Menu

Home Converter About Holidays

Today's Date

Gregorian Calendar

Ethiopian Calendar

ሰኞ
Mon
ማክሰ
Tue
ረቡዕ
Wed
ሐሙስ
Thu
ዓርብ
Fri
ቅዳሜ
Sat
እሑድ
Sun
Today
Holiday

This Month: Hidar (ህዳር)

Hidar is month 3 of the Ethiopian (Ge’ez) calendar and always has 30 days. In the Gregorian calendar it typically spans parts of November and December (exact range varies by year).

Quick Facts

  • Month number: 3 (after Tikimt)
  • Days: 30 (fixed)
  • Typical GC span: November–December
  • Week layout: 6×7 grid (Monday first on this site)

Holidays in Hidar

There are no nationwide fixed-date public holidays in our list for Hidar. Local religious observances are common. A major one is Hidar Tsion (Feast of St. Mary of Zion) on Hidar 21, especially in Axum. For all public holidays and their dual dates, see the Holidays page.

Want the exact Gregorian range for Hidar this year? Use the month selector above or the Ethiopian↔Gregorian converter to check any date.

Note: This site presents dates using deterministic, integer-based JDN math. See Methodology.

Understanding the Ethiopian Calendar

The Ethiopian calendar, also known as the Ge'ez calendar, is the principal calendar used in Ethiopia and also serves as the liturgical calendar for Christians in Eritrea and Ethiopia belonging to the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. It is a unique solar calendar that derives from the ancient Coptic calendar, which itself has roots in the even older Egyptian calendar system. Its distinct structure and dating make it a fascinating subject and a cornerstone of Ethiopian culture and identity.

The 13-Month Structure: A Year of Sunshine

One of the most defining features of the Ethiopian calendar is its division of the year into 13 months. The first twelve months each have exactly 30 days. The thirteenth month, known as Pagume (ጳጉሜ), consists of five days in a common year and six days in a leap year. This structure is the source of a popular tourism slogan, "Thirteen Months of Sunshine," highlighting the country's pleasant climate and unique timekeeping system.

This method of structuring the year is incredibly consistent. Unlike the Gregorian calendar with its variable month lengths (28, 29, 30, or 31 days), the Ethiopian system provides a predictable rhythm of 30-day months, making it mathematically simple and elegant.

Why is it Seven to Eight Years Behind?

A common point of curiosity is why the Ethiopian calendar year is seven to eight years behind the Gregorian calendar. The discrepancy arises from a difference in the calculation of the date of the Annunciation, the announcement by the angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary that she would conceive and become the mother of Jesus Christ. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church holds that this event occurred in 7 AD, whereas the Roman Catholic Church, which influenced the Gregorian calendar, calculated it to have occurred earlier. This fundamental disagreement on the starting point for the life of Christ leads to the significant difference in the year number.

The Ethiopian calendar's leap year calculation is also more straightforward than the Gregorian system. A leap year occurs every four years without exception, adding a sixth day to the month of Pagume. This differs from the Gregorian calendar's more complex rule, which skips leap years for years divisible by 100 but not by 400 (e.g., 1900 was not a leap year).

Cultural and Religious Significance

The calendar is not merely an administrative tool; it is deeply interwoven with the cultural and religious fabric of Ethiopia. For the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, it is indispensable for determining the dates of fasts, feasts, and religious ceremonies. Major movable feasts like Fasika (Easter) are calculated using its ancient rules, and the dates of saints' days are fixed within its months.

This living calendar connects modern Ethiopians to their ancient heritage. It serves as a daily reminder of the nation's long history, its distinct cultural path, and the enduring influence of the Orthodox Church. While the Gregorian calendar is used for international business and travel, the Ethiopian calendar remains paramount for daily life, social events, and national identity.