by the term tshes together with a cardinal number it happens that certain numbers or dates the corresponding tithi do not occur at all chad or appear twice lhag The tithi are counted from 1 to 30 and it can happen that a Monday with the lunar day number 1 tshes gcig is followed by a Tuesday with the moon day number 3 tshes gsum On the other hand a Monday with the lunar day number 1 tshes gcig may be followed by a Tuesday with the lunar day number 1 tshes gcig In other words it happens quite often that certain dates do not appear in the Tibetan almanac and certain dates occur twice But there are no natural days or week days that occur twice or which are omitted The days of the week Tibetan གཟའ Wylie gza are named for astronomical objects citation needed Day Tibetan Wylie Phonetic transcription ObjectSunday གཟའ ཉ མ gza nyi ma nyima SunMonday གཟའ ཟ བ gza zla wa dawa MoonTuesday གཟའ མ ག དམར gza mig dmar Mikmar MarsWednesday གཟའ ལ ག པ gza lhak pa Lhakpa MercuryThursday གཟའ ཕ ར བ gza phur bu Purbu JupiterFriday གཟའ པ སངས gza pa sangs Pasang VenusSaturday གཟའ ས ན པ gza spen ba Penba SaturnNyima Sun Dawa Moon and Lhakpa Mercury are common personal names for people born on Sunday Monday or Wednesday respectively History editDuring the time of the Yarlung dynasty years were named after the 12 animals common in the Chinese zodiac The months were named according to the four seasons of a year and the year started in summer The translation of the Kalachakratantra in the second half of the 11th century CE marked the beginning of a complete change for the calendar in Tibet The first chapter of this book contains among others a description of an Indian astronomical calendar and descriptions of the calculations to determine the progression of the five planets and the sun and moon eclipses According to the Buddhist tradition the original teachings of the Kalacakra were taught by Buddha himself Nevertheless it took more than two hundred years until the Kalacakra calendar was officially introduced as the Tibetan calendar by the ruler Drogon Chogyal Phagpa in the second half of the 13th century Although this calendar was changed many times during the subsequent centuries it kept its original character as a luni solar calendar of Indian origin See also editBuddhist calendar HorologyNotes edit Sarat Chandra Das A Tibetan English dictionary with Sanskrit synonyms p viii accessed October 25 2009 Primary sources edit Sanskrit Kalacakratantra Tibetisch mChog gi dang po sangs rgyas las phyung ba rgyud kyi rgyal po dus kyi khor lo Grags pa rgyal mchan Dus tshod bzung ba i rtsis yig sde srid Sangs rgyas rgya mtsho Phug lugs rtsis kyi legs bshad mkhas pa i mgul rgyan vaidur dkar po i do shal dpyod ldan snying nor karma Nges legs bstan jin gTsug lag rtsis rigs tshang ma i lag len khrul med mun sel nyi ma ner mkho i dod pa jo ba i bum bzangSecondary sources editSvante Janson Tibetan Calendar Mathematics accessed December 16 2009 Norbu Thubten amp Harrer Heinrich 1960 Tibet Is My Country London Readers Union Rupert Hart Davis de Koros Alexander Csoma 1834 A Grammar of the Tibetan Language Calcutta Henning Edward 2007 Kalacakra and the Tibetan Calendar Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences NY Columbia University Press p 408 ISBN 978 0 9753734 9 1 Laufer Berthold 1913 The Application of the Tibetan Sexagenary Cycle T oung Pao Vol 14 pp 569 596 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Petri Winfried 1966 Indo tibetische Astronomie Habilitationsschrift zur Erlangung der venia legendi fur das Fach Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften an der Hohen Naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultat der Ludwig Maximilians Universitat zu Munchen Munchen a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pelliot Paul 1913 Le Cycle Sexagenaire dans la Chronologie Tibetaine Paris Journal Asiatique 1 pp 633 667 Schuh Dieter 1973 Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung Wiesbaden Steiner Verlag Schuh Dieter 1974 Grundzuge der Entwicklung der Tibetischen Kalenderrechnung Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft Supplement II XVIII Deutscher Orientalistentag vom 1 bis 5 Oktober 1972 in Lubeck Vortrage pp 554 566 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Tsepon W D Shakabpa 1967 Tibet A Political History New Haven and London Yale University Press Tournadre Nicolas amp Sangda Dorje 2003 Manual of Standard Tibetan Language and Civilization trans Ramble Charles Ithaca Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 189 8 Yamaguchi Zuiho 1973 Chronological Studies in Tibet Chibetto no rekigaku Annual Report of the Zuzuki Academic foundation X pp 77 94 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Yamaguchi Zuiho 1992 The Significance of Intercalary Constants in the Tibetan Calendar and Historical Tables of Intercalary Month Tibetan Studies Proceedings of the 5th Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies Vol 2 pp 873 895 Narita a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tibetan calendars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tibetan calendar amp oldid 1179261205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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