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Light Calendar

Gordon edited this page Dec 7, 2025 · 20 revisions

The Gordian Light Calendar

The Gordian Light Calendar is a solar calendar aligned with real astronomical events. It divides the year into four equal Light Seasons, twelve Light Months, and uses a simple, practical Moon Counter (M1–M13).

The system can be adopted gradually (Levels 1–3), from using just the seasons to fully adopting a new year structure beginning on 1. New February (1. Neufebruar).

How This Calendar Differs From Other Proposals

There are many thoughtful and creative calendar reform ideas — some introduce 13 months, others use leap weeks or highly regular mathematical patterns. These systems can be elegant and useful, especially for administrative or accounting purposes.

However, such systems also create cultural side effects — for example: a birthday that always falls on the same weekday (not everyone wants a lifelong Monday birthday).

The Light Calendar follows a different purpose: it is designed for natural coherence. Its structure comes directly from astronomical reality — the solstices, equinoxes, and the changing speed of daylight. Rather than addressing bureaucratic problems, it aims to create a calendar that makes intuitive sense, feels more natural, and helps people reconnect with nature, the Earth, the cosmos, and their own bodily rhythms.

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