In 930, at the close of the settlement period in Iceland, a week-based calendar was adopted. Observations of the solar cycle soon revealed errors of the calendar, which were cleverly amended. In the 12th century, the week-based misseri calendar was adjusted to the Roman calendar used by the Christian Church. It remained in common use for secular purposes until the 19th century, and detailed guides to it were written. Special occasions related to it are still celebrated
CalendarLiturgySaec. xv med.Sweden*ORIGIN: Added according to liturgical use. OTHER NOTES: Previousl...
In 2014, the present author came across a runic calendar — that is a perpetual calendar in which gol...
This chapter examines the multimodal and multilingual features of 31 calendars in religious and scie...
Abstract. The Icelandic calendar, which for centuries was the civil calendar on Iceland, has a year ...
The main goal of this work is to describe calendars of various countries, and that both calendars, w...
The advancement of humanity has culminated in artificial intelligence and it cannot do without the m...
This paper focuses on medieval time-reckoning as it was conceived and experienced by the Scandinavia...
The dissertation discusses the construction of Europe's new political geography after the Roman empi...
peer reviewedThe order of the months in the calendar at the end of the šakkanakkū period (19th centu...
In this paper, we report on three areas of the Iberian Peninsula that were occupied at least during ...
The solar year in the Calendar of Coligny The Calendar of Coligny provides the earliest written evid...
The Labors of the Months and Signs of the Zodiac form a visual calendar evoking the passage of time,...
The role of the bear as a calendric deity among the Finnic and Finno-Ugric peoples echoes it general...
CalendarLiturgySaec. xiii in. - med.Nordic?*LITURGICAL USE: Primary use: Nordic, diocese of Strängnä...
It was on the first of January 45 BC when calendar reform instigated by Julius Caesar came into forc...
CalendarLiturgySaec. xv med.Sweden*ORIGIN: Added according to liturgical use. OTHER NOTES: Previousl...
In 2014, the present author came across a runic calendar — that is a perpetual calendar in which gol...
This chapter examines the multimodal and multilingual features of 31 calendars in religious and scie...
Abstract. The Icelandic calendar, which for centuries was the civil calendar on Iceland, has a year ...
The main goal of this work is to describe calendars of various countries, and that both calendars, w...
The advancement of humanity has culminated in artificial intelligence and it cannot do without the m...
This paper focuses on medieval time-reckoning as it was conceived and experienced by the Scandinavia...
The dissertation discusses the construction of Europe's new political geography after the Roman empi...
peer reviewedThe order of the months in the calendar at the end of the šakkanakkū period (19th centu...
In this paper, we report on three areas of the Iberian Peninsula that were occupied at least during ...
The solar year in the Calendar of Coligny The Calendar of Coligny provides the earliest written evid...
The Labors of the Months and Signs of the Zodiac form a visual calendar evoking the passage of time,...
The role of the bear as a calendric deity among the Finnic and Finno-Ugric peoples echoes it general...
CalendarLiturgySaec. xiii in. - med.Nordic?*LITURGICAL USE: Primary use: Nordic, diocese of Strängnä...
It was on the first of January 45 BC when calendar reform instigated by Julius Caesar came into forc...
CalendarLiturgySaec. xv med.Sweden*ORIGIN: Added according to liturgical use. OTHER NOTES: Previousl...
In 2014, the present author came across a runic calendar — that is a perpetual calendar in which gol...
This chapter examines the multimodal and multilingual features of 31 calendars in religious and scie...