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The World Haiku Club
WHC World Kigo Database |
New Year
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Location: worldwide Season: New Year (a Haiku season
of its own) Category: Seasons |
Explanation: New Year shinnen 新年 There are many
ways to celebrate the New Year, even many different dates. In this entry we
will concentrate on the worldwide events. The Japanese have
many special words during this season, which we will pick up in special
entries. Shin-nen (shinnen) is one general Japanese word for this time of the
year. http://nenga.impress.co.jp/images/2005_logo.gif Worldwide
use: (from the Wikipedia) The New
Year is an event that happens when a culture
celebrates the end of one year and the beginning of the next. Cultures that measure
yearly calendars
all have New Year celebrations. The most common modern celebrations are: January 1 :
Western
cultures that start a year with January.
Rosh Hashanah (Hebrew for 'head of the year') is a celebration
that occurs 163 days following Pesach (Passover)
(See Hebrew Calendar). In the Gregorian calendar at present, Rosh Hashanah
cannot occur before September 5, when it occurred in 1899 and will occur
again in 2013.
After the year 2089, the differences between the Hebrew Calendar and the
Gregorian Calendar will force Rosh Hashanah to be not earlier than September
6. Rosh Hashanah cannot occur later than October 5,
when it occurred in 1967
and will again occur in 2043. In the Bahá'í calendar, the new year starts on March 21,
called "Naw Ruz". The Chinese
New Year is generally celebrated with fire-crackers, and in some places
with a parade. It falls at a new moon during the (Chinese) winter, i.e. the
end of January or beginning of February. The Telugu New Year
generally falls in the months of March or April. The people of Andhra
Pradesh, India
celebrate the advent of Lunar year this day. The Thai
New Year is celebrated from April 13 to
April 15
by throwing water. The Vietnamese New
Year is the Têt
Nguyen Dan. It is celebrated on the same day as Chinese New Year. Historical dates for the new year The
ancient Roman calendar had only ten months and started
the year on 1
March, which is still reflected in the names of some months which derive
from Roman numerals: September
(Seventh), October
(Eighth), November
(Ninth), December
(Tenth). Around 715
BC the months of January, February and Mercedonius
were added to the end of the year (Mercedonius only in leap years).
Because consuls
were chosen in January, and because years were named after the consuls who
served in that year, January became the de facto beginning of the
year. In 45 BC,
Julius
Caesar introduced the Julian
calendar, dropping Mercedonius and decreeing that the New Year should
start on 1
January. In
the Middle
Ages in Europe
a number of significant feast days in the Ecclesiastical calendar of the Roman Catholic Church came to be used as
the beginning of the year:
Since the 17th
century, the Roman Catholic ecclesiastic year has started on the first
day of Advent,
the Sunday nearest to St. Andrew's Day (30
November). The above is all from this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Year New Years Day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Year%27s_Day Japanese New Year http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_New_Year Chinese New Year http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_New_Year oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
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Haiku: A page about the New Year alone in the canyon the silent sun watching the rocks http://home.clara.net/pka/haiku/newyear.html New Year's stroll Pamela Miller Ness http://home.earthlink.net/~missias/Acorn.html the new year
comes *This haiku was selected for the Nyuusen (third prize) in the Foreign Language Category of the International "Kusamakura" Haiku Competition. by slimey in My Haiku | From the Shiki Archives
Collection of winter and New Year Haiku http://www.cc.matsuyama-u.ac.jp/~shiki/kim/shikiwinter.html |
See
also: Last Day of the Year (oomisoka, Japan)
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