Almanac. Or Almanack. Or even Almanach. It doesn’t
matter how you spell it, we don’t know for sure where the word comes from. The al
bit at the beginning would point to an Arabic etymology – it means the –
as in algebra, alcohol or alchemy. The latter part of the
word could come from menākh, and al-menākh appears in Pedro de
Alcala’s Arabic-Castilian Vocabulista (1505), referring to the climate,
with manah (probably intended as the same word) as a word for a sundial,
but the word isn’t found elsewhere in Arabic. Walter Skeat, in his Concise
Etymological Dictionary (1882), is unequivocal that the word has no
connection with Arabic whatsoever.
Manuscript strip almanac - 1433 |
The Greek άλμενεχιαχοīς – almenichiaká
– was used to refer to the ancient Egyptians’ use of horoscopes, astrology
and the powers of their gods to cure diseases but this does seem to equate to
our sense of an almanac. Samuel Johnson, in his Dictionary, has the
Arabic al and either the Hebrew manah – ‘count, compute’, or the Greek
μην – ‘month’, (although he does not say why he thinks the word should be derived
from two completely different languages). The first use of the word appears in
Latin, in Roger Bacon’s Opus Majus (1267), where he mentions ancient
astronomers discussing tables that are called almanacs –
“In expositione tabularum, quae almanac vocantur.”
Iohannes Regiomontanus - Kalendarium - 1482 |
A calendar is simply a list
of days whereas an almanac has further information about those days - the
occurrence of holidays and moveable feasts, astronomical and astrological data
and specific information of use to specialist groups, e.g. sailors, farmers,
gardeners and so forth. Old prayer books quite often contained calendars in
which the fixed saints’ days were recorded, as these were intended to be used
over a number of years, whereas an almanac was produced for a specific year,
and contained information for that year alone – the conjunction of planets, the
dates of eclipses, the positions of the Sun and the Moon, etc. There are no
extant examples of the earliest almanacs remaining, but Robert Plot, in his Natural
History of Staffordshire (1686) describes the Danish ‘clogg’
almanacs brought to this country by the Vikings, with a representation of a
facsimile of one of these.
Example of a Clogg Almanac |
These were square sticks of box, or some other
hardwood, about eight or twelve inches in length, with a ring at the upper end,
by which they could be hung up. On each of the four sides notches corresponding
to days were inscribed, with a larger notch representing Sundays, with three
months shown on each of the four sides of each stick. Various dots, marks and
symbols represent an aid to calculating the phases of the moon and the cycle of
the Sun, and for counting the days throughout the year. Alongside the marks are
hieroglyphs representing the Saints’ days, with an attribute of a particular
saint used to mark their day – a lover’s knot for Valentine, a harp for David,
shoes for Crispin, keys for Peter and so on. The northmen called these
runesticks, runestaffs, reinstocks, runici, staves, stocks and clogs, and
similar runic carvings were placed on pilgrim staffs, with the pagan symbols
replaced by Christian ones from the fourth century onwards.
Table from Regiomontanus - 1482 |
The first printed
almanacs date from 1447, published in Mainz by Johannes Gutenberg (eight years
before his famous Bible of 1455), and from 1472, almanacs were produced
by John Muller, under the name Iohannes Regiomontanus, in Nuremberg, Germany,
in which he gave the characters of the year and the months, together with
tables for calculating eclipses and so on, for thirty years in advance.
A Shepherds' Kalendar - 1908 |
A Sheapheard’s
Kalander, translated from French, was the first almanac printed in English,
in 1497, with verses for each month and extraneous astronomical and
astrological information. This information was used in an attempt to predict
forthcoming events, and formed a separate section of the almanacs; these were called
prognostications.
Jaspar Laet - Prognostication for 1524 |
From the earliest times, all manner of wizards,
conjurors, seers, mystics, scryers, astrologers and crystal-gazers have sought
to look into the future; an understandable, if somewhat impracticable,
undertaking (let’s just take it as a given, for now at least, that time tends
be a linear, one-way sort of a thing). For the most part, the prognostications
of the prognosticators were not good things - wars, famines, disasters, the
death of kings, which were not really unusual occurrences in the late middle
ages, and the sorts of things that you’d be lucky to get an even money bet on
with any half-decent bookmaker that they’d be happening again in the very near
future.
Wynkyn de Worde - Prognostication for 1498 |
Even today, you can make quite a comfortable living in the prognostications
trade if you have very, very few scruples when it comes to separating the
gullible from their savings, and this was just as true, if not truer, in the
times when almost everybody believed that their fate was written in the stars.
Anatomy of the Body Governed by the Constellations |
At a basic level, this might only involve selling printed charts of the
calculated movements of the assorted rocks and balls of gas in the sky to the
hard-of-thinking, although you don’t need to be a prognosticator to recognise
that here was a reasonably guaranteed route to a sizeable increase of your
disposable income.
Tomorrow – I foresee more almanacs in your chart.
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