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Comparison: Chinese calendar vs. Western calendar
As early as in the Shang
Dynasty (16th-11th century BC), when China was already a farming country,
the ancient people used the concept of leap month to decide the four seasons,
and by the Warring
States Period (475-221BC), the measured length of a solar year was quite
precise. In the Western countries, however, the calendar was still in a mess by
the time of China's Western
Han Dynasty (206BC-24AD).
Ancient Chinese people learned of the "seven leap months in
19 years" 200 years earlier than the Greeks
Whenever the Western countries carried out a calendar
reform, they preferred to improve the coordination between the year, month, and
day, leaving other parts unchanged. In ancient China, however, a calendar reform
usually involved inferring the astronomic constants and the problem of solar and
lunar eclipses as well as the planets' movement.
The astronomic development was highly emphasized in ancient China in terms of
the calendar, contributing a lot to the development of calendars in other
countries.
Author: Jessie
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