Archeological discoveries show that ancient
people in China began to use the Celestial Stem and the Terrestrial Branch to record time as early as the Yin and Shang period about
4,000 years ago.
Within each 60-year cycle, each year is
assigned name consisting of two components:
The first component is a Celestial
Stem. These words are Jia, Yi, Bing, Ding, Wu, Ji, Geng, Xin, Ren, Gui
in Pingyin and they have no English equivalents.
The second component is a Terrestrial
Branch. The names of the corresponding animals in the zodiac cycle of 12
animals are given in parentheses. They are Zi (rat), Chou (ox),
Yin (tiger), Mao (hare, rabbit), Chen (dragon), Si
(snake), Wei (sheep), Shen (monkey), You (rooster),
Xu (dog) and Hai (pig).
Each of the two components is used
sequentially. Thus, the 1st year of the 60-year cycle becomes Jia-Zi, the
2nd year is Yi-Chou, the 3rd year is Bing-Yin, etc. When we reach
the end of a component, we start from the beginning: The 10th year is
Gui-You, the 11th year is Jia-Xu (restarting the Celestial
Stem), the 12th year is Yi-Hai, and the 13th year is Bing-Zi
(restarting the Terrestrial Branch). Finally, the 60th year becomes
Gui-Hai.
This way of naming years within a 60-year
cycle goes back approximately 2000 years. A similar naming of days and months
has fallen into disuse, but the date name is still listed in
calendars.
It is customary to number the 60-year cycles
since 2637 B.C.E., when the calendar was supposedly invented. In that year the
first 60-year cycle started.