The Cham calendar (Cham: ꨧê¨Âꨥꨪ sakawi) is a lunisolar calendar used by the Cham people of Vietnam since ancient times. Its origins is based on Saka Raja calendar which was influenced by the Shaka era (78 CE) Indian Hindu calendar, with the current standard called Sakawi Cham likely instituted during the reign of Po Rome of the Champa kingdom.
The Cham calendar (Sakawi Cam/Cham) has a system of a set of revolving cycles of days, weeks, months and years. The Cham month consists of two lunar phases of 15 days each. The 1st half denotes the full moon phase called Bingun (à Âukla paká¹£a), while the new moon phase is called Kanem (Ká¹Âá¹£á¹Âa paká¹£a). The 12 year cycle similar to Chinese zodiac is referred to as Nasak(12 Nasak from 27/28 Naká¹£atra). The Cham calendar known as Sakawi Cam is a term used to encompass two calendar variants.
The calendar is used as an agricultural almanac to ascertain the time of cultivation. The biggest Cham festival known as Kate falls on the 1st day of the seventh Cham month (9th Imlek month).
The names of the days of the Cham week were derived from their Sanskrit names used in the traditional Hindu calendar.
The length of the month: the full month (balan tapÃÂk) has 30 days and the hollow month (balan u) has 29 days.
Balan Mak [MÃÂgha]
The Cham zodiac is similar to the Vietnamese zodiac in its usage and arrangement of animals, but replaces the Monkey with the turtle (kra); the cat with the rabbit (Tapay).
This variant is influenced by of 12 Arabic lunar months system consisting of 29-30 days. It uses an 8 year cycle called Ikessarak. This variant is used for certain Islamic festivals observed by the Bani Chams.
Important festivals in the Cham calendar: