Reference Table – Hybrid / Symbolic Calendars

Calendar NameRegion / CivilizationApprox. IntroductionStructure / CyclesPurpose / Symbolic ComponentsNotes / Legacy
Maya Calendar System (Haabʼ, Tzolkʼin, Calendar Round, Long Count)Maya civilization (Mesoamerica)At least 1st millennium BCE; Long Count epoch starts at equivalent of −3114 BCE in proleptic Gregorian calendarTzolkʼin = 260-day sacred cycle (20 day-names × 13 numbers); Haabʼ = 365-day civil solar count (18×20 + 5 extra “Wayeb” days); Calendar Round = combination of Tzolk’in & Haab’ (~52 Haabʼ years); Long Count = linear day count from epochRitual, prophecy, historiography; tracking mythic time and events; astronomical observations encoded (Venus, eclipse tables) as auxiliary infoSignificant in archaeological and cultural continuity; Maya inscriptions; modern interest; some Maya communities maintain ritual use; source of popular fascination (2012 etc.)
Aztec / Mexica Calendar (Xiuhpohualli / Tonalpohualli)Central Mexico (Aztec Empire)Late Postclassic period (14-16th century CE) though inherits from earlier Mesoamerican systemsRitual Tonalpohualli (260-day cycle) + solar Xiuhpohualli (365 days, 18 × 20 + 5 nemontemi days) + 52-year “calendar round” combining both; symbolic deities associated with days; period endings are ritual-significantUsed for divination, civic/ritual scheduling, imperial legitimacy; Sun Stone (Cal- lendar Stone) built as monumental symbolic statementThe Sun Stone is a major icon of Mexican cultural heritage; these calendar cycles still taught and shown in museum contexts; basis for traditional festivals and cultural identity
Chinese Sexagenary Cycle + Calendrical SymbolismChina and cultural sphere (Korea, Vietnam, etc.)At least by Han dynasty (2nd century BCE)Overlay of 60-year cycle (10 Heavenly Stems + 12 Earthly Branches) onto years; used names for years, days; paired with lunisolar calendar for festivals etc.Astrology, naming, omens; symbolic relationships between time, elements, zodiac; social ritual and identityStill used: zodiac animal years, traditional astrology, names; cultural festivals anchored to symbolic cycles
Balinese Pawukon / Dual CalendarsBali (Indonesia)Pre-Hindu, then Hindu-influenced eras, ongoingPawukon = 210-day ritual cycle of overlapping weeks of various lengths; Bali also retains Saka lunisolar calendar; dual calendars in operationRitual scheduling, temple function, festivals; symbolic balance; community identityBalinese Hindu communities still use these systems for ceremony; visitors observe cycle structure; shows living hybrid calendar usage
Other Symbolic CalendarsVarious (Mesoamerican, indigenous Americas, ritual calendars in Asia/Africa)Varies by cultureMultiple overlapping symbolic cycles, often combining ritual count, agricultural/political count, mythic epochsSymbolism, cosmology, identity; less about civil administration, more about rituals, marking sacred timeMany lost via colonialism; some preserved in indigenous traditions; increasingly revived or reconstructed; source of art, ritual, identity

Image Links – Hybrid / Symbolic Calendars

File:Reproduction of Aztec Sun Stone.jpg

Ancient Aztec Stone Compass

File:Maya calendar (Hunab-Ku).svg

Maya calendar