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Tabular Islamic calendar

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Tabular Islamic calendar

The Tabular Islamic calendar (Arabic: التقويم الهجري المجدول, romanizedaltaqwim alhijriu almujadwal) is a rule-based variation of the lunar Hijri calendar. It has the same numbering of years and months, but the months are determined by arithmetical rules rather than by observation or astronomical calculations. It was developed by early Muslim astronomers of the second hijra century (the 8th century of the Common Era) to provide a predictable time base for calculating the positions of the Moon, Sun, and planets. It is now used by historians to convert an Islamic date into a Western calendar when no other information (like the day of the week) is available. Its calendar era is the Hijri year. An example is the Fatimid or Misri calendar.

Each year has 12 months and 354 or 355 days. The odd numbered months have 30 days and the even numbered months have 29 days, except in a leap year when the 12th and final month Dhu al-Hijjah has 30 days.

Virtually all Muslims use an observation-based calendar for religious purposes such as the Umm al-Qura calendar, accounting for the non-uniform motions of the Sun and the Moon and other factors, and use the tabular calendar only for approximation (because dates predicted by the tabular Islamic calendar can occur one or two days too early or too late).

In its most common form there are 11 leap years in a 30-year cycle. Noting that the average year has 354+1130 days and a common year has 354 days, at the end of the first year of the 30-year cycle the remainder is 1130 day. Whenever the remainder exceeds a half day (1530 day), then a leap day is added to that year, reducing the remainder by one day. Thus at the end of the second year the remainder would be 2230 day which is reduced to −830 day by a leap day. Using this rule the leap years are year number 2, 5, 7, 10, 13, 16, 18, 21, 24, 26 and 29 of the 30-year cycle.

If leap days are added whenever the remainder equals or exceeds a half day, then all leap years are the same except 15 replaces 16 as the sixth long year per cycle.

The Ismaili Tayyebi community delays three leap days by one year: the third to year 8, the seventh to year 19 and the tenth to year 27 in their 30-year cycle. There is another version where, in addition, the fourth leap day is postponed to year 11 and the last leap day is in the last year of the 30-year cycle.

The mean number of days per month in the 30-year cycle is 29.53056 days, or 29d 12h 44m. Six months of 29 days and six with 30 days, plus 11 days of the leap years. (29 days × 6 months + 30 days × 6 months) × 30 years + 11 leap days = 10,631 days and 10,631 / 360 = 29.53056 (360 is number of months in 30 years). And this is approximately how long it takes for the Moon to make full lunar cycle.

Microsoft's Kuwaiti algorithm is used in Windows to convert between Gregorian calendar dates and Islamic calendar dates. There is no fixed correspondence defined in advance between the algorithmic Gregorian solar calendar and the Islamic lunar calendar determined by actual observation. As an attempt to make conversions between the calendars somewhat predictable, Microsoft claims to have created this algorithm based on statistical analysis of historical data from Kuwait. According to Rob van Gent, the so-called "Kuwaiti algorithm" is simply an implementation of the standard Tabular Islamic calendar algorithm used in Islamic astronomical tables since the 11th century.

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