remainder) calendar, which began about 484 BC, was the first calculated Chinese calendar, so named because it used a solar year of 365? days, along with a 19-year = 235-month Rule Cycle, known as the Metonic cycle in the West. The winter solstice was in its first month and its intercalary month was inserted after the twelfth month. Beginning in 256 BC with the Qin kingdom, which would later become the Qin dynasty, the intercalary month was an extra ninth month at the end of a year that began with the tenth month. Western Han Dynasty continued to use this timing method. In fact, in most time of feodal society, Chinese used emperor's reign-period year based on the sexagesimal cycle. But the Boxer rebellion of 1900 left the ruler of China, weakened and vulnerable to a challenge from Chinese Republicans, who intentionally used a continuous count of years to delegitimize the Qing Dynasty by refusing to use its years. The Gregorian calendar was adopted by the nascent Republic of China effective January 1, 1912 for official business, but the general populace continued to use the traditional calendar of the Qing Dynasty. The Kuomintang may have begun to number the years of their republic in 1929, regarding 1912 as year 1. When the Communists gained control of mainland China October 1, 1949, they simply continued using the Gregorian calendar, but now numbered the years in the Western manner, beginning with 1949. In China, the months of the Gregorian calendar are numbered 1-12 just like the months of the traditional calendar. |