Difference between revisions of "Ghyll:Encyclopedant Calendar"

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To identify a Ghyll month, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month. Likewise, for a day, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month followed by another slash followed by the day. ''Example: the fifth day of the seventh month of -20 EC would be written as -20/7/5 EC.''
 
To identify a Ghyll month, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month. Likewise, for a day, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month followed by another slash followed by the day. ''Example: the fifth day of the seventh month of -20 EC would be written as -20/7/5 EC.''
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'''When using EC dates in your entries, always use the special <nowiki>{{EC}}</nowiki> syntax to link back to this page.  For example, typing "<nowiki>-20 {{EC}}</nowiki>'" will produce the following text, -20 {{EC}}, and will always refer readers to the proper explanation, as well as the latest timeline (below).'''
  
 
==Ghyll Timeline==
 
==Ghyll Timeline==

Revision as of 19:33, 2 September 2004

To nurture the creation of a Ghyll Encyclopedia that will be of use to all of Ghyll's citizens, the Encyclopedants--key editors, and instigators of the encyclopaedic effort--are taking certain measures to ensure that some regional variations are normalised to canonical systems. One of the regional variations that the Encyclopedants have felt it foremost necessary to address is that of dates and times.

What this means to scholars is that when you submit entries that contain dates and times in a regional system, you will be asked (if we can get a message back to you) to provide them instead in the Encylopedant Calendar. It is the aim of this notice to define that calendar, and provide you with tips on the conversion. Should it be impossible for you to be contacted, the Encyclopedants will take up the changes themselves, attempting to provide normalisations where possible, and omitting dates otherwise.

The Encyclopedant Calendar

The Encyclopedant Calendar (EC) is based on years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. There are sixty seconds to a minute, sixty minutes to an hour, twenty-four hours to a day, seven days to a week, four weeks to a month, and a dozen months to a year. Hence there are three hundred and thirty six days in a year, as corresponds with a full rotation of our seasons.

The epoch for the Encyclopedant Calendar, i.e. 0 EC, is based on the date that the call for entries was first set forth over the fair lands of Ghyll. Hence, the first year of the creation of the Ghyll Encyclopedia will take place throughout 0 EC. Since scholars will generally be mentioning dates only when they have occured before the creation of the dictionary, it is expected that dates prior to 0 EC will be most heavily represented in entries: the syntax for doing so is to use a negative number for the amount of years. Note that -1 EC is the year before the creation of the Ghyll Encyclopaedia. It is expected that the first round of definitions for the twenty six letters of the alphabet will take one EC year to complete, and hence the next time we call for definitions of words beginning with "A" is predicted to occur at the start of 1 EC.

To identify a Ghyll month, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month. Likewise, for a day, use the year followed by a slash followed by the number of the month followed by another slash followed by the day. Example: the fifth day of the seventh month of -20 EC would be written as -20/7/5 EC.

When using EC dates in your entries, always use the special {{EC}} syntax to link back to this page. For example, typing "-20 {{EC}}'" will produce the following text, -20 EC, and will always refer readers to the proper explanation, as well as the latest timeline (below).

Ghyll Timeline

In order to aid scholars' abilities to convert their regional dates into EC, the Encyclopedants have taken it upon themselves to research the dates for the events described in the first set of entires received for the letter "A". It has been a painstaking and laborious process, but it should enable scholars to more easily research the EC date for events that they describe. The timeline is as follows:

DateGhyll Event
-900 ECThe Nitenmangrey culture became extinct.
-300 ECAndelphracia and Quezlar 6 were active in this period.
-280 ECArariax the poet was born in the Evesque Valley.
-200 ECHistorical records start to become difficult to decipher.
-150 ECEarliest known use of the phrase "Andelphracian Lights".
-58 ECBirth of Windsor Creame.
-13 ECFolktown Records weekly newspaper founded.
-8 ECBirth of Morphous Ibb.
-8 ECWindsor Creame weds Bavarian Creame.
0 ECGhyll Encyclopedia founded.