Season of the Emergence
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per--t — Season of the Emergence in hieroglyphs |
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The Season of the Emergence (Egyptian prt), or Peret [1], etc, was the second or Winter season of the ancient Egyptian calendar (running from "roughly mid-November to mid-March."[2]), following the Season of the Inundation. It received its name because this was the period when the Nile flood waters receded, and allowed the Egyptians to plant their fields.[3]
The ancient Egyptians used this name in both their lunar and their civil calendars. The months of the lunar calendar are roughly equivalent to the period from the middle of November to the middle of March. Since the civil calendar moved through the seasons over time, losing about one day every four years, this season does not continuously match any part of the modern calendar; it consists of the four 30-day months of Tybi, Mechir, Phamenoth, and Pharmuthi.
It is followed by the Season of the Harvest or Shemu.
[edit] References
- ^ Nigel C. Strudwick, Texts from the Pyramid Age, SBL 2005, p.103
- ^ David P. Silverman, Ancient Egypt, Duncan Baird Publishers, London 1997. p.93
- ^ Leiden University