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Solar New Year

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The sun is directly behind the Heel Stone of Stonehenge, at sunrise on the summer solstice
The sun behind the Heel Stone of Stonehenge, at sunrise on the summer solstice

The Solar New Year is the beginning of the solar calendar year. This event is observed at different times of year and with varying practices in cultures across the globe. The most common bases chosen to begin a new calendar year are the winter solstice, summer solstice, the spring equinox and the autumnal equinox. South and South-east Asian solar calendars are more formally linked to astronomical events.

Some of the more widely known solar new year celebrations include:

See also

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Today
Saturday
Gregorian calendarFebruary 1, 2025
Islamic calendar2 Sha'aban, 1446 AH
Hebrew calendar3 Shevat, AM 5785
Coptic calendarTobi 24, 1741 AM
Solar Hijri calendar13 Bahman, 1403 SH
Bengali calendarMagh 18, 1431 BS
Julian calendar19 January 2025

Notes

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  1. ^ The Julian calendar gains a day against the true solar year every 129 years. In other words, the Julian calendar gains 3.1 days every 400 years, while the Gregorian calendar gains 0.1 day over the same time. The Julian calendar will gain another day in 2100 but the Gregorian will not.

References

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  1. ^ "Water, Water, Everywhere". AsiaCarolinas.