Kin-strife |
07-21-2008 02:00 PM |
"The calendar used by the Hobbits of the Shire divided the year into twelve months which, unlike the irregular months of Roman and modern Europe, were of equal length: every month in the Hobbit year had exactly thirty days. This totals only 360 days, so the left-over five or six additional days in each year were invested in a pair of festivals, one at each solstice. The two days of Yule fell around the Winter solstice, between December and January; the first day of Yule was the last day of one year, and the second day of Yule was the new-year's day of the next. Six months later the festival of Lithe ornamented the Summer solstice, and lasted either three or four days: the first day of Lithe began the festival, followed by Midyear's Day itself, followed in leap years by an “Overlithe”, and then the festival ended on the second day of Lithe."
I got the above from a web-site called shire-reckoning.com, so where they got it I don't know. When I read your post I thought for one horrifying, earth-shattering second that Tolkien may have made a stupid mistake. So I quickly sprang into action and investigated. I thing Tokien just substituted the Shire months for our months, so Afteryule = January, Solmath = February etc. But he kept the 30 days to each month thing. Notice that nothing seems to happen on the 31st of any month. Footnote 7 in the appendix says "months and days are given according to the Shire calendar", and also notice in 3019 "1 Lithe. Arwen comes to the city"
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