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  1. v. t. e. A date inscription in the Maya Long Count on the east side of Stela C from Quirigua showing the date for the last Creation. It is read as 13.0.0.0.0 4 Ahau 8 Kumku and is usually correlated as 11 or 13 August, 3114 BC on the Proleptic Gregorian calendar.

    • The 2012 Phenomenon
    • Not A Mayan Invention
    • Wheels Working Together
    • The Haab
    • The Tzolkin
    • The Long Count
    • How to Set The Date
    • Mayan Culture Today

    The Mayan calendar rose to fame in 2012, when a “Great Cycle” of its Long Count component came to an end, inspiring some to believe that the world would end at 11:11 UTC on December 21, 2012. The media hype and hysteria that ensued was later termed the 2012 phenomenon. Of course, the predictions did not come true—just like hundreds of other doomsda...

    The Mayan calendar dates back to at least the 5th century BCEand it is still in use in some Mayan communities today. However, even though the Mayans contributed to the further development of the calendar, they did not actually invent it. The same system was used by most cultures in pre-Columbian Central America—including those predating the Maya.

    The Mayan Calendar consists of three separate corresponding calendars: the Long Count, the Tzolkin (divine calendar), and the Haab(civil calendar). Each of them is cyclical, meaning that a certain number of days must occur before a new cycle can begin. The three calendars are used simultaneously. The Tzolkin and the Haab identify the days, but not ...

    The Haab is a 365-day solar calendar which is divided into 18 months of 20 days each and one month which is only 5 days long (Uayeb). The calendar has an outer ring of Mayan glyphs (pictures) which represent each of the 19 months. Each day is represented by a number in the month followed by the name of the month. Each glyph represents a personality...

    The Tzolkin, meaning “the distribution of the days,” is also called the Divine Calendar and the Sacred Round. It is a 260-day calendar with 20 periods of 13 days, and it is used to determine the time of religious and ceremonial events. The days in each period are numbered from 1 to 13. Each day is also given a name (glyph) from a sequence of 20 day...

    The Long Count is an astronomical calendar which is used to track longer periods of time. The Maya called it the “universal cycle.” Each such cycle is calculated to be 2,880,000 days long (about 7885 solar years). The Mayans believed that the universe is destroyed and then recreated at the start of each universal cycle. This belief caused the 2012 ...

    A date in the Mayan calendar is specified by its position in both the Tzolkin and the Haab calendars. This creates a total of 18,980 unique date combinations, which are used to identify each day within a cycle lasting about 52 years. This period is called the Calendar Round. In practice, the date combinations are represented by two wheels rotating ...

    The Maya still form sizable populations that include regions encompassing present-day Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El Salvador, and parts of Mexico. They maintain a distinctive set of traditions and beliefs, which was inspired by a combination of pre-Columbian and post-conquest ideas and cultures. Topics: Calendar

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  3. The 2012 Phenomenon New Age Appropriation of an Ancient Mayan Calendar Robert K. Sitler ABSTRACT: According to the ancient Mayan Long Count calendar, a cycle of more than 5,000 years will come to fruition on the winter solstice of 2012. While this date is largely unknown among contemporary Maya,

  4. December 21, the winter solstice, 2012 CE will mark the completion of one highly significant 5,125-year cycle in the ancient Maya ‘Long Countcalendar, the period of 13 Baktuns or 13 × 144,000 days, exactly. Many details of the elaborate Maya calendar, including this remarkable period, have been studied and rediscovered by scholars in the

  5. Much like the Gregorian calendar, Mayan culture used cyclical calendars that revolved around either the moon cycle or the sun-cycle. The tun, a 360-day cycle, could be grouped together in sets of 20, their base unit of counting, or katun, similar to Western cultures divide their years into decades.

  6. John B Carlson. This essay introduces the papers from the specially organized session on the theme‘The 2012 phenomenon: Maya calendar, astronomy, and apocalypticism in the worlds of scholarship and popular culture’. Download Free PDF. View PDF.

  7. The 2012 phenomenon: Maya calendar, astronomy, and apocalypticism in the worlds of scholarship and global popular culture (PDF) The 2012 phenomenon: Maya calendar, astronomy, and apocalypticism in the worlds of scholarship and global popular culture | Mark Van Stone - Academia.edu

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