From Round to Square (and back)

For The Emperor's Teacher, scroll down (↓) to "Topics." It's the management book that will rock the world (and break the vase, as you will see). Click or paste the following link for a recent profile of the project: http://magazine.beloit.edu/?story_id=240813&issue_id=240610

A new post appears every day at 12:05* (CDT). There's more, though. Take a look at the right-hand side of the page for over four years of material (2,000 posts and growing) from Seinfeld and country music to every single day of the Chinese lunar calendar...translated. Look here ↓ and explore a little. It will take you all the way down the page...from round to square (and back again).
*Occasionally I will leave a long post up for thirty-six hours, and post a shorter entry at noon the next day.

Friday, November 29, 2019

China's Lunar Calendar 2019 11-29

Click here for the introduction to the Round and Square series "Calendars and Almanacs" 
⇦⇦⇦⇦⇦ From right to left: ⇦⇦⇦⇦
11/29..........................................11/26..............Monthly Calendar Information
This is one in a never-ending series—following the movements of the calendar—in Round and Square perpetuity. It is today's date in the Chinese lunar-solar (or "luni-solar" calendar; I call it the "lunar" calendar in order to distinguish it from the kinds of calendars most Westerners use. It has a basic translation and minimal interpretation. Unless you have been studying calendars (and Chinese culture) for many years, you will likely find yourself asking "what does that mean?" I would caution that "it" doesn't "mean" any one thing. There are clusters of meaning, and they require patience, reflection, careful reading, and, well, a little bit of ethnographic fieldwork. The best place to start is the introduction to "Calendars and Almanacs" on this blog. I teach a semester-long course on this topic and, trust me, it takes a little bit of time to get used to the lunar calendar. Some of the material is readily accessible; some of it is impenetrable, even after many years.

As time goes on, I will link all of the sections to lengthy background essays. This will take a while. In the meantime, take a look, read the introduction, and think about all of the questions that emerge from even a quick look at the calendar. You will likely find that several of the translations seem quite "fanciful" in English. I am simply trying to convey that they also sound fairly fanciful in Chinese.
Section One
Solar Calendar Date
廿

五期星
Eleventh Month, Twenty-Ninth Day 
Friday, November 29
————

Section Two
Beneficent Stars 
(top to bottom, right to left)
不合天歲
將日德祿
Generational Emolument
Heavenly Exemplarity
Linked Days
Not General
————

Section Three
Auspicious Hours
(top to bottom, right to left
申辰
吉中
酉巳丑

戌午寅
吉吉
亥未卯
中吉中
23:00-01:00 Inauspicious
01:00-03:00 Auspicious
03:00-05:00 Auspicious
05:00-07:00 In-Between

07:00-09:00 In-Between
9:00-11:00 Inauspicious
11:00-13:00 Auspicious
13:00-15:00 Auspicious

15:00-17:00 Auspicious
17:00-19:00 Auspicious
19:00-21:00 Inauspicious
21:00-23:00 In-Between
 ————

Section Four 
Activities to Avoid  
(top-to-bottom; right to left) 

田搭苫結
獵厠蓋網
Binding Nets
Thatched Coverings
Building Toilets
Field Venery (Hunting)
 
Section Five 
Cosmological Information





Fourth Day (Eleventh Lunar Month)
Cyclical day: gengwu (7/60)
Phase (element): Earth
"Constellation Personality" Cycle: Oxen (9/28)
"Day Personality" Cycle: Danger (8/12)
————

Section Six
Appropriate Activities
and Miscellaneous Information  
(top-to-bottom; right to left)
上開嫁祭
樑市娶祀
安交納祈
牀易采福
作修裁會
灶造衣友
安動移訂
葬土徙婚
虛五
致天四 大
  死吏耗方亡空
————
Appropriate Activities
Venerating Ancestors
Inquiring-into Fortune
Meeting Friends
Marriage Engagements
Marriage Alliances
Grain Payments
Cutting-out Clothing (Sewing and Tailoring) 
Opening Markets
Trade and Commerce
Repairing and Constructing
Moving Soil
Raising Beams
Positioning Beds
Stove Work
Positioning Graves 

Five Voids

Baleful Astral Influences
Great Loss-Void
Four Squander-Directions
Heavenly Official
Toward Death

Section Seven
Inauspicious Stars
(the Chinese should be read right to left, but the English translation is underneath each character)
Bifurcation
 ————

Section Eight
Miscellaneous Items 
(the Chinese should be read top-to-bottom, and right-to-left;the English translation for is under the bottom characters)
磨 碓 占
Mortar, Pestle, Divination

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