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A Year and a Day

by Magi

Ever wonder where the Pagan 'a year and a day' comes from? It is based
on a year comprised of thirteen months each of 28 days to match the full
moons plus one day to balance the solar cycle.

The calendar is regarded as "Celtic" or Druidical and was most famously


propounded by poet Robert Graves in The White Goddess, though its
historicity has been seriously questioned. Graves was no historian, but the
book makes a very worthwhile read nonetheless. He related the Ogam
letters to verses of The Song of Amergin.

(Many historians and archaeologists prefer to work instead from the Coligny
Calendar, a great bronze plate now in fragmentary form, showing 62 lunar
months plus two intercalated months to match the solar cycle.)

Anyway, the months in Graves' interpretation are purportedly named after


the Ogam letters, the "tree alphabet" of Old Irish:

• Dec 24 - Jan 20 = Beith (Birch)


• Jan 21 - Feb 17 = Luis (Rowan)
• Feb 18 - Mar 17 = Nion (Ash)
• Mar 18 - Apr 14 = Fearn (Alder)
• Apr 15 - May 12 = Saille (Willow)
• May 13 - Jun 09 = Uath (Hawthorn)
• Jun 10 - Jul 07 = Duir (Oak)
• Jul 08 - Aug 04 = Tinne (Holly)
• Aug 05 - Sep 01 = Coll (Hazel)
• Sep 02 - Sep 29 = Muin (Vine)
• Sep 30 - Oct 27 = Gort (Ivy)
• Oct 28 - Nov 24 = Ngetal (Reed)
• Nov 25 - Dec 22 = Ruis (Elder)
• Dec 23 : the extra day

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