Dropbox link to pdf:
It is based on a 125-day Guthay cycle and a 33-day Ral cycle as presented in the Merchant Calendar program. Found here:
http://www.athas.org/articles/the-merchant-s-calendar
No official 2e Dark Sun product ever detailed out the periods
of the phases of the moons, and I think the author of that program did a nice
job of it. It seems to be the most widely accepted program for that purpose, so
I patterned my calendar after it somewhat. (Even though I believe there could
be other acceptable periods of the moons.) I like the program because it is based on physics for plausible cycles of the two moons
When operated
correctly this disk calendar should follow the Merchant Calendar program very closely. Think
of it as an actual useable calendar that an Athansian could use. I may have a
few lines slightly off centered and whatnot, but if you check my calendar with
what is presented there you will find a close agreement.
The calendar
consists of three different discs: a Base Disc, a Ral Moon Disc, and a Sofean
cycle Indicator disc. It also includes
two needles.
Operating the calendar:
It is usually easiest to keep the High Sun at the top of the
disc to first orient yourself. It is also helpful to think as though you are
standing in the middle of the ring and then rotate the whole disc to the
desired month/moon phase/constellation/date so that it is now at the top. Also,
note all moons are assumed to wax from the right side to the left. (i.e. Waxing
the right side is light up, waning the left side is light up.) Ergo, this assumes a northern hemisphere
location for the cities Athas. Sorry, I did not make this consistent for those
who may be used to a southern hemisphere / moon-in-the-north-sky / upside-down-moon/
opposite-waxing and waning-moon. That may be my northern hemisphere privilege
showing through. (Though admittedly, I am under the assumption that when the
creators of Dark Sun designed it, they did so with a northern hemisphere
location in mind.)
Though many lunar calendars in Earth’s history start on a
new moon, and not a full moon, this calendar system starts the calendar system
with two full moons that are in conjunction on the same day as the summer
solstice (High Sun). This cycle repeats every 11 years.
Listed in order from outer most edger to inside
BASE DISC
This disc is made of several concentric rings that have
various pieces of information detailed throughout.
Month Ring – This ring has the names of all 15 months
of the Merchant’s Calendar aligned with the days of the years they fall on.
Day of Month Ring – This ring has every 5th
day identified of each month. It includes all 375 days – (I wasn’t going to identify
all 375 of these so I only did every 5th day.)
Day of Year Ring – This ring has every 5th
day of the year marked of 375 days. Again, I didn’t want to detail all 375 of
them so I did every 5th. This
is useful to subtract two dates from each other to know how many days apart
they are.
Constellation Name Ring – This ring contains all the
names of the constellations corresponding to when they fall in the year. This
was taken from The Ivory Triangle. This ring also has part of the indicator for
Sun Ascending, Sun Descending, High Sun, and Low Sun. Please also notice that
High Sun is placed above the line and Low Sun is placed below the line. And the
equinoxes are placed on the line.
Constellation Pattern Ring – Has all the shapes of
the constellations in the Zodiac. The idea here is that if you know what
constellation is in the sky you should be able to figure out the month and day
you are in by the phases of the moons.
Guthay Phases Ring – has the phases of Guthay
throughout the year. Since Guthay has an exact 125 days between full moons, it means
that there are exactly 3 full moons of Guthay in a year on Athas.
Inner Ring – this is the interior portion of the base
ring and will mostly be covered by the top discs except for where the upper
discs have cutout. The left side includes the names of the Endlean cycles. They
are also numbered 1-11. Each has an
arrow that is lined up with the arrow on the Ral Disc depending on the cycle
you are in. – more on that in the Ral Disc.
This ring also includes the information for the Free Year
that corresponds to the equivalent year of the Sofean cycle. Starting with FY
1, in Priest’s Defiance, the 77 unique combinations of Endlean and Sofean that
correspond to the Free Year are found here. I started with FY1 since I figured
that most campaigns will want to start at or around FY1. It is possible to convert to other years
prior to FY1 by just adding or subtracting 77 from the number listed on the
disc. I.e 77 becomes FY 0. 76 become FY -1.
Alternatively, if you want the corresponding King’s
Age/Year, you can add 25 to the number displayed on the disc.
The other items on there is an image of the two moons in
conjunction (occultation) which will be revealed every 11 years, i.e. every
time there is a year of Ral in the Endlean cycle. There also is two images of
the comet the Messenger, which appears in the year of FY7 and FY52.
It would be possible to have other base discs created or at
least this portion that match other periods in the game, but hopefully this is
the most useful time period.
RAL MOON DISC
This disc has the phases of the moon Ral for an entire year.
The indicator at the top with the arrow is aligned with the specific Endlean
cycle. This ring will rotate counter-clockwise each year to a new cycle and
then at the end of the eleventh year will return to the first year. Reading of the moons follows a clockwise
direction as the year progresses.
Because the number of full moons in a year is not exactly
divisible into a year, when the last full moon on this disc is
reached, you jump down to the lower portion and follow it until the year is completed. The phase of the moon, Ral, at the beginning
of the year will always be initially indicated by the outer phases of the ring. Starting with the one that is
aligned with line running from the center of the ring to Highest Sun.
Eclipse indicator.
I may add other info to the disc later.
SOFEAN CYCLE DISC.
This disc includes the names of the Sofean cycle that
correspond to the Free Year. More detail
needed.
Messenger indicator for the two years that it occurs between
FY1 and FY77
NEEDLES
Used to provide a straight line from the center of the map
to the edge of the map. Using the day of
the year ring, one can be subtracted from another to determine how many days
away an event is.
ASSEMBLING THE CALENDAR
You will need:
8.5 x 11 card stock. 2 pages to print it on.
A small brad or pin.
I’ve used the smallest Brad I could find. If you use a pin, you may need
some backer board or something to stick it in.
Scissors to make all the cutouts of the hatch marks
A standard paper hole punch. –
Assemble them in from largest on the bottom to smallest on
top with the two needles last.
I had some problems printing it and it is a tight fit on an 8.5 x 11 page. I recommend printing it with cardstock or photopaper. Cutting it will scissors and an exacto knife and using a three hole punch for the small holes. you will need a pin or a small brad for the middle that goes through the exact center of each circle. if it is punched correctly the circles will line up.
Very Cool Idea. Any chance you have a PDF of the Disc Page Components (ie month disc, moon disc etc). So they can be printed out. Also, what diameter did you use for each of the disc? I know it is a lot of questions, but I would like to construct one and thought others, who liked your idea, would as well. So it would be easier with a few more details. Thanks again for cool idea
ReplyDeleteI only have what is in the PDF in the dropbox link: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ebbme5hyvh069qs/print%20to%20pdf%20athas%20disc%20calendar%20v1.31.pdf?dl=0
ReplyDeleteI think the diameter is right at 8.5" so it should print on 8.5 x 11 sheet. Concentric rings on the inside of the base disk are .5" to 1" apart. Depending on the printer you have the base disk may have issues not printing all the way on the left and right edges but the rest should be ok.
The Ral ring is 4.5" and the Seofean cycle disk was 3.5"