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Author Topic: Understanding… The Thai Lunar Calendar  (Read 4015 times)

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Understanding… The Thai Lunar Calendar
« on: October 21, 2011, 12:37:56 AM »
Understanding… The Thai Lunar Calendar

By Richard Barrow | Posted in Thai Culture


If you have ever been to Thailand, then you probably already know that the calendar here is slightly different. Here we use calendars that show the Buddhist Era. This counts the years from the time when the Lord Buddha passed into Nirvana. This predates the Christian Era by 543 years. So, even though this year is 2011 A.D., in Thailand, calendars show it as 2554 B.E. Although Thailand adopted the solar calendar system in the late 1880′s in order to synchronize with the Western calendar, the new year started on 1st April. This continued like this up until 1941 when it was changed to 1st January.

Thai calendars show both Buddhist Era and Christian Era dates. They also have another set of dates which belongs to the old system which calculates the Thai Lunar Months. This is when it gets complicated. Lunar months do not match the solar calendar. So, why is important to still show the lunar calendar although it hasn’t been used officially for several hundred years? Well, all Buddhist holidays and festivals are based on the Thai lunar calendar. It tells people which day of the week is “wan phra” or the holy day and which days we should celebrate holidays such as Khao Phansa and Loy Krathong.

One of the questions we often get at ThailandQA.com Forums is when will Loy Krathong be celebrated this year or the next. This is because many of these holidays are not fixed by the solar calendar. Here are the official dates according to the lunar calendar:

Magha Puja Day – full moon day of the third lunar month
Ashana Puja Day – on the fifteenth day of the waxing moon of the eighth lunar month
Khao Phansa – on the first day of the waning moon of the eighth lunar month
Loy Krathong – on the full moon night of the twelfth lunar month
Phra Samut Chedi Temple Fair – on the fifth day of the waning moon in the eleventh lunar month


A complete cycle of the moon, from the new moon (dark moon) to the full moon is 29 and a half days. To make up for this, months alternate between 29 days and 30 days. Like I said before, August this year is the 9th lunar month. It has 15 days of waxing moon (known in Thai as “keun”) and 14 days of waning moon (known in Thai as “raem”). Next month has an equal 15 days of waxing and 15 days of waning.



Offline Jon Terry

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Re: Understanding… The Thai Lunar Calendar
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2011, 10:20:03 PM »
Does it make Thai women mad by any chance ?  :blink:

Offline F1ART

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Re: Understanding… The Thai Lunar Calendar
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2011, 09:52:09 AM »
Especially on the full moon (Lunacy!)  tired1 hungry1

 

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