The Calendar of Hmur was a prominent calendar system in Serôs, the undersea realms of the Sea of Fallen Stars, during the empire of Hmurrath. Following the empire's fall and the rise of the Timesong calendar, it continued to see use among most locathahs and some merfolk, though both races practiced it differently. The former kept it solely as an oral tradition, while the merfolk of Serôs used it to for the purposes of written history.[1]
Months[]
Much like Whaletime, measurement of time in the Calendar of Hmur was based roughly upon the lifecycles and reoccurring seasonal activities of the merfolk and locathahs. These activities each corresponded to nine seasons, which together made up a cycle (year), and all together the system was fairly accurate to a surface year. These lifecycle activities included mating, birthing, the planting of kelp crops, summer harvesting, seasonal hunting, the shedding of scales in the winter,[1] the winter migration to the southern waters of the Inner Sea, and the summer migration to the central and northern waters of the Inner Sea.[2]
Years[]
Dates in the Calendar of Hmur were formed by counting the total number of cycles that had occurred over time since the founding of Hmurrath or its successor state Eadraal, followed by the ordinal number of the then-ruling praessar (ruler) of Hmurrath or Eadraal, and ending in one of the years of that ruler's praess (reign).[3] This practice of marking cycles in relation to the reign of a ruler was likely inspired by the Aryselmalyn calendar.[1]
When denoting years from the time of Hmurrath, the date would be preceded by the abbreviation OH, meaning "Old Hmureckoning". When denoting years from the time of Eadraal, the preceding abbreviation would instead be NH, meaning "New Hmureckoning". Using the surface year of 1370 DR as an example, the equivalent date in the Calendar of Hmur would be written as "NH 620p26c35". This was because King Vhaemas was the 26th ruler of Eadraal, he was in the thirty-fifth year of his reign by that time, and in the six-hundred-and-twentieth cycle since the collapse of Hmurrath.[3][note 1]
History[]
By the time of Hmurrath's fall in 820 TS (750 DR), the end of the Tenth Serôs War,[4] the calendar had recorded around 900 cycles across 46 praessars. In addition, the Calendar of Hmur had counted up to 620 cycles for the successor state of Eadraal by 1370 DR.[3][note 2]
Appendix[]
Notes[]
- ↑ As it was written from the perspective of the Present Age (then 1370 DR to 1371 DR), the source text does not state what notation abbreviation would have been used during the height of Old Hmurrath.
- ↑ The text incorrectly refers to Hmurrath as having fallen during the Fifth Serôs War.
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Steven E. Schend (1999). Sea of Fallen Stars. (TSR, Inc), p. 61. ISBN 0-7869-1393-2.
- ↑ Steven E. Schend (1999). Sea of Fallen Stars. (TSR, Inc), pp. 61–62. ISBN 0-7869-1393-2.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Steven E. Schend (1999). Sea of Fallen Stars. (TSR, Inc), p. 62. ISBN 0-7869-1393-2.
- ↑ Steven E. Schend (1999). Sea of Fallen Stars. (TSR, Inc), p. 71. ISBN 0-7869-1393-2.
Connections[]
Aryselmalyn calendar • Azuposi calendar • Calendar of Hmur • Kara-Turan calendar • Timesong calendar • Zakharan calendar