Kemetic PDF
Kemetic PDF
Kemetic PDF
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Kemetic Calendar
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archetypes arranged in various combinations and sequences over thousands of years. They recorded the essence of the system in the Pyramid Texts at the dawn of Egyptian history. Then they adapted it in various ways to create the Senet Oracle Game, the Litany of Ra, the Book of the Dead, the units of the cubit, and the various units of time. Using Tarot Cards to Mark Units of Time For the Egyptian Tarot deck, I selected 22 Archetypal Trump Neters, 4 Elements [Followers of Horus], 4 Senses [Avatars of Baba], 8 Chakra Energies, and 40 Amulet Corecepts [Core Concepts]. In this Egyptian calendar, we divide the year into three seasons of four months each. People who live in temperate climates can divide the year into four seasons of three months each. We then use the Egyptian Senet Oracle Tarot cards to mark the units of time. The Solar Calendar Each Egyptian Solar Month has exactly 30 days and contains three ten-day Decan Weeks. At the end of the Solar Year, we add Five Extra Days to complete a Solar Year of 365 days. Every four years we add a sixth Henty [Leap] Day at the end of the Five Extra Days to keep the Solar Calendar aligned with the seasons of the true 365.25 day year. The Egyptian Tarot has four suits just like ordinary Tarot or playing cards. Egyptian Firesticks Towns Feathers Lotuses Tarot Wands Coins Swords Cups Poker Clubs Diamonds Spades Hearts Glyph Symbol
C : < T
The 10 pip [number] cards record the ten days of the Decan Solar Week. A complete cycle of pip cards mapped to Decan [10-day] Weeks creates a four-month Egyptian season. The four Temperate Seasons of three months each also cycle through a Year. Once familiar with the system, you know exactly what day of the year it is from the Solar Month number and the pip suit and number no matter what year it is. In ancient times the Egyptian New Year began around the Caniculi hot dog days of summer. They were so-called because dogs lie around panting to keep cool in the
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hot weather. Two important events occurred at this season in ancient Egypt. First, the Nile began to rise as waters from the monsoon rains of Ethiopia moved down the river into Egypt. This marked the beginning of the year for Egyptians because it relieved the summer drought and then watered and fertilized the fields with fresh topsoil for planting once the Nile flood receded. Second, the very bright star Sirius had its heliacal rising around this time. During the Roman Empire many people in Europe called Sirius the Dog Star and imagined the constellation of a dog in the cluster of stars that included Sirius. However, the Egyptians associated this star with Isis, the wife of Osiris. Isis was the Neter of the fertile Nile delta region in the north of Egypt. Osiris was the Neter of Agriculture. Each year the summer drought temporarily killed him. His wife would grieve for him, and her tears (the rain in Ethiopia that produced the flood) would summon her beautiful sister Nephthys from the south to join her. Neter Nephthys was the power of the Nile flood that came northward from the south. Osiris loved both sisters. When the Nile flood receded, Osiris would come back to life and his crops would spring up again in the delta. The Egyptians celebrated New Year in the late summer to honor this renewal of life provided by the Nile flood. During most of classical Egypts history, the Egyptian Solar Year of 360 days would tend to slip about 6 hours per year with respect to the seasons. They would insert a 30-day intercalary Henty Solar Month every 120 years to bring it back into alignment. Later they began to insert a Leap Day as we do every four years to keep the Solar Calendar aligned with the seasons. Our modern Egyptian Solar Calendar adds a Henty Day every four years instead of a Henty Month every 120 years. Thus, the solar component of the calendar stays aligned with the year. The Summer Solstice falls on the Gregorian date June 21 and marks the beginning of the last month of the Egyptian Solar Year. In this Kemetic Calendar Solar Month 12 runs 30 days through the ten Firesticks (clubs/wands), ten Towns (diamonds/coins), and ten Feathers (spades/swords) followed by a short week of 5 Extra Epagomenal Days. We add a Henty Extra Day to the 5 usual Extra Days during each Gregorian Western Leap Year, but put it at Gregorian February 29, because that custom is now worldwide. This means there are 6 Extra Days in such years and this is necessary because the Western Calendar inserts its Intercalary Leap Day on February 29 of a Western Calendar Leap Year (a year divisible by 4). If you wish you may record each succeeding Henty Leap Day with one of the 30 gods from the Senet Solar Oracle Board sequence that begins with Ra (not the Lunar Game
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Board sequence that begins with Thoth). We will arbitrarily begin a Henty solar year cycle in 2012 with Ra. Every period of 120 years therefore will complete a Henty Month cycle and return to the Ra Henty Day. This procedure preserves the Egyptian tradition of the Henty Month while also keeping the Solar Calendar synchronized with the actual seasons and the Standard Western (Gregorian) Calendar. After Solar Month 12 and the Extra Days pass, the New Solar Year begins with month 1, Neter Khem, the Fool. (The Egyptians also called him Kenmut and other names.) The first Decan Week of month Khem (or Kenmut) has the Lotus Suit (hearts/cups) sequence to commemorate the onset of the Nile Flood. Neters of the Solar Months The Egyptians simply numbered their solar months. A common method of writing dates was to give the name of the season and the number of the month (1, 2, 3, or 4) within that season. (For example, solar month 12 was called Shemu 4.) For our calendar we assign a major Egyptian Neter to each solar month as follows: Month 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Neter Khem (Kenmut, Baba) Khnemu (Shay) Ammit (Set) Anubis Tut Benu Shu Meskhent Serqet Horus Geb Tem Tarot Trump Fool Wheel of Fortune Devil Death Lover (Thoth as the divine image) Hermit Emperor Judgment Moon Chariot World Tower
The Solar Festivals: The Solar Calendar is used mostly for agricultural purposes and celebrating civil holidays. The solstices and equinoxes mark the special spiritual days on the Solar Calendar. The Epagomenal Extra Days are excellent summer vacation days. Summer Solstice Extra Days (including Henty Leap Days)
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Fall Equinox Winter Solstice Spring Equinox The northern and southern hemispheres have mutually reversed sequences for the celebrations of the Solar Solstices and Equinoxes, but the Extra Days and Solar New Year fall on the same days in both hemispheres. The Lunar Calendar The Lunar Year is Cyclical and independent of the Solar Year.
months is only about 254 days long and is therefore more than 11 days shorter than the Solar Cycle of 365.25 days. In order to make the Lunar Cycle stay roughly in synchrony with the Solar Cycle, we insert intercalary lunar days and months as needed before the Lunar New Year begins. The Lunar Year begins with the Lunar Month of Thoth. The traditional Egyptian Lunar New Year started at the first New Moon after the heliacal rising of Sirius. However, from a global perspective, Sirius rises at different times in different locations and is always visible in the southern hemisphere, so this standard is not usable for a Modern Global Egyptian Calendar. The Egyptians used the star Sirius because its heliacal rising was about at the time the Nile began to rise, and because the precession of the earth and the motions of Sirius tended to keep its rising pretty much at the same time during the year. The heliacal rising of Sirius is roughly in early August (depending on where you live) and in traditional Egypt coincided with the start of the Nile flood. In Egypt, the Nile flood no longer inundates the land the way it used to due to the Aswan Dam. For these various reasons we no longer base the New Year on the rising of Sirius. We start the Global Egyptian Lunar New Year at the first New Moon after the last Solar Extra Day (July 25). We treat any intervening days from the last Extra Day to the first New Moon as Lunar Thoth Days. Thus, any year may have extra Thoth Days ranging from one or two days up to a lunar month. This is due to the approximately 11 additional days that a Solar Year of twelve months has beyond a Lunar Year of twelve months. Every three years an intercalary month of Thoth must be inserted and there are two months of Thoth one that starts during the 12th solar month, and one that starts with the first New Moon after the end of the Extra Days. With this system of inserting intercalary days, the Solar and Lunar Calendars stay in
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approximate synchrony. The Thoth Days become part of the New Year Celebration, which means that in some years, such as 2009, the Thoth Days form a rather long interval. The ancient Egyptians celebrated most of their holidays according to the Lunar Calendar. In our modern version of the Egyptian calendar, each Lunar Month has a festal theme in addition to regular New Moon, Half Moon, and Full Moon feasts. As in ancient Egypt, local regions may celebrate their own holidays that are special to their cultural traditions and environments. For example, Christmas, Hannukah, or Chinese New Year all can find their places in this modern Kemetic Calendar. Lunar Months and Major Festal Themes Tarot Trump Major Festivals High Priest Tekhy: Thoth Days, Lunar NY, Wag, Tekhy Transcendental Empress Magician Temperance Priestess Star Moon Justice Hanged Man Strength Tower Paopi: 11-day Apet Festival, High Flood Athor: Dedications to Hathor Khoiak: 12-day Osirian Rites, Nehebkau Tobi: Flood Recedes, Sowing Begins, Heka Mekhir: Lifting the Sky Phamenoth: Lantern Festival, Leader Day Pharmouthi: Harvest, Onions for Bast Pakhon: Count Harvest, Harvest Moon, Min Paoni: Valley Festival, Min-Mut Epip: Beautiful Reunion (14 days) Mesore: Birth of Ra
Mo. Neter 1. Thoth 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Min-Mut Hathor Osiris Nephthys Isis Nut Renenutet Maat Khenty Khat Sekhmet Temu
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Regular Monthly Feast Days New Moon Feast (every lunar month) Sixth of the Month Waxing Half Moon Full Moon (every lunar month) Waning Half Moon
Unless a festival falls on or begins at the New or Full Moon, or links to a special day of the month, there can be local flexibility as to the starting date, the ending date, and the length of a major festival.
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The Lunar Work Week Most people in our era follow a 7-day workweek. To approximate this in our Kemetic Calendar we divide the Lunar Month into four 7-day weeks. Short Lunar Months have 29 days, and Long Lunar Months have 30 days. Thus, at the end of each Lunar Month of 28 days [4 weeks of 7 days each], there is a remainder of either one or two days. The seven days of the Lunar Week cycle through seven Chakra Energy cards. Day 29 is for the eighth chakra (Light Body). For Day 30 we use the Min-Mut card or the Thoth card if the Min-Mut card is in use. Lunar days 29 and 30 become long weekends at the end of the month for rest and entertainment. Each month therefore always begins on a Sunday (Root [Body] Chakra), and the days of the Lunar Month always fall on fixed days of the Lunar Week. The seventh and first chakra days (both belonging to element earth) can represent our Saturday and Sunday weekends. Summary To summarize, each day has a card that indicates the Solar Month Neter, the Solar Day Amulet, the Lunar Month Neter, the Lunar Day Neter, and the Lunar Workweek Day Chakra Energy. The Monthly Lunar Neter Card displays the monthly theme. The Daily Lunar Neter Cards display the Lunar Feast Day Themes. (I follow the simple Senet Lunar Game Board sequence for the Daily Lunar Neter Cards, not the more complex traditional sequence that scholars reconstruct.) During festival times, we may also display certain Neter or Amulet cards to celebrate the value of the festival. There is also a mantra and yantra for each days meditations. Year Numbers The Year Number depends on defining an arbitrary chronological starting point. Different cultures date their calendars from different starting points. There is no objective standard, so the ancient Egyptians reckoned from the start of a pharaohs reign. This defined a Regnal Year Period. One approach is to divide the Precession Cycle into twelve equal portions and consider the Christian Era to mark the Age of Pisces. A complete Precession Cycle takes 25,765 years. That means a Zodiacal Precession Year is approximately 2147 Earth Years long. Dynastic Egypt spanned the Ages of Taurus and Aries, or roughly 4294 years. If we think of this year as Pisces 2008, then perhaps we can begin the Age of Aquarius [Aquarius 0001] in the Earth Year following Pisces 2147. follows: The symbols for the Zodiacal Year Periods are as
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Zodiacal Year Periods (Ages or Eras) Capricorn Chimera, Set Animal Sagittarius Scorpio Libra Virgo Leo Cancer Gemini Taurus Aries Pisces Aquarius Bow and Arrow Eagle, Hawk, or Scorpion Scales Woman Lion Scarab, Crab, or Turtle Twins, Lovers, Two Pillars of Baba Bull Ram Fish Man (pouring water) Coptic Thout Lunar Trump Jehuty Solar Trump Fool Festival Wag Apet Osirian
Mo. Cal Egyptian Lunar Aakhet 1. Aug Tekh Thoth 2. 3. 4. Sep Menkhet Oct Het Heru Nov Nehebkau Shefbedet Rekeh Wer Rekeh Nejes Renenutet
Panipet Paopi Hathor Athor Kaherka Khoiak Ta Aabet Tobi P-Mekhir Mekhir A-hotep Phamenoth P-Ren. Pharmouthi P-khons Paeninet Ipip MesutRa Pakhon Paoni Epip Mesori
Min-Mut Khnemu Hathor Ammit Asar Anubis NebetHet Lovers Aset Benu Newet Shewe Renenet Meskhent Maat Kh-khat Sekhmet Ra Sereqet Heru Geb Temu
Shemu 9. Apr Khensu 10. May Khenty Khety 11. Jun Apet-hemet 12. Jul WepetRenpet
Extra Days 13. Asar, Heru, Set, Aset, Nebet Het, [Henty Day] 14. Thoth Days Jehuty NOTE: Calculate the festivals of the first Lunar Month by counting from the start of the Thoth Days. This keeps them in line with the Solar Year. Then have a special Lunar New Year celebration of Thoth and the Ennead when the New Moon occurs.
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Major Lunar Festivals of the Year Tekh Count Tekh Festival dates from start of the Thoth Days on 01 Lotus. This keeps the festivals vaguely in line with the Solar Year. The first New Moon during the Thoth Days after the Extra Days is a special day for Thoth and the Ennead and begins the official day count for the first Lunar Month. The Thoth Days in Solar Month 12 before the First New Moon of the New Year belong to Khem, the Fool. Mo Day Festival Thoth 1 01 Lunar New Year 15 Welcome Flood 17 18 19 20 22 Eve of Wag Wag (03d) Wag (honey&figs) Tekh (Drunk) Osiris Procession God(s) Ra Horakhty, Jehuty Hapy, Amen Jehuty, Khem, salute Asar Jehuty, Khem, Jehuty, Khem Jehuty, Khem Send off Asar Jehuty Taat (Weaving Maid Festival) Amen (Min-Mut) (option: 27-day Apet) Khenemu, Aneqet Montu (Heru the Warrior) Satet, Aneqet, Khenemu (culmination of long Apet 27th day) (opt. party til 24th)
Menkhet (Min-Mut) 2 01 Pawet 07 15 18 27 28 Menkhet Apet (High Flood) (11days) Thanksgiving (flood) Montu (2 days) Abu Source Ceremony
Het Heru (Hathor) 3 12 Min-Mut Feast day 30 Anuqet day, end of flood
Nehebkau (Osiris) 4 01 Hathor Day (celebrate end of Hathor month, beginning of Yoga Month) 12 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Benu Bird Day (entering a period of meditations) Kaherka begins (12d) Osirian Rites to inaugurate Agricultural Season Defeat of Enemies at Nedat Night of Haker Seker Procession Wep Wawet Procession Osiris Procession to Peqer Night Vigil over Dead Osiris Put Seker in their Midst Plow the Earth
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26 27 28 29 30
Black land to Horus, Red land to Set Isis seeks to revive Osiris Horus heir to throne, Isis grieves Isis rejoices, Thoth, Baba revive Osiris; Consummation Return to Abydos and Raise the Jed Pillar to celebrate new crops coming.
Shefbedet (Sowing) Ta Aabet (Nephthys) 5 01 Nehebkau Celebrate Success of Tantra Yoga, Yoke Bulls to plow, Bast 18 Great Heka Feast (04d) 20 Heka 3 Bast goes forth from Bubastis feast with Wajet 21 Heka 4 Bast guards the two lands 25 27 29 30 Honor Dewamutef, lord of Eastern Lands and farming Hew and Saa day Raise the Willow, Sailing of Bast; guiding of Egypt Sailing of Shesmet, Hathor Sekhmet feast
Rekeh Wer (Isis) 6 01 Anubis sails; Peteh uplifts R@ with 2 hands (Avatar Day) 02 Ennead receives R@; Great Festival 08 Great Heat (Birth of Horus, son of Isis); Hathor day 09 Lifting the Sky; Great Burning (Peteh) 16 Filling the Sacred Eye, the Ashed Sacred Tree Rekeh Nejes (Nut) 7 01 Feast honoring Peteh (Hew) Baba 04 05 07 15 21 29 Lantern Festival preparations, goes to full moon Lantern Festival inauguration feast (10 days 3 days for Amen and the Aakhu Full Moon Climax Lantern Festival (Yuan Xiao) Moon and Stars Amenhetep Day, celebrate great national leaders 4-day Amenhetep celebration for civil servants, and infrastructure workers Net
Renenutet 8 05 Eye of Ra, Eye of Horus 4-18) days, Chew Onions for Bast, Birth of Baba 09 Count parts of Eye, one per day, Khepera Procession 15 25 27 29 Full Moon Eye becomes Whole, Feast of Wejat and Aakhu Harvest Offering to Renenutet Granary Offering to Renenutet 4-day Min festival
Khenesu (Thoth and Maat) 9 01 Feast of Renenutet and Nepry (Min 2) 03 (Min 4)
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11 13 14 15 19 20 23
Birthday of Shewe and Tefenut Ras crew Ra, Heka, Khonsu; Counting of Thoth and Maat Khonsu Festival Thoth counts, hears Maat, Khonsu procession Maat Judges (end of counting harvest) Anpu swathes (packing of harvest for storage)
Khenety Khaty 10 01 Valley Festival Begins; Min-Mut (4 days); Flowers for the kings 07 Anger in Eye 10 12 17 26 27 28 29 30 Hot days start (Fool, Thoth, Shewe meet Tefnut/Sekhmet/Hathor) Anger in the Eye, Sekhmet heads south Hathors Return (Thoth and Shewe meet Sekhmet) Beautiful Reunion begins Hathor sets out to Edfu to meet Horus Anukis temple celebration Horus joins at Nekhen Big Feast: Wejat, Baba, Thoth, Shewe, Horus; bring back Eye Min-Mut Ennead Festival
Apet-hemet (Tefnut/Sekhmet) 11 01 Edfu Opening Mouth rites 14 Pray to Hapy and Amen for rain and flood 15 16 17 Sensen (2 Bulls) Khenem, Midsummer Full Moon Solar Lunar Celebration Wajet Rites
Wepet Renpet (Mesut Ra) 12 01 2 days Sekhmet-Hathor for the solar year 02 Epiphany 24 Peteh day 30 Lunar New Years Eve
Solar Year Festivals Jun 21 S. Solstice Wepet Renpet, Wajet Rite, Ra and Crew, Raet Jul 21-25 Extra Days complete 365 day solar year Jul 26 (Henty Leap Day in years before Western Calendar Leap Years) Aug 02 (Approx.) Rising of Sirius (optional, date depends on location) Sep 21 Autumnal Equinox Dec 21 Mar 20 W. Solstice Set quells Apep, Victory in Land, Feast Aset and Ra crew Spring Equinox (Renew Year, begin harvest)
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Lunar Monthly Day Festivals 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Jehuty and the Pawet, New Moon, opening the month, Teacher Day Asar (Abet; Student Day) Net/Newet (Mesper 1 Future Day) Maa (Vision Day) Maat (Balance Day) Sixth day feast (Sejem) (Ses: Day of Listening and sensing) Denat (Judgment of the 30 Day of Deciding) Tep (Hew, Day to honor initiator and 8 Primordials; Day of Beginning) Aset Isis day Day of Partnership Wajet day (Baby Horus in papyrus swamp; day of birth and growth) Mut/Hathor day (Mother Day of Love and Nurture) Saa (Day of Wisdom and Study) Tefnut (Day of Mastering Skills) Ram day (Aten Ra Higher Self Independence Day) Met Dewa (Khenem, Full Moon Fortune [Career] Day) Mesper 2 (Serqet, Moon Begins Waning Cycle; Challenge Day) Ammit (Mehen) Labyrinth Day (Lessons still to Learn and Explore) Mery (Lovers Day) Khem (Fools Day) Geb (Wep, Earth Day, Bread Day) Nephthys Day (Day for Spiritualization) Qebhusenuf (Breath Day) Mesta (Denat: Fire Day) Hapy (Water Day) Dewamutef (Earth Day) Benu (Integrity Day) Anepu (Pure Awareness Day) Shiva (Self-cultivation Day) Tem (Big Bang Climax Day) Horus (Kar Day, Procession of Horus in his Chariot or Car)
There is uncertainty about days six and eight on the Lunar Game Board Calendar. The number six is ses (or sesen or sens) and may belong to Hew, Lord of the sense of Smell and Taste. In that case Sejem, Lord of Hearing, would occupy day 8 in square number 8.
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Cycle of Solar Days in a Solar Week Firesticks 1-10 Towns 1-10 Feathers 1-10 Lotuses 1-10 Solar Weeks in a Solar Month Solar Months 1, 5, and 9 begin with Lotuses. Solar Months 2, 6, and 10 begin with Feathers. Solar Months 3, 7, and 11 begin with Towns. Solar Months 4, 8, and 12 begin with Firesticks. Days of the Lunar Week Days 1, 8, 15, and 22 belong to the Physical Body. Element Earth Fire Water Fire Water Wind Earth Wind Transcend
Sunday
Days 2, 9, 16, and 23 belong to the Electrical Body. Monday Days 3, 10, 17, and 24 belong to the Chemical Body. Tuesday Days 4, 11, 18, and 25 belong to the Heart Body. Wednesday Days 5, 12, 19, and 26 belong to the Name Body. Days 6, 13, 20, and 27 belong to the Prana Body. Days 7, 14, 21, and 28 belong to the Shadow Body. Day 29 belongs to the Light Body. Day 30 belongs to the Min-Mut Card Thursday Friday Saturday Holiday
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L1
L2
L3
L4
L5
L6
L7
L8
L9
L10
Wands
W1
W2
W3
W4
W5 W6 Towns
W7
W8
W9
W10
T1
T2
T3
T4
T5 T6 Plumes
T7
T8
T9
T10
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
P7
P8
P9
P10
Wands are also called Firesticks. Plumes are ostrich feathers. Lotuses are the same as Cups in the European Tarot. Wands are the same as Wands in the European Tarot. Towns are the same as Coins in the European Tarot. Plumes are the same as Swords in the European Tarot.
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Egypt had three seasons of 4 months each. Each month had 3 Decans. Each Decan had 10 days. The total number of days was 36 Decans or 360 days plus the five (or 6) Epagomenal Days. This calendar is designed to reflect that tradition, but can also divide easily into 4 seasons of 3 months each. Here are the Solar Months. Trumps with them. They are simply numbered here, but I have correlated
8. W, T, P. Shemu (Drought Season Summer) 9. L, W, T. 10. P, L, W. 11. T, P, L. 12. W, T, P. (Plus 5 or 6 Epagomenal Days) Epagomenal Days
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6 Henty
Solar Calendar leap days follow the sequence of the Senet Oracle Board. The Egyptian year corresponding to Gregorian 2011-2012 starts with the Leap Day of
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Henty Ra. The first day in the Leap Day cycle is Ra (the Sun) and falls on July 25, 2012. Every four years thereafter on July 25 there is a Leap Day. Exceptions follow the Gregorian rules. The sequence of Henty Days follows the sequence of Houses on the Senet Oracle Board as shown below. 1. Ra 2. Tem 3. Shewe (Shu) 4. 5. 6. 7. Tefnut Geb Newet (Nut) Heru (Horus)
8. Het Heru (Hathor) 9. Aset (Isis) 10. Nebet Het (Nephthys) 11. Hew (Hu) 12. Khenty-khat 13. Saa 14. Qebhusenuf 15. Hepy 16. Dewamutef 17. Amset 18. Maa 19. Asar (Osiris) 20. Sejem 21. Jehuty (Thoth) 22. Maat 23. Anpu 24. Qeftenu (Baba) 25. Khnemu 26. Benu 27. Ammit (Sets minion) 28. Serqet 29. Meskhent 30. Henty (Mery)
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The Perpetual Solar Calendar Converted to Gregorian Dates The following chart holds for all years.
Gregorian February 29 serves as Lovers Leap Day (Henty Day), the 6th Epagomenal Day.
Month 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Epa.
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2. 3. 4.
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5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Nephthys represents the nurturing of the crops. Isis represents the crops maturing. Nut represents the grain fruiting in the crops. Renenutet represents the harvest gathered in. Khensu represents transporting the grain to the silos and tallying it. Khenty-khat represents the sun as a child.
11. Sekhmet (Ras Queen and his Power) represents the Eye of Ra waxing strong in the summer. 12. Mesut Ra represents Horus as the patriarch gathering his children for the New Year celebration. He will then retreat and let them play their roles. The Egyptian New Year starts at the first New Moon after the Epagomenal Days. In this version of the calendar all days between the end of the Epagomenal Days and the New Moon are considered Thoth Days on the Lunar Calendar. Sometimes there are only a few Thoth Days, but every 3 years they constitute an intercalary month. In 2009 the Chinese add an intercalary 5th month, so their 7th Lunar Month is actually the 8th New Moon of 2009. The month of Thoth begins on July 22, which is on the second Epagomenal Day and therefore falls before the Solar New Year. Thus, we must wait until the next New Moon on August 20 to begin the Egyptian Lunar New Year, and we end up with two Thoth months in 2009.
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The above chart is the traditional Egyptian Senet Game Board Layout. This Game Board was also a Lunar-Solar Calendar as well as a sacred temple containing all the major archetypal principles of life. The Trump Days of the Lunar Month begin with Thoth at the top and proceed to the right across the top row. Then they continue from right to left on the middle row, and finish the month from left to right on the bottom row. This was the usual path of play during the Game of Senet. The final two squares on the bottom row represented the 29th and 30th days of the month. Below are charts for the Lunar months of the years 2010-2012.
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Ren
Ba
Khaybet
Aakh
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Min-Mut
Day 30
The days of the Week perpetually follow the Lunar Calendar. They provide a seven-day week that always matches the phases of the moon. There is one week for each quarter of the moon. At the end of the month the dark moon phase has 1 or two extra days that provide a long weekend for rest or for celebrating an extended New Moon festival. The usual five-day work-week with a two-day weekend can be followed for all of the month except for the New Moon period. The two adjacent Earth days form the usual two-day weekend. The Solar Calendar has 10-day Decans instead of 7-day Weeks. Each Solar Month has exactly 30 Days that form 3 Decans. The elements alternate in such a way that four months form a complete round. This defines an Egyptian traditional season. Of course, we can divide the year into four seasons of three months each just as easily. The Solar Months follow the traditional Solstices and Equinoxes defined astronomically, unlike the currently fashionable Gregorian calendar. At the end of the Solar Year is a set of five Epagomenal Days that keeps the Solar Year aligned with the astronomical year. For convenience we insert the Henty Lovers Leap Day to coincide with February 29 in the Gregorian calendar because this has been so widely adopted. The first day of the first month of the solar year always begins on Gregorian July 26 and is the Ace of Lotuses (L Mu = Pure Awareness, Unconditional Love). Gregorian New Years Day is always the 10 of Plumes (2 Pet = Heaven).