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  2. History of calendars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_calendars

    [clarification needed] [7] The site is found near the world's oldest known site of permanent aquaculture. A mesolithic arrangement of twelve pits and an arc found in Warren Field, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, dated to roughly 8,000 BC, has been described as a lunar calendar and was dubbed the "world's oldest known calendar" in 2013. [8]

  3. Warren Field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Field

    Warren Field is the location of a mesolithic calendar monument built about 8,000 BCE. [1] It includes 12 pits believed to correlate with phases of the Moon and used as a lunisolar calendar. [2] It is considered to be the oldest lunisolar calendar yet found. [3] [4] [5] It is near Crathes Castle, in the Aberdeenshire region of Scotland, in the ...

  4. List of calendars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_calendars

    This is a list of calendars.Included are historical calendars as well as proposed ones. Historical calendars are often grouped into larger categories by cultural sphere or historical period; thus O'Neil (1976) distinguishes the groupings Egyptian calendars (Ancient Egypt), Babylonian calendars (Ancient Mesopotamia), Indian calendars (Hindu and Buddhist traditions of the Indian subcontinent ...

  5. Scientists Found a 12,000-Year-Old Monument—Turns Out It May ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/scientists-found-12-000...

    The calendar’s preoccupation with day, night, and seasonal changes may have sparked anew with a world-changing comet strike, one that experts believed occurred in roughly 10,850 B.C. and helped ...

  6. Crathes Castle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crathes_Castle

    The find was analysed in 2013 and is considered to be the world's oldest known lunar calendar dating from 8000 BC to about 4000 BC. [11] This dating would make the structure up to five thousand years older [ 11 ] than previously recorded time-measuring monuments in Mesopotamia .

  7. History of timekeeping devices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_timekeeping_devices

    As megalithic civilizations left no recorded history, little is known of their timekeeping methods. [3] The Warren Field calendar monument is currently considered to be the oldest lunisolar calendar yet found. Mesoamericans modified their usual vigesimal (base-20) counting system when dealing with calendars to produce a 360-day year. [4]

  8. Runic calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runic_calendar

    Runic calendars were written on parchment or carved onto staves of wood, bone, or horn. The oldest one known, and the only one from the Middle Ages, is a staff from Nyköping, Sweden, believed to date from the 13th century. Most of the several thousand which survive are wooden calendars dating from the 16th and the 17th centuries.

  9. Ianuarius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ianuarius

    On the calendar of military religious observances known as the Feriale Duranum, sacrifices pertaining to Imperial cult outnumber the older festivals. After the mid-1st century AD, a number of dates are added to calendars for spectacles and games held in honor of various deities in the venue called a " circus ".