The
Javanese calendar is a calendar still in use by the Javanese people of Indonesia
concurrently with two other important calendars,
the Gregorian calendar and the
Islamic calendar. (The Gregorian
calendar is the official calendar of the Republic of
Indonesia
and civil society, while the Islamic calendar is
used by Muslims and Government for religious worship and deciding
relevant Muslim public
holidays.)
The
Javanese calendar is used almost exclusively by the people of
Java
including the main ethnicities of Java island
: Javanese
, Madurese and Sundanese-
primarily as a cultural icon, a
cultural identifier and as an
object and tradition of antiquity to be kept alive. The
Javanese calendar is used for cultural and metaphysical purposes of
these Javanese peoples
The current Javanese calendar was inaugurated by
Sultan Agung of Mataram in the
Gregorian year
1633.
Prior, Javanese had used the
Hindu
calendar or
Saka calendar which that
starts in
78 CE and
uses the solar cycle for calculating time .
Sultan Agung's Javanese calendar retained the
Saka calendar date of origin but differs by
using the same
lunar year measurement
system as the
Islamic calendar
(based on the lunar month). Occasionally it is referred by its
Latin name
Anno Javanico or
AJ (Javanese Year).
The Javanese calendar contains multiple, overlapping separate
measurements of times, called cycles.These include
- the five-day Pasaran cycle of five days
- the common Gregorian seven-day week
- the month-cycles of Mangsa and Wulan month-long cycles
- the year-cycles Tahun cycles of years
- and octo-ennia (8 year) cycles called Windu
The Javanese derive mystical meaning from the coincidence of these
multiple cycles. Coincidence is an important part of the Javanese
aesthetic, for example the use of
seleh and
gongan metrical cycles in Javanese
music.
The Cycles of Time
Pasaran cycle
Signs of the Pasaran cycle
The
pasaran cycle is so termed from the Javanese
'pasaran'—literally '
marketplace-related'. The
pasaran cycle
and week lasts five days- with villagers gathering communally at
the local market to meet socially, engage in commerce, buying and
selling wares, produce, foods, etc.
Itinerant merchants would visit different villages each day of the
Pasaran week.Some hypothesise that the length of the week/cycle is
related to the number of fingers on the hand..
The
Pasaran week is divided into days as follows, please
note the (
ngoko and
krama in
parentheses):
- Legi (Manis)
- Pahing (Pait)
- Pon (Petak)
- Wagé (Cemeng)
- Kliwon (Asih)
The origin of these terms is unclear, and their etymology remains
obscure. The days are most commonly referred to by their
ngoko names. Possibly, the names may be derived from
indigenous gods, like the
European and
Asian names.An ancient Javanese manuscript illustrates the week
with five human figures (shown at right below the day names): a man
seizing a suppliant by the hair, a woman holding a horn to receive
an offering, a man pointing a drawn sword at another, a woman
holding agricultural produce, and a man holding a spear leading a
bull.
Additionally, Javanese consider these days' names to have a
mystical relation to colors and cardinal direction:
- Legi represents white and East
- Pahing represents red and South
- Pon represents yellow and West
- Wage represents black and North
- Kliwon represents blurred colors and focus and 'center'.
Markets no longer operate under this traditional
Pasaran
cycle, instead pragmatically remaining open every day of the
Gregorian week.Javanese astrological
belief dictates that individual characteristics, future etc., are
attributable to the coincidence of the
Pasaran day and the
'common' weekdays of the
Islamic calendar derived week
cycle on that person's birthday.Additionally, great meaning is
often attributed to specific 7-day week and
Pasaran
weekday concurrences.
For example in Surakarta
, there is Pasar Legi, Pasar Pon, and Pasar Kliwon,
which had markets on the given days. The
Pasaran
week is an integral part of the
Wetonan cycle that
Javanese find of greatest interest in their astrological
interpretations.
Seven-day week
The seven-day long week cycle (
dina pitu, "seven days") is
derived from the Islamic calendar. The names of the days of the
week in
Javanese are derived from
their
Arabic counterparts,
namely:
Days of 7-Day Week
| Javanese |
Arabic |
English |
| Senin |
yaum al-ithnayn (2) يوم الإثنين |
Monday |
| Selasa |
yaum ath-thalatha' (3) يوم الثُّلَاثاء |
Tuesday |
| Rebo |
yaum al-arba`a' (4) يوم الأَرْبعاء |
Wednesday |
| Kemis |
yaum al-khamis (5) يوم الخَمِيس |
Thursday |
| Jemuwah |
yaum al-jum`a يوم الجُمْعَة |
Friday |
| Setu |
yaum as-sabt (7) يوم السَّبْت |
Saturday |
| Minggu/Ahad |
yaum al-ahad (1) يوم الأحد |
Sunday |
Wetonan cycle
The
Wetonan cycle superimposes the five-day pasaran cycle
with the seven-day week. Each cycle lasts 35 days.The coincindental
dates of interest are read as weekday name and Pasaran day name and
called
Weton.
An example of a Government calendar printing the
Wetonan
day superimposition, the Pasaran days and Indonesian weekday but
following
Gregorian calendar
dates:
- {| class="wikitable" width="100%"
From the example above, the
Wetonfor Tuesday 6th of May
2008 would be read as
Selasa Wageand similarly the
Wetonfor Thursday 14 May 2008, would be read as
Rebo
Pahing.
The
Wetonancycle is especially important for divinatory
systems, and important celebrations, rites of passage,
commemorations and so forth are held on days considered to be
auspicious, known as the
Weton.
An
especially prominent example widely still taught at primary schools
is the Weton for the Proclamation of the Republic of
Indonesia
on August 17 1945,was a Jumat legi, coinciding with the
Weton for the birth and death of Sultan Agung, considered one of the greatest
kings of Java history, .
Friday Legi is considered an important night for pilgrimage. There
are also
taboosthat relate to the cycle; for
example, the ritual dance
bedhayacan only be
performed on Thursday Kliwon.
The coincidence of the Psaaran day with the common day on the day
of birth is considered by Javanese to indicate the personal
characteristics of that person, similar to the Western Zodiak and
planetary positioning in
Western
astrology.
Pawukon
Pawukonis a 210-day cycle related to Hindu
tradition.
Though most associated with Bali
, Java refers
to it for special purposes.The calendar consists of
concurrent weeks, and has a set of ten weeks, which have a duration
of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 days.
The first day of the year is considered the first day of all ten
weeks. As 210 is not divisible by 4, 8, or 9, extra days must be
added to the 4-, 8-, and 9-day weeks.
SENIN SELASA RABU KAMIS JUMAT SABTU MINGGU
Dates
For timekeeping, days are numbered within the lunar month
(
wulan) as is common in other calendar systems. The date
indicates the change in the moon, and symbolizes the life of a
human in the world. This process of revolving life is known as
cakra manggilinganor
heru cakra. On the first day
of the month, when the moon is small, it is compared to a newborn
baby. The 14th day, called
Purnama Sidhi(full moon),
represents a married adult. The next day, called
Purnama,
occurs as the moon begins to wane. The 20th day,
Panglong,
symbolizes the point at which people begin to lose their memory.
The 25th day,
Sumurup, represents the point at which the
adult requires care like when they were young. The 26th day,
Manjing, represents the return of the human to his or her
origin.
Cycles of months
Pranata Mangsa
The solar year is divided into twelve periods (
mangsa) of
unequal length. Its origin lies in
agriculture. The names of the first ten months
are simply the
ordinal numbersfrom 1
to 10, although the names of the 11th and 12th are unclear. The
cycle begins near the summer
solstice,
around the middle of the dry season in Java.
Pranata mangsa
In the nineteenth century, the pranata mangsa was much better known
among Javanese than the civil or religious year, described below.
The cycle is clearly of Javanese origin, since the specific
application to their climate does not match other territories in
the Indonesian archipelago, as well as the usage of Javanese names
for the months. Although the cycle matches the weather pattern
well, it is still clearly somewhat arbitrary, as can be seen by the
fact that the lengths of the first and last month, the second and
eleventh, and so on, match.
The pranata mangsa can be used to predict personality traits in a
similar manner to
sun signsin Western
astrology. It is not widely used anymore for
divination, but some practitioners use it as well
as the other cycles in their divination.
Wulan
Each lunar year (
tahun) is divided into a series of twelve
wulan("months", of 29 or 30 days each). This is similar to
the use of months in the Islamic calendar. The names of the month
are given below (in krama/ngoko):
- Warana/Sura (30 days)
- Wadana/Sapar (29 days)
- Wijanga/Mulud (30 days)
- Wiyana/Bakda Mulud (29 days)
- Widada/Jumadil Awal (30 days)
- Widarpa/Jumadil Akhir (29 days)
- Wilarpa/Rejeb (30 days)
- Wahana/Ruwah (29 days)
- Wanana/Pasa (30 days)
- Wurana/Sawal (29 days)
- Wujana/Sela (30 days)
- Wujala/Besar (29 or 30 days, depending on the length of the
tahun, see below)
The cycle of months is considered metaphorically to represent the
cycle of human life. The first nine months represent
gestationbefore birth, while the tenth month
represents the human in the world, the eleventh the end of his or
her existence, and the twelfth the return to where he or she came
from. The cycle thus goes from one spark or conception
(
rijal) to another, traversing through the void
(
suwung).
Year designation
The
Shalivahana era, which started
in 78 CE and continues to be used on Bali, was used in Hindu times
on Java, and for well over a century after the appearance of Islam
on Java. When Sultan Agung adopted the Islamic lunar calendar in
1633 CE, he did not adopt the
Anno
Hegiraeto designate those years, but instead continued the
count of the Shalivahana era, which was 1555 at the time. As a
result, the Anno Javanico does not in effect count from any
time.
Cycles of years
Eight
tahunmakes up a
windu. A single
windulasts for 81 repetitions of the wetonan cycle, or
2,835 days (about 7 years 9 months in the Gregorian calendar). Note
that the
tahunare lunar years, and of shorter length than
Gregorian years. The names of the years in the cycle of windu are
as follows (in krama/ngoko):
- Purwana/Alip (354 days)
- Karyana/Ehé (354 days)
- Anama/Jemawal (355 days)
- Lalana/Jé (354 days)
- Ngawanga/Dal (355 days)
- Pawaka/Bé (354 days)
- Wasana/Wawu (354 days)
- Swasana/Jimakir (355 days)
The
winduare then grouped into a cycle of four:
- Windu Adi
- Windu Kunthara
- Windu Sengara
- Windu Sancaya
The cycles of wulan, tahun, and windu derive from the
Saka calendar.
Windu are no longer used much in horoscopy, but there is evidence
that there were previously used by court officials to predict
trends. The passing of a windu is often seen as a milestone and
deserving a
slametanritual feast).
Dino Mulyo
Dino Mulyo(literally "noble days") are celebrated
by worshipping
Gusti, the creator of life and
the universe. Practitioners of traditional Javanese spiritual
teachings have preserved five noble days:
- Satu Suro, the first of Sura, the New
Year
- Aboge (from A - alip (first year), Bo - rebo (Wednesday), and
Ge - Wage of the pasaran), celebrated on Wednesday Wage in the year
of alip
- Daltugi (from Dal - Dal (fifth year), tu - setu (Saturday), and
Gi - Legi of the pasaran), celebrated on Saturday Legi in the year
of Dal
- Hanggara Asih (Tuesday Kliwon)
- Dino Purnomo: Jemuah Legi/Sukra Manis (Friday Legi)
See also
References
- http://xentana.com/java/calendar.htm, The Javanese Calendar by
Matthew Arciniega
- M.C. Ricklefs. A History of Modern Indonesia Since c.
1300, 2nd ed. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993. ISBN
0804721955. Page 46
- John Crawfurd. History of the Indian Archipelago, vol.
1. Edinburgh: Archibald Constable and Co., 1820. Page 290.
- Crawfurd, 290-291, and plate 7.
- Joglosemar article
- Klaus Furmann, der javanischen Pilgerschaft zu
Heiligenschreinen, Dissertation for
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg i. Br., 2000, page 231
- Kunst, Jaap.
Music in Java. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1949, page
151-152.
- http://xentana.com/java/weton/basis.htm, More about Javanese
Wetonan by Matthew Arciniega
- http://www.joglosemar.co.id/kejawen/calendar.html, Javanese
Calendar and Its Significance to Mystical Life by Suryo S.
Negoro
- Crawfurd, 296.
- Ki Hudoyo Doyodipuro, Misteri Pranata Mangsa.
Semarang: Dahara Prize (1995), cited on
http://xentana.com/java/calendar.htm
- Crawfurd, 295.
- Crawfurd, 297.
- Crawfurd, 299.
- Crawfurd, 301.
Further reading
- Pigeaud, Th., Javaans-Nederlands Woordenboek.
Groningen
-Batavia
: J.B.
Wolters, 1938
- Quinn, George The Javanese science of 'burglary' ,
RIMA. Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, IX:1 January-June
1975. pp.33-54.
- Ricklefs, M.C., Modern Javanese historical tradition: a
study of an original Kartasura chronicle and related
materials. London
: School of
Oriental and African Studies, University of London,
1978
- Soebardi. Calendrical traditions in Indonesia Madjalah
IIlmu-ilmu Satsra Indonesia, 1965 no.3.
External links
The "Wetonan" Cycle for 2nd week of May (Mei)
2008:
| English |
Monday 5 |
Tuesday 6 |
Wednesday 7 |
Thursday 8 |
Friday 9 |
Saturday 10 |
Sunday 11 |
Monday 12 |
Tuesday 13 |
Wednesday 14 |
Thursday 15 |
Friday 16 |
Saturday 17 |
Sunday 18 |
Monday 19
|-
|
| Indonesian 7 day |
Senin 5 |
Selasa 6 |
Rabu 7 |
Kamis 8 |
Jumat 9 |
Sabtu 10 |
Minggu 11 |
Senin 12 |
Selasa 13 |
Rabu 14 |
Kamis 15 |
Jumat 16 |
Sabtu 17 |
Minggu 18 |
Senin 19
|-
|
| Javanese 7 day |
Senin 5 |
Selasa 6 |
Rebo 7 |
Kemis 8 |
Jumat 9 |
Setu 10 |
Minggu/ Ahad 11 |
Senin 12 |
Selasa 13 |
Rebo 14 |
Kemis 15 |
Jumat 16 |
Setu 17 |
Minggu/Ahad 18 |
Senin 19 |
|
| Javanese Pasaran days |
28 Pon |
29 Wage |
1 Kliwon |
2 Legi |
3 Pahing |
4 Pon |
5 Wage |
6 Kliwon |
7 Legi |
8 Pahing |
9 Pon |
10 Wage |
11 Kliwon |
12 Legi |
13 Pahing |
|
| Starting day |
Name |
Length (days) |
Description |
|
| Jun 23 |
Mangsa Kaso |
41 |
The dry season; leaves are falling from the trees; the ground
is withered and arid, bereft of water "like a jewel that has come
free of its setting." |
|
| Aug 3 |
Mangsa Karo |
23 |
The dry season; parched earth lies in hard clumps; the mango
and cotton trees begin to bloom. |
|
| Aug 26 |
Mangsa Katelu |
24 |
The dry season; spice roots are harvested; the gadung tree
begins to bear fruit. |
|
| Sep 19 |
Mangsa Kapat |
25 |
Rain begins to fall, as "tears well up in the soul", marking
the end of the dry season; birds are singing and busily
constructing nests. The Labuh Season is at hand. |
|
| Oct 14 |
Mangsa Kalima |
27 |
The rainy season, sometimes with fierce winds and flooding;
mangoes are ripe; snakes are driven from their nests; "a fountain
of gold falls across the earth". |
|
| Nov 11 |
Mangsa Kanem |
43 |
The rainy season; lightning strikes and there are landslides;
but it is also the season of many fruit. |
|
| Dec 23 |
Mangsa Kapitu |
43 |
The rainy season is at its peak; birds are hard pressed to find
food, and in many areas there is severe flooding. |
|
| Feb 4/5 |
Mangsa Kawolu |
27 |
The rainy season; rice fields are growing and the cat is
looking for his mate; grubs and larvae abound. |
|
| Mar 2 |
Mangsa Kasanga |
25 |
The rainy season; rice fields are turning yellow; "happy news
is spreading"; water is stored within the earth, the wind blows in
one direction, and many fruits are ripe. |
|
| Mar 27 |
Mangsa Kasadasa |
24 |
Rain yet falls, but is diminishing; the wind rustles and blows
hard; the air is still chilly. The Mareng Season is at hand. |
|
| Apr 20 |
Mangsa Desta |
23 |
The dry season has begun; farmers are harvesting the rice
fields; birds tend their young with affection, as if they were
"jewels of the heart". |
|
| May 13 |
Mangsa Saddha |
41 |
The dry season; water begins to recede, "vanishing from its
many places". |