What is the first day of the Iranian calendar?
The Iranian year usually begins within a day of 21 March of the Gregorian calendar.
What date is today in Shamsi?
Today’s date in shamsi
Date | Result |
---|---|
Shamsi calendar | 17 Scorpio 1400 |
Shamsi calendar, Digital format | 17/8/1400 |
What is the first month of Persian calendar?
It begins on the March equinox (Nowruz) as determined by astronomical calculation for the Iran Standard Time meridian (52.5°E, UTC+03:30) and has years of 365 or 366 days.
Which month is mordad?
July
Mordad (Persian: Mordād, Persian pronunciation: [moɾˈdɒːd]) is the fifth month of the Solar Hijri calendar, the official calendar of Iran and Afghanistan. Mordad has thirty-one days, beginning in July and ending in August of the Gregorian calendar.
What year is it in Hijri Shamsi?
This is a calendar reference for Hijri Shamsi (Afghan) and Anno Domini (Western Gregorian) calendars. The H.S. has been the official government calendar of Afghanistan since 1336 H.S. (1957 A.D.). The H.S….Hijri Shamsi (H.S.) & Anno Domini (A.D.) Calendars.
Year H.S. | 1341 |
---|---|
Start Date A.D. | 1962.3.21 |
Year H.S. | 1366 |
Start Date A.D. | 1987.3.21 |
Year H.S. | 1391 |
How do you read a date with the first year?
The ISO date format
- YYYY is the year [all the digits, i.e. 2012]
- MM is the month [01 (January) to 12 (December)]
- DD is the day [01 to 31]
What was the date of the Persian calendar in 1392?
Persian Calendar. Gregorian Calendar. 1 Farvardin 1392. March 21 2013 (Thursday) 2 Farvardin 1392 (Jomeh) March 22 2013 (Friday) 3 Farvardin 1392 (Shanbeh)
Is the Nowruz holiday a public holiday in Armenia?
Since the extinction during the 19th century, Nowruz is not celebrated by Armenians and is not a public holiday in Armenia. However, it is celebrated in Armenia by tens of thousands of Iranian tourists who visit Armenia with relative ease. The influx of tourists from Iran accelerated since around 2010–11.
Where does the word Nowruz come from in Persian?
The term Nowruz is a Persian compound word, consisting of the words now and ruz. Now (Middle Persian: 𐭭𐭥𐭪 nōg; Old Persian: 𐎴𐎺 nava), which means “new” and descends from Proto-Indo-European *néwos, is cognate with English new, German neu, Greek νέος (neos), Latin novus, Russian новый (novyj), and Sanskrit नव (náva).