I used to have strong views about the various calendars in use in the Eastern Christian world, but I've come to realize that of all the things to be exercised about, calendars are not among them. And yet, as I've
mentioned before, Eastern Christians are,
sadly, divided amongst ourselves, and from Western Christians, when it comes to calendars.
What are calendars? Whence came they? What is their history? A recent scholarly book may help us understand these vexed questions: Sacha Stern,
Calendars in Antiquity: Empires, States, and Societies (Oxford UP, 2012), 512pp.
About this book we are told:
Calendars were at the heart of ancient culture and society, and were far more than just technical, time-keeping devices. Calendars in Antiquity
offers a comprehensive study of the calendars of ancient Mesopotamia,
Egypt, Persia, Greece, Rome, Gaul, and all other parts of the
Mediterranean and the Near East, from the origins up to and including
Jewish and Christian calendars in late Antiquity. In this volume, Stern
sheds light on the political context in which ancient calendars were
designed and managed. Set and controlled by political rulers, calendars
served as expressions of political power, as mechanisms of social
control, and sometimes as assertions of political independence, or even
of sub-culture and dissidence.
While ancient calendars varied
widely, they all shared a common history, evolving on the whole from
flexible, lunar calendars to fixed, solar schemes. The Egyptian calendar
played an important role in this process, leading most notably to the
institution of the Julian calendar in Rome, the forerunner of our modern
Gregorian calendar. Stern argues that this common, evolutionary
trajectory was not the result of scientific or technical progress. It
was rather the result of major political and social changes that
transformed the ancient world, with the formation of the great Near
Eastern empires and then the Hellenistic and Roman Empires from the
first millennium BC to late Antiquity. The institution of standard,
fixed calendars served the administrative needs of these great empires
but also contributed to their cultural cohesion.
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