Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - What year is Ren Xu?

What year is Ren Xu?

Ren Xunian can be abbreviated as the Year of the Dog, and the 59th year of a cycle in China traditional calendar is called Ren Xunian, such as 1862, 1922, 1982, etc. The calculation method is that the number of calendar years is divided by more than 60, or the number of years is divided by 2 and then divided by 10, or the number of calendar years is divided by 12. These years are years. The second year is 2042.

Dogs are the earliest domesticated livestock and friends of human beings. Dogs like to be close to people, serve faithfully, obey their masters' orders and understand people's simple intentions. Dogs sometimes make important contributions to human beings, even without fear of sacrifice, so they are deeply loved by people.

The so-called chronology of dry branches means that dry branches are literally equivalent to trunks and branches and leaves. In ancient China, the sky was dominant and the earth was subordinate. The connection between the sky and the trunk is called heavenly stems, and the connection between the ground and branches is called earthly branches. Together, it is called heavenly stems and earthly branches, or "dry branch" for short.

The chronology of cadres and branches began in beginning of spring in the twenty-four solar terms, and the chronology of cadres and branches is the calendar chronology of cadres and branches. The same is true of the official almanac (that is, the Yellow Calendar). After the Republic of China, the emperor's year number was abandoned, and the lunar calendar can only record the year with dry branches, which ranges from the first day of the first month to New Year's Eve, which is indisputable. Lunar calendar and trunk calendar are two different calendars, which are different in the starting point of a year, the division rules of months and the number of days in a year. Due to the use of the Gregorian calendar after the Republic of China, many people lack calendar knowledge, so they often confuse the calendar with the lunar calendar.