Template:Contains special characters Template:Infobox month Mesori (Template:Langx, Masōri) is the twelfth month of the ancient Egyptian and Coptic calendars.

It is identical to Nahase (Template:Langx, Nähase) in the Ethiopian calendar.

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NameEdit

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The ancient and Coptic month is also known as MesoreTemplate:Sfnp (Template:Langx, Mesorḗ).

In ancient Egypt, the months were variously described. Usually, the months of the lunar calendar were listed by their placement in the seasons related to the flooding of the Nile, so that Mesori is most commonly described as the fourth month of the season of the Harvest (4 Šmw),Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp variously transliterated as Template:Nowrap or Shomu. These lunar months were also named after their most important feasts,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp so that Mesori was also known as the "Opening" or "Opener of the Year"Template:Sfnp (Wp Rnpt) or Template:Nowrap.Template:Efn The month was also personified as the deity of its festival,Template:Sfnp which in late sources is given as Ra-Horakhty (Rꜥ Ḥr Ꜣḫty, "RaHorus of the Horizons").Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp

The solar civil calendar borrowed the festivals of the earlier lunar calendar, though sometimes under other names.Template:Sfnp These festival names are increasingly attested after Egypt's Persian occupation.Template:Sfnp The most common name continued to be the "Opening of the Year", although its little-attested synonym "Birth of the Sun" (Mswt Rꜥ) or Template:Nowrap became the namesake of the Ptolemaic Greek and Coptic month.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Efn

In Egyptian Arabic, the Coptic month is known as Misra<ref name=a2z>Template:Harvp.</ref> or Mesra<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> (Template:Langx, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).

The Ethiopian month is sometimes also transliterated Nehase,<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> Nehasa,Template:Sfnp or Nehasie.<ref>Template:Citation.</ref>

Egyptian calendarsEdit

AncientEdit

Template:Further Until the Template:Nowrap the beginning of the months of the lunar calendar were based on observation,Template:Sfnp beginning at dawn on the morning when a waning crescent moon could no longer be seen.Template:Sfnp The intercalary month was added every few years as needed to maintain the heliacal rising of Sirius within the month.Template:Sfnp According to the civil calendar, the month fell in order with the rest regardless of the state of the moon. It always consisted of 30 days, each individually named and devoted to a particular patron deity, and was always followed by an intercalary month, although it slowly cycled relative to the solar year and Gregorian date owing to the lack of leap days until the Ptolemaic and Roman eras.

Torches were ritually carried on the 28th day of the month in preparation for the spiritual danger of the intercalary month that followed.Template:Sfnp

New Year's Eve ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) was observed on the 30th day of the month.Template:Sfnp

Once the holidays were transferred to the civil calendar, Wep Renpet proper was celebrated on the first day of ThothTemplate:Sfnp by at least the Middle Kingdom,Template:Sfnp though the last month of the year continued to bear its name. The holiday honored the birth and youth of the personification of the sun and its fight against evil. Royal artisans were freed from work,Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn temples lit torches to banish darkness and its demons, spells concerning the crushing of enemies were cast, and ritual combat occurred during a "water procession" on temple lakes.Template:Sfnp People threw ink into water, cleansed themselves, and painted their eyes green.Template:Sfnp It was a common occasion for pharaonic coronations during the Middle Kingdom and the occasion of ceremonies of renewed kingship in other eras, occasioning his officials to present him with new year's gifts.Template:Sfnp This practice extended to commoners presenting gifts—such as rings, scarabs, and bottles inscribed "Happy New Year's" (Wpt Rnpt Nfrt)—to one another during the Saite Period.Template:Sfnp

In Ptolemaic Egypt, the festivities began on the last day of Mesori and ran through the first nine days of Thoth.Template:Sfnp

CopticEdit

Template:Further In the present-day Coptic calendar, Mesori has fallen between August 7 and September 5<ref name=a2z/> since ADTemplate:Nbsp1900 ([[Anno Martyrum|Template:Sc]]Template:Nbsp1616)<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> and will continue to do so until ADTemplate:Nbsp2100 ([[Anno Martyrum|Template:Sc]]Template:Nbsp1816).Template:Sfnp In that year, the Gregorian calendar's lack of a leap day will cause the Coptic month to advance another day relative to it<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> and it will run from August 8 to September 6. The Coptic liturgical calendar of the month consists of:<ref>Template:Citation.</ref>

Coptic Julian Gregorian Commemorations
Mesori

1

July

25

August

7

  • Martyrdom of St. Apoli, Son of Justus.
  • Departure of St. Cyril V, the 112th Pope of Alexandria.
2 26 8
  • Departure of St. Pa'esa (Athanasia) of Minuf
  • Martyrdom of St. Menas
3 27 9
4 28 10
  • Departure of Hezekiah the King.
  • Consecration of the Church of St. Anthony the Great.
5 29 11
  • Departure of St. John the Soldier.
6 30 12
  • Martyrdom of St. Julietta.
  • St. Besa, disciple of St. Shenute
7 31 13
8 August

1

14
  • Martyrdom of the Sts. Lazarus, Salomi, His Wife and their Children.
  • Confession of St. Peter, the Apostle, that Christ is the Son of the Living God.
9 2 15
  • Martyrdom of St. Ari, the Priest of Shatanouf.
10 3 16
  • Martyrdom of St. Matra.
  • Martyrdom of St. Pigebs (Bekhebs).
  • Martyrdom of St. Yuhannis
11 4 17
  • Departure of St. Moisis, Bishop of Ouseem.
12 5 18
13 6 19
14 7 20
  • Commemoration of the great miracle, the Lord had manifested during the papacy of St. Theophilus, the 23rd Pope of Alexandria.
15 8 21
  • Departure of St. Mary known as Marina, the Ascetic.
  • Departure of St. Habib Girgis.
16 9 22
17 10 23
  • Martyrdom of St. James, the Soldier.
18 11 24
19 12 25
  • Translocation of the Body of St. Macarius to His Monastery in Scetis.
20 13 26
  • Martyrdom of the Seven Young Men of Ephesus.
21 14 27
22 15 28
  • Departure of Micah, the Prophet.
  • Martyrdom of St. Hadid of Giza.
  • Concentration of the Church of St. Mohrael.
23 16 29
  • Martyrdom of thirty thousand Christians in Alexandria.
  • Martyrdom of St. Damian in Antioch.
24 17 30
25 18 31
  • Departure of St. Bessarion, disciple of St. Anthony
  • Departure of St. Macarius III, the 114th Pope of Alexandria.
26 19 September

1

  • Martyrdom of St. Moses and his Sister Sarah.
  • Martyrdom of St. Agabius, the Soldier, and his Sister Thecla.
27 20 2
  • Martyrdom of Sts. Benjamin and his sister Eudexia.
  • Martyrdom of St. Mary, the Armenian.
28 21 3
29 22 4
  • Martyrdom of Saints Athanasius, the Bishop, Gerasimus (Jarasimus), and Theodotus.
  • Arrival of the Holy Relic of St. John the Short, to the Wilderness of Scetis.
30 23 5

Ethiopian calendarEdit

Template:Further In the present-day Ethiopian calendar, Nahase is identical to the Coptic month of Mesori, falling between August 7 and September 5.Template:Sfnp It will also shift forward one day relative to the Gregorian calendar in ADTemplate:Nbsp2100<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> (2092Template:Nbsp[[Ethiopian calendar|Template:Sc]]).Template:Sfnp

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

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BibliographyEdit

Template:Coptic months