The calendar had a significant impact on religious observance. It fixed the pantheon of major divinities, and also ensured that their names were uttered often, since at every Zoroastrian act of worship the yazatas of both day and month were invoked.
The calendar had a significant impact on religious observance. It fixed the pantheon of major divinities, and also ensured that their names were uttered often, since at every Zoroastrian act of worship the yazatas of both day and month were invoked.
New Year Is The First Day of Spring
And not just the first day of spring. The first second. The exact vernal equinox. Doesn’t that just make sense? The weather is warming up The Months correspond with The Seasons
No season starts in the middle of the month. What kind of anarchy is that? The first day of four months of the year marks the beginning of each season The Months Also correspond with Zodiac Signs
Leos, for instance, are born between July 23 to August 22, which is simply the month of Mordâd on the Iranian calendar. Easy peasy. In the US The Number of Days Each Month Are A Cinch to Remember
None of this counting on your knuckles mess or singing “30 days has September, April, June, and November…” The 1st of Mehr Is Back to School…
…for every school in any city. In the US, it was different for every school even in the same city. Back in my day The 1st of Mehr Is Also Time to Fall Back
No more Googling “When do we fall back?” It’s the 1st of Mehr, along with back to school. And how nice that the night before you start school The 2nd of Farvardin Is Time to Spring Forward
If the new year happens at the exact vernal equinox, then it’s time to spring forward at midnight, technically the 2nd of Farvardin There Are Seasonal Celebrations
Nowruz in the spring, Tirgan in the summer, Mehregan in the autumn, and Yalda in the winter. Nowruz and Yalda are still huge celebrations
Persian Gulf national day
Persian Gulf National Day is an official holiday in Iran observed on the 10th day of Ordibehesht, the second month in the Iranian calendar.
This usually coincides with 29 or 30 April of the Gregorian calendar.
The purpose of this holiday is to celebrate the history, name, and significance of the Persian Gulf.
The holiday commemorates the day that combined forces of the Safavid Empire and the British East India Company captured Ormuz expelled the Portuguese from the Strait of Hormuz.