(Due to different transliterations of the Arabic alphabet, other
spellings of the months are possible.)
Each month starts when the lunar crescent is first seen (by a human
observer's eye) after a new moon.
Although new moons may be calculated quite precisely, the actual
visibility of the crescent is much more difficult to predict. It
depends on factors such as weather, the optical properties of the
atmosphere, and the location of the observer. It is therefore very
difficult to give accurate information in advance about when a new
month will start.
Furthermore, some Muslims depend on a local sighting of the moon,
whereas others depend on a sighting by authorities somewhere in the
Muslim world. Both are valid Islamic practices, but they may lead to
different starting days for the months.
So you can't print an
Islamic calendar in advance?
Not a reliable one. However, calendars are printed for planning
purposes, but such calendars are based on estimates of the visibility
of the lunar crescent, and the actual month may start a day earlier or
later than predicted in the printed calendar.
Different methods for estimating the calendars are used.
Some sources mention a crude system in which all odd numbered
months have 30 days and all even numbered months have 29 days with an
extra day added to the last month in 'leap years' (a concept otherwise
unknown in the calendar). Leap years could then be years in which the
number year mod 30 is one of the following: 2, 5, 7, 10, 13,
16, 18, 21, 24, 26, or 29. (This is the algorithm used in the calendar
program of the Gnu Emacs editor.)
Such a calendar would give an average month length of 29.53056
days, which is quite close to the synodic month of 29.53059 days, so on
the average it would be quite accurate, but in any given month it
is still just a rough estimate.
Better algorithms for estimating the visibility of the new moon
have been devised.
How does one count years?
Years are counted since the Hijra, that is, Mohammed's emigration
to Medina in AD 622. On 16 July (Julian calendar) of that year, AH 1
started (AH = Anno Hegirae = year of the Hijra).
In the year AD 2003 we have witnessed the start of Islamic year AH
1424.
Note that although only 2003-622=1381 years have passed in the
Christian calendar, 1423 years have passed in the Islamic calendar,
because its year is consistently shorter (by about 11 days) than the
tropical year used by the Christian calendar.
When will the Islamic
calendar overtake the Gregorian calendar?
As the year in the Islamic calendar is about 11 days shorter than
the year in the Christian calendar, the Islamic years are slowly
gaining in on the Christian years. But it will be many years before
the two coincide. The 1st day of the 5th month of C.E. 20874 in
the Gregorian calendar will also be (approximately) the 1st day of the
5th month of AH 20874 of the Islamic calendar.
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