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The Liberalia Triday Calendaris a proposal for Calendar Reform by Peter Meyer. It combines a solar calendar with a lunar calendar which have tridays (periods of 3 days) in common.

Both the solar and lunar calendars start year 0 on 17 March 1904.

The three days of the triday are named

  1. Sophiesday
  2. Zoesday
  3. Norasday

So 17 March 1904 is a Sophiesday. Its Julian day number is 2,416,557 which is divisible by 3, so the Sophiesdays are those days whose Julian day number is divisible by 3.

The lunar calendar gives a very rough indication of the moon phase, not only because every month is a whole number of tridays (either 30 or 27 days), but also because the short 27-day months are not as evenly spaced as possible. However spacing the short months as evenly as possible would give rise to either a more complicated calendar or one in which the lunar years have a variable number of months.

Dates[]

Solar date
±M*CYYS-Q-T-D
Lunar date
±C*C-YYYL-Q-T-D

A cycle consists of 384 lunar years, each 354 or 357 days long.

Quarters
Number Name Tridays Days
1 Kamaliel 30 90
2 Gabriel 31  93
3 Samlo 30  90
4 Abrasax 30 (31)  90 (93)
Sum 121 (122) 363 (366)

Abrasax only has 30 tridays if the solar year number plus one is divisible by 4 or by 198.

Months
Number Name Tridays Days
01 Armedon 10 30
02 Nousanios 10 30
03 Harmozel 10 30
04 Phaionios 10 30
05 Ainios 10 30
06 Oraiel 9 27
07 Mellephaneus 10 30
08 Loios 10 30
09 Davithe 10 30
10 Mousanios 10 30
11 Amethes 10 30
12 Eleleth 9 (10) 27 (30)
Sum 118 (119) 354 (357)

Eleleth has 9 tridays unless the lunar year number minus 2 is divisible by 8 and is not 2.

External link[]

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