Calendar of Harptos
Faerun
1 Hammer, Year of the Black Regalia DR
Calendar of Harptos
Days
365
Months
12
Days per Month
30
Weeks
Tendays (3 weeks of 10 days), also known as eves, domen, hyrar or rides
Holidays
5 that fall between months (31st of its month)
Leap Year
Every 4 Years, retained purely for social convenience, and provides a sixth special day that is used as the basis for long-term agreements and such contracts and activities.
Inventor
Long Dead Wizard Harptos of Kaalinth
Months
[1] Hammer
Deepwinter (January)
Midwinter
Midwinter is known officially in Cormyr as the High Festival of Winter. It is a feast where, traditionally, the local lords used it to make or renew alliances, although the common people called it Deadwinter Day, a reference to the cold and hard times that remained before the spring.
[2] Alturiak
The Claw of Winter, or the Claws of the Cold (February)
[3] Ches
Of the Sunsets (March)
[4] Tarsakh
Of the Storms (April)
Greengrass
Greengrass is the official beginning of spring, a day of relaxation. Flowers that have been carefully grown in the inner rooms of the keeps and temples during the winter are blessed and cast out upon the snow to bring rich growth in the season ahead.
[5] Mirtul
The Melting (May)
[6] Kythorn
The Time of Flowers (June)
[7] Flamerule
Summertide (July)
Midsummer
Midsummer, called Midsummer Night or the Long Night, is a time of feasting and music and love. In a ceremony performed in some lands, unwed maidens are set free in the woods and "hunted" by their would-be suitors throughout the night. Betrothals are traditionally made upon this night. It is very rare indeed for the weather to be bad during this night - such is considered a very bad omen, usually thought to foretell famine or plague.
[8] Eleasias
Highsun (August)
[9] Eleint
The Fading (September)
Highharvestide
Higharvestide heralds the coming of fall and the harvest. It is a feast that often continues for the length of the harvest so that food is always on hand for those coming in from the fields. There is much traveling about on the heels of the feast, as merchants, court emissaries, and pilgrims make speed before the worst of the mud arrives and the rain freezes in the snow.
[10] Marpenoth
Leaffall (October)
[11] Uktar
The Rotting (November)
The Feast of the Moon
This festival, also called Moonfest, is the last great festival of the year. It marks the arrival of winter and is also the day when the dead are honored. Graves are blessed, the Ritual of Remembrance is performed, and tales of the doings of those now gone are told far into the night. Much is said of heroes and treasure and lost cities underground.
Wars, by the way, are often but not always fought after the harvest is done, continuing as late as the weather permits. The bulk of the fighting takes place in the month of Uktar, and the ironic practicality of the Feast of the Moon is readily apparent.
Wars, by the way, are often but not always fought after the harvest is done, continuing as late as the weather permits. The bulk of the fighting takes place in the month of Uktar, and the ironic practicality of the Feast of the Moon is readily apparent.
[12] Nightal
The Drawing Down (December)
Shieldmeet (Leap Years)
Once every four years, another day is added to the year in the manner of February 29 in the Gregorian calendar. This day is part of no month and follows Midsummer Night. It is known as Shieldmeet. It is a day of open council between nobles and people, a day for the making and renewing of pacts, oaths, and agreements. It is a day for tournaments, tests and trials for those wishing to advance in battle fame or clerical standing, for entertainment of all types, particularly theatrical, and for dueling.