The Egyptian calendar consisted of 12 months, each containing 30
days. An extra five days were added after the 12th month to equal a
year of 365 days. There were no leap years. Hence, New Year's Day,
Thoth 1, moved one day backward every four years relative to the
Julian calendar.
How to Use This
Chart
You can calculate a Julian date for any Egyptian month in the 5th
century BC, using the Chart below. In the example given, Phamenoth
25 in the year 451 BC occurred on July 6. How do we find out the
date was July 6? First, column 3 shows Phamenoth 1 in 500 BC
occurred on June 24. Second, columns 5 and 6 tell us to subtract 12
days for 451 BC
June 24 - 12 Days = June 12
Third, since the date is Phamenoth 25, we must add 25 days to
June 12.
June 12 + 25 Days = July 6
|
Month
|
Days in Month
|
1st Day of Month in 500 BC
|
Years Applicable
|
New Year's Day Thoth 1
|
Subtract x No. of Days From Col 3
|
| Thoth |
30 |
Dec 26 |
500 to 498 |
Dec 26 |
0 |
| Phaophi |
30 |
Jan 25 |
497 to 494 |
Dec 25 |
1 |
| Athyr |
30 |
Feb 24 |
493 to 490 |
Dec 24 |
2 |
| Choiak |
30 |
Mar 26 |
489 to 486 |
Dec 23 |
3 |
| Tybi |
30 |
Apr 25 |
485 to 482 |
Dec 22 |
4 |
| Mechir |
30 |
May 25 |
481 to 478 |
Dec 21 |
5 |
| Phamenoth |
30 |
Jun 24 |
477 to 474 |
Dec 20 |
6 |
| Pharmuthi |
30 |
Jul 24 |
473 to 470 |
Dec 19 |
7 |
| Pachons |
30 |
Aug 23 |
469 to 466 |
Dec 18 |
8 |
| Payni |
30 |
Sep 22 |
465 to 462 |
Dec 17 |
9 |
| Epiphi |
30 |
Oct 22 |
461 to 458 |
Dec 16 |
10 |
| Mesore |
30 |
Nov 21 |
457 to 454 |
Dec 15 |
11 |
| Epagomenai |
5 |
Dec 21 |
453 to 450 |
Dec 14 |
12 |
|
|
|
449 to 446 |
Dec 13 |
13 |
|
|
|
445 to 442 |
Dec 12 |
14 |
|
|
|
441 to 438 |
Dec 11 |
15 |
|
|
|
437 to 334 |
Dec 10 |
16 |
|
|
|
443 to 430 |
Dec 9 |
17 |
|
|
|
429 to 426 |
Dec 8 |
18 |
|
|
|
425 to 422 |
Dec 7 |
19 |
|
|
|
421 to 418 |
Dec 6 |
20 |
|
|
|
417 to 414 |
Dec 5 |
21 |
|
|
|
413 to 410 |
Dec 4 |
22 |
|
|
|
409 to 406 |
Dec 3 |
23 |
|
|
|
405 to 402 |
Dec 2 |
24 |
|
|
|
401 to 398 |
Dec 1 |
25 |
|
|
|
397 to 394 |
Nov 30 |
26 |