The calendar is closely related with the
development of the astronomy. China is one of the first countries that see the emergence of astronomy,
as well as the calendar. As far as 5,000 years ago, China had the lunisolar calendar, which
indicated that each year had 366 days.
In the Shang Dynasty (1600-1066BC),
officials were appointed to bear the sole task of observing and recording the
changes in the heavens. During this period, people used the lunisolar calendar,
with an intercalary added to the end of certain years. During the Western Zhou
Dynasty (1066-771BC), the astronomer began to measure the shadow cast by the sun
and decided upon 24 solar terms to direct the farming.
In the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-23AD),
Emperor Wu ordered the establishment of a new calendar -- Taichu
Calendar, based on the old calendar. And the calendar was used in the next
200 years. In the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220), Sifen Calendar was
drawn.
Later, Zu Chongzhi worked out the Daming
Calendar, taking into consideration the precession of the equinoxes for the
first time in China. After
observations and studies, Zu concluded that a year lasted exactly 365.24281481
days which was only 52 seconds different from the modern estimate.
In the Tang Dynasty (618-907), famous monk
Yi Xing compiled the Dayan Calendar, the most comprehensive and thorough
calendar in the Chinese history. The almanac consisted of 7 parts, explaining in
details how to calculate the new moon, full moon, 24 solar terms, the movement
of the sun and the moon, etc. The calendar had great influences as all the later
ones were revised according to it before the introduction of western
calendar.
In the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127),
Shen Kuo worked out the 12 Qijie Calendar, discarding the intercalary and this
is in line with the Gregorian Calendar.
During the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368), Guo
Shoujing compiled the Shoushi Calendar. He employed several methods of
calculation, including interpolation, spherical trigonometry to solve four main
problems in the previous calendars. His calendar had 365.2425 days in a year,
which was only 26 seconds different from the time it takes the earth to go
around the sun. His achievement was 300 years earlier than the finalization of
the modern calendar.
From the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Jesuit
missionaries brought European astronomy to China. In the early Qing Dynasty (1644-1911),
German missionary Johann Adam Schall von Bell compiled the Shixian
Calendar. From 1912, China
began to adopt the Gregorian Calendar, but the traditional Chinese lunar
calendar was still in use. In essence, the lunar calendar was Shixian
Calendar.