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calendarios

Calendarios, or calendars, are systems for organizing days into units of time—days, weeks, months, and years—used to plan events, track time, and regulate social and religious life. They can be civil, for everyday administration, or religious, to observe holy days. Most calendars are linked to the cycles of the sun or the Moon and may be solar, lunar, or lunisolar. They often include leap years or intercalary periods to keep the calendar aligned with the seasons.

Historically, calendars emerged from agricultural needs and astronomical observations. The Julian calendar, introduced by Julius Caesar

Major calendar types include solar calendars, such as the Gregorian calendar, which aims to approximate the

In contemporary use, calendars exist in physical form and as digital tools, integrated with scheduling software

in
45
BCE,
established
a
365-day
year
with
a
1‑day
leap
year
every
four
years.
By
the
16th
century
a
drift
of
about
10
days
prompted
the
Gregorian
reform
of
1582,
which
dropped
10
days
and
refined
leap-year
rules:
years
divisible
by
4
are
leap
years,
except
that
centennial
years
are
not
unless
divisible
by
400.
The
reform
spread
gradually
and
became
the
basis
for
the
modern
civil
calendar
used
in
most
of
the
world.
solar
year;
lunar
calendars,
such
as
the
Islamic
calendar,
which
follows
the
cycles
of
the
Moon;
and
lunisolar
calendars,
such
as
the
Hebrew
and
traditional
Chinese
calendars,
which
combine
both
rhythms
and
may
insert
leap
months
or
days
to
stay
aligned
with
the
seasons.
and
time-zone
data.
They
support
cultural
and
religious
observances
and
are
standardized
for
interchange
in
software,
printing,
and
everyday
life.