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  2. Yoruba calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoruba_calendar

    Day 1 is dedicated to Obatala, Sopona, Iyami Aje, and the Egungun; Day 2 is dedicated to Orunmila, Esu, and Osun; Day 3 is dedicated to Ogun and Oshosi; Day 4 is dedicated to Sango and Oya; To reconcile with the Gregorian calendar, Yoruba people also measure time in seven days a week and four weeks a month. The four-day calendar was dedicated ...

  3. Tax Freedom Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_Freedom_Day

    Tax Freedom Day is a concept developed and trademarked by American businessman Dallas Hostetler, which aims to calculate the first day of the year on which a nation as a whole has theoretically earned enough income to pay its taxes. Every dollar that is officially considered income by the government is counted, and every payment to the ...

  4. Earth Overshoot Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_Overshoot_Day

    Earth Overshoot Day (EOD) is the calculated illustrative calendar date on which humanity's resource consumption for the year exceeds Earth’s capacity to regenerate those resources that year. In 2024, it fell on August 1st. [ 2 ]

  5. Zoroastrian calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoroastrian_calendar

    A 365-day calendar, with months largely identical to the Egyptian calendar, was introduced shortly after the conquest of Egypt by the Achaemenid ruler Cambyses (c. 525 BCE). [10] Scholars are divided on whether this 365 day calendar was in fact preceded by a 360-day calendar of Zoroastrian observances. [11]

  6. Celtic calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_calendar

    Diagram comparing the Celtic, astronomical and meteorological calendars. Among the Insular Celts, the year was divided into a light half and a dark half.As the day was seen as beginning at sunset, so the year was seen as beginning with the arrival of the darkness, at Calan Gaeaf / Samhain (around 1 November in the modern calendar). [4]

  7. Tibetan calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_calendar

    The Tibetan calendar (Tibetan: ལོ་ཐོ, Wylie: lo-tho), or Tibetan lunar calendar, is a lunisolar calendar, that is, the Tibetan year is composed of either 12 or 13 lunar months, each beginning and ending with a new moon. A thirteenth month is added every two or three years, so that an average Tibetan year is equal to the solar year. [1]