Iranian Now-Ruz (New Year), the
Nissanu and the 365 Day Year
Originally at: http://www.ghandchi.com/iranscope/Anthology/KavehFarrokh/farrokh8.htm
Iranian Now-Ruz (New Year), the Nissanu and the 365 Day Year
By Dr. Kaveh Farrokh
manuvera@aol.com
03/17/2005 3:40 PM
To investigate the origins of the Iranian Nowruz (literally New day,
New Year), one is compelled to go back a great deal in time, well beyond
3000 years in fact. The date of today’s Nowruz may have its origins
in the Babylonian Lunar Year, known as the Nisannu.
The Nissanu – The Babylonian Year
Although not generally acknowledged, it was the Babylonians who, since
the beginning of recorded civilization, have devised techniques for
measuring the passage of time, namely day, night and year. The day was
viewed as lying between the onset of two consecutive evenings. The Babylonian
calendar month was defined as that time when the full moon appeared.
There were tow problems with this of course. First, is the problem that
the moon’s visibility could be limited by factors such as cloud
thickness or density. The second problem is that the Babylonian lunar
system is out of synchrony with the solar year and the regular seasons.
Today, it is generally acknowledged that the earth takes approximately
365 ¼ days to revolve around the sun. Therefore, the solar system
is eleven days longer than the twelve full moons of the Babylonian system.
As a result, the Babylonian system was asynchronous with the earth’s
natural seasons. To rectify this problem, the Babylonians responded
by adding an extra month from time to time, to their twelve full moon
(lunar) months.
By the time of Cyrus the Great’s relatively peaceful conquest
of Babylon (539 B.C.), the Baylonians had developed an impressive knowledge
of time. They had already discovered the equation of 19 years as being
equal to 235 months. From the 5th century B.C., the Babylonians had
established a cycle of seven intercalculations every 19 years. Note
that as before, the beginning of every new month came with the onset
(roughly) of every new moon. This resulted in the Babylonian New Year
on Nissanu 1st, falling onto early Spring. It would appear that this
specific Babylonian date entered the Aryan Nowruz festival.
The Nisaannu & The Iranian Nowruz Festival of March 21st
Cyrus the Great’s conquest of Babylon, bought the concept of
Spring as the onset of the new year into wider Iranian culture around
2500 years ago. The Achaemenid government adopted the Babylonian New
Year beginning at Nisannu 1st, approximately the time of the vernal
equinox, or March 21st. But it is here where the similarity with the
Babylonians ends. The rituals and mythology of the festival itself have
been since the inception of the Aryans, and remain to this day, an Iranian
phenomenon.
Nowruz was not only a seasonal and climactic renewal, but an occaision
to renew the pledges of friendship, loyalty, camaraderie, and peace
between peoples of all races in the ancient Persian Empire, both Iranian
and non-Iranian. The pledges were symbolically expressed by bringing
gifts to the King, a gesture immortalized on the silent walls of Persopolis,
destroyed by Alexander the Great in 333 BC. The Achaemenids made clear
that theirs was a multiracial and multilingual empire. Persia from its
inception was founded on the Prophet Zoroaster’s message of the
universal brotherhood of humanity. The western world has generally been
able to praise the Greeks for their founding of democracy; few in the
west realize that it was in Persia where the universal declaration of
human rights, were proclaimed. A facsimile of Cyrus’s declaration
is embedded in the UN building in New York City to this day.
The Iranian Nowruz Festival of March 21st and the 365 day Year
Despite their advanced understanding of time, the Babylonians were
surpassed in their understanding of days and years by the Aryan Magi
priests of the Medes and the Persians. The Iranian Magi calculated the
day as being situated between two consecutive sunrises. It is also worth
noting that by Achaemenid times, Babylonian months had obtained Persian
names in the records of Iranian peoples, in effect transforming the
Babylonian calendar into a Perso-Babylonian one.
It is actually not known when the Achaemenids actually adopted the
entire Babylonian calendar system. This system may already have been
known to the Persians and Medes even before before they conquered Babylon
under Cyrus the Great. The Elamites of ancient southwest Iran, already
had an advanced civilization before the arrival of the Aryans into Persia,
had passed a great deal of their knowledge to the Persians, before they
united with Medes to form the first truly world (Achaemenid) Empire[i].
The Rise of the 365-Day Calendar
The Iranian New Year is also calculated differently from the Babylonian
system. What is remarkable about the Zoroastrian system, is how “modern”
it appears to be. The Zoroastrian system, unlike the Babylonian, is
based on the sun. The Zoroastrian year, like the Babylonian system,
is also divided into twelve months. Each of these months has thirty
days. It is interesting that the skilled workmen who worked on the city-palace
of Persopolis were in fact paid at the end of each thirty day month.
With the Zoroastrian system, the 30-day month system of 12 months would
make total of 360 days in the year. However, the 360 day cycle most
likely pre-dates the Zoroastrian religion and was known by other ancient
Aryan cults, such as those in India. The Rigveda of Aryan India defines
the year as being 360 days long. The Egptians also used a similar system[ii].
It was during the Sassanian era when this system became widespread
amongst the Iranians of Persia in the third century AD. There is considerable
dispute however, as to actual origins of the Zoroastrian calendar however
– the proposed dates range from 3209 B.C. to 325 A.D!
Whatever the date of origin, the Zoroastrian Magi improved on the 360-day
system. Most significant is the fact that the actual solar year is 365
¼ days. The full Zoroastrian year became 360 plus 5 days –
this was the 365 day year. The calculations of the Magi certainly came
very close to the solar year, and was only short by a ¼ of a
day.
To correct this, the Magi advanced their calendar by a full day every
four years. Fravardin the 1st (the Zoroastrian New Year), fell on the
16th of June on June 16th 632 AD, and then on the 15th of June 636 AD.
Fravartin, like all other Zoroastrian months, was based on Zoroastrian
divine entities. Fravartin is a derivative of ‘Fravashis’
(modern “Fereshteh”), or angels of justice who possess bounty
and power. Each day of the month had its own name. These names remained
the same in all months of course. Interestingly, the first day of the
month was called Ohrmazd, after the great god, Ahura-Mazda.
The Spread of the 365-Day Calendar
Having examined a (very brief) sketch of the history of the Iranian
(or more specifically Zoroastrian) calendar, the question of influence
on European and Judeo-Christian religions must be addressed. Western
historians have been aware of the Zoroastrian calendar since antiquity.
Quintus Curtius makes reference to 365 young men who followed the ancient
Zoroastrian chants of the Magi as the army of Darius III deployed against
Alexander the Great in 333 B.C. Specifically, Curtius (III. iii. 10)
states that “their number was equal to that of the days of the
whole year”. As noted previously, the Medo-Persian Magi knew of
the 365 days since the days of Cyrus or more likely, earlier.
How did the Europeans come to adopt the 365 day system?[iii] The Europeans
came to adopt a great of Persia’s culture by way of the many migrating
Iranian speaking as well as later Turkic speaking nomadic peoples of
the Central Asian and Ukrainian steppes. In fact, variations of the
Zoroastrian system had spread well beyond the borders of Persia, mainly
by way of Iranian peoples. The Zoroastrian calendar and its variations,
were in use in ancient Central Asia amongst the Iranian Magi of Soghdia,
Transoxiana and Chorasmia. Much of Iranian culture and mythology has
survived intact in Central Asia, despite the almost full takeover of
the region by non-Iranian Turkic peoples by the 11th century AD. Powerful
traces of Zoroastrian culture remain amongst the surviving Iranian speaking
peoples of the Pamirs and Tajikestan.
The Zoroastrian calendar also spread to ancient Cappadocia, modern
Northeast Turkey, a region in which numerous peoples such as Greeks,
Armenians and Iranians lived side by side and mixed. This region is
still home to a very large Iranian speaking population (Bahdenani Kurds),
and was the birthplace of Mithridates of Eupador who nearly defeated
Roman Emperor Pompei (see photo). Cappadocia had direct links to the
Ionian Greeks of modern western Turkey as well as the European Greeks
of Athens.
The Armenian kingdom, the first nation to officially accept Christianity,
also used the Zoroastrian calendar. This is because the Armenians aristocracy
were of Iranian origin. These were those Parthians who had refused to
accept the Sassanian takeover in Persia by 226 AD. After the conversion
of Armenia to Christianity, her involvement in the cultural and political
life of the Roman and later Byzantine Empire was to greatly increase.
Many of the architectural, artistic, military and mythological themes
of the Persia did spread from Armenia to the west; the likelihood of
the Armenians introducing the Zoroastrian system to the Europeans is
certainly possible.
Another source may be seen in the persecuted Manichean sect of Persia
which spread to Europe in the West and up to Northern China in the East
during the 3rd century and after. Like the migratory peoples, Cappadocians,
and Armenians cited earlier, the Manicheans may have also bought much
of Persia’s arts, architecture and ideas to Western and Eastern
Europe. Manicheism appears to have directly influenced many of the later
European “heresies”, such as the Bogomil movement of present
day Bosnia. Evidence of the Manicheans influencing the Chinese are found
in the Ta-yun Kuang-ming Ssu temple (a Manichean church) of ancient
Chang’An – a city of over one million residents. The Manichean
Magi, certainly knew of the Nowruz and the concept of the 365 days -
their Bogomil successors in Southern France were known as the “Meitros”
(derived from the Iranian Mitras).
The Nowruz of Today
Despite the passage of over 2,500 years, the Iranian new year (Nowruz)
continues to be commemorated every March 21st, in Iran and wherever
Iranian peoples reside in the Caucasus (e.g. Tats, Talysh), Central
Asia (e.g. Tajiks) as well by the Kurds of Iraq and Turkey. Various
aspects of Now-Ruz celebrations are even celebrated by the many Turkic
speaking peoples of central Asia and the Caucasus (e.g. Kazakhs), an
enduring legacy of the long standing relations between them and Iranian
peoples across history. Nowruz has withstood the test of time and conquerors
and has allowed Iranians of all stripes to gather in celebration and
song.
Some Further readings
Cambridge History of Iran 3(2), p. 781.
Diakonov, I.M., & Livshits, V.A. (1966), Novye Nakhodki dokumentov
v staroi Nise, Peredneaziatski Shornik II, Moscow, p.153.
Ghirshman, R. (1954), Village Perse-Achaemenid, (Memoires de la mission
archeologique en Iran, 36), P. 73.
Haloun, G., & Henning, W.B. (1952), The compendium of the doctrines
of Mani, Asia Major, III, p.200.
Luschey, H. (1968), Studien zu dem Darius-Relief von Bistun, AMI I,
p.92.
Nyberg, H.S. (1923), The Pahlavi documents of Avroman, Le Monde Oriental,
XVII, p.189. This is very interesting for those interested in investigating
the survival of Parthian usage of Zoroastrian terminology among the
local Kurds of modern day Hawraman (Avroman).
Dr. Kaveh Farrokh
Manuvera@aol.com
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[i] Ghirshman, R. (1954), Village Perse-Achaemenid, (Memoires de la
mission archeologique en Iran, 36), P. 73.. See also Luschey, H. (1968),
Studien zu dem Darius-Relief von Bistun, AMI I, p.92.
[ii] Herzfeld, ---, Ginzel, p.288.
[iii] Diakonov, I.M., & Livshits, V.A. (1966), Novye Nakhodki dokumentov
v staroi Nise, Peredneaziatski Shornik II, Moscow, p.153. See also Henning
(----), Tang-I-Sarvak, p.176. For further reading consult Nyberg, H.S.
(1923), The Pahlavi documents of Avroman, Le Monde Oriental, XVII, p.189.
The latter document is of interest for those interested in investigating
the survival of Parthian usage of Zoroastrian terminology among the
local Kurds of modern day Hawraman (Avroman).