Chronos, Kairos and Aion are the three deities of time, events and epic destinies. Here is the multi-religious and multicultural calendar!

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holiday ephemeris calendar

The schedule in brief from D-2 to D+5

  • April 4, 2025, : Hanshi Festival
  • April 5, 2025, : Qingming Jie
  • April 5, 2025, : Singmogil
  • April 6, 2025: Shakri Day

The complete interactive calendar

Holidays of the month

  • April 4, 2025 (1 event)

    April 4, 2025

    begin the Hanshi festival (known as the cold meal festival). Since the 7th century BCE, the tradition has been to avoid the light of fires even when preparing meals. The origins of this tradition are quite vague and would come from the noble Jin, Jie Zitui, between romance and reality of the story. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #4April #JieZitui #Hanshi #China

  • April 5, 2025 (2 events)

    April 5, 2025

    Today, the Chinese celebrate Qingmingjie (purity and light). They clean the graves to avoid wandering souls. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar 1TP5China #5April

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    April 5, 2025

    Today, Koreans celebrate Singmogil. In the aftermath of the Korean War, the South Korean government decided to celebrate Tree Day to address the destruction and deforestation caused by the conflict. #mythology #myth #legend #korea #calendar #5April #singmogil

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  • April 6, 2025 (1 event)

    April 6, 2025

    Today, Thais celebrate Chakri Day. This day marks the founding and establishment of the great Chakri dynasty in 1782 by Phra Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke. He was also known as King Rama I and declared Bangok, then called Krung Thep, the capital of Siam. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #6April #thailand #ChakriDay

  • April 12, 2025 (1 event)

    April 12, 2025

    Today, Thais celebrate the Buddhist New Year for three days, Songkran. Dances, meals and religious traditions, this festival is also the occasion of a huge water fight. #mythology #myth #legend #April 12 #thailand #songkran

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  • April 13, 2025 (3 events)

    April 13, 2025

    Today, Khmer people celebrate the new year, Chaul Chhnam Thmey. The ceremonies last three days, during the first day, a new devata in animal form comes to take care of the world for the coming year. Afterwards, the Buddha statues are bathed and perfumed, gifts are given to the less fortunate and the ancestors are honored. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #April 13 #CaulChhnamThmey #Khmer

    April 13, 2025

    Today, Laotians celebrate Pimai, the new year. Like its Tai-Kadai counterparts, it is a water festival, corresponding to the hottest time of the year, shortly before the start of the rainy season. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #April 13 #Laos #May

    April 13, 2025

    Today, the Burmese celebrate Thingyan, the new year and water festival. A cannon is fired and people come out with containers full of water and branches of thabyay, to sprinkle the water on the ground with a prayer. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #burma #hingyan

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  • April 14, 2025 (1 event)

    April 14, 2025

    Today, Koreans celebrate Black Day (in contrast to Valentine's Day and White Day a month later). People who did not receive gifts on White Day gather to eat jajangmyeon, noodles with black bean sauce. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #April 14 #BlackDay #Korea

  • April 15, 2025 (1 event)


    April 15, 2025

    On this day, the Aztecs began the month of Huey Tozoztli, dedicated to the god Tlaloc. Tlaloc was the god of fertility (of the earth), water and good health. His kindness was essential to guarantee good harvests and avoid bad weather that could ruin them during this month. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #12May #HueyTozoztli #Aztec #Tlaloc

Multicultural and multi-religious almanac

An almanac is a calendar showing the main dates of the calendar, the religious holidays, bearing ephemerides such as the phases of the moon or the duration of the days (lunar and solar calendars).

A calendar is a system for marking dates according to time. Such a system was invented by men to divide and organize time over long periods. The observation of the periodic phenomena of the environment in which they lived — such as the daily movement of the shadow, the return of the seasons or the lunar cycle — served as the first references for organizing the agricultural, social and religious life of societies.

The calendar used today in most of the world is the Gregorian calendar. In everyday language, an ephemeris designates what happens daily; the ephemeris of the day is the list of the significant events of this day.