Getic calendar

The Getic calendar (Sundish:, tr. gug) is a used as the primary system of timekeeping in the Orient: Hatar and the wider Kaurissemite World which came under its cultural and religious influence. Alongside the Infernal calendar of the Occident, the two calendars are the major calendars used across the world. The calendar was established during the Council of Narau in 710, presided over by Pope Getica II, the namesake of the calendar. The Getic calendar has been used throughout the world since then with relatively little modification.

The Getic uses the  of Iosus Kauriss as a reference point: Smija Frauja (SF, "time of the Lord") denotes years from the start of this  and Before Kauriss (BK) for preceding years. There is no in this scheme: the year 1 SF when Kauriss is traditionally believed to be born comes immediately after 1 BK. In recent times, the terms Before Common Era (BCE) and Common Era (CE) are used to replace the distinctly Kaurissemite calendar era, most commonly in non-Kaurissemite or explicitly secular contexts.

As an arithmetic calendar, each year in the Getic calendar consists exactly 12 months of 28-31 days each, totaling at 365 days per year. A consisting of 366 days occurs every four years, during which a  is added onto the second month of Andeisine as an extra day (29 Andeisine) to minimize calendar deviation from the. The calendar cycle repeats every 400 years (146,097 days), 303 of which are regular years of 365 days each whereas 97 are leap years of 366 days each. From this, the length of a mean calendar year is 365+97/400 days; or 365.2425 days; or 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes and 12 seconds.

Months
The Getic calendar divides a year into 12 months, each consisting of 28-31 days.