Inheritance of the Nadrilian Calendar and Timekeeping
The Nadrilian calendar was also adopted in its full form by the Yuoric people. The calendar consisted of 12 months of 30 days each, with months containing 5 weeks each, and weeks of 6 days. It included one cultural observance festival of 5 days during every change of the year from winter to spring. Its days totaled 365 days per year. Although the Yuoric lords changed some of the meanings of the festivals and holy days, the Nadrilian calendar was well-received and quickly became standardized throughout the lands to which the Yuoric communities migrated.
The Nadrilian calendar marks "
Year Zero" at the dramatic astronomical event known most commonly as
The Second Moon Death. At this time, the smaller moon, known in the Nadrilian language as
Vaden, gradually begins to break and crumble apart. After three years of fragmentation, it is gone. The Nadrilis Empire recorded this astronomical event as
An Demenuurhiah Vadaenhemur, translated roughly as "
The Sad Ending of Noble Vaden." The event is abbreviated in record-keeping as "DV". The Nadrilian Calendar is reset to Year Zero DV. As years are recorded in Nadrilian writing (and therefor Yuoric writing eventually), the are proceeded by the notation "
DV" to mark the annual time as it relates to the known astronomical event of the disappearance of the world’s previous second moon.
The Nadrilian writers recorded details about changes in the tides of the seas that occurred at the time of the Second Moon Death, and also some changes in the ways and habits of animals and even men. The Nadrilian records which still exist, written mostly in red ink on animal skins and preserved by a technique now lost, show that a great confusion endured about the reason of Vaden’s destruction. Nadrilian astronomers seemed to be fascinated with the topic judging by the frequency of the record on it. Many thought it a bad omen, and the coming of the conquering Yuors in the following century may have suggested that the omens were true.
The Yuoric people, having no written record of their lives before the 2nd Century DV, gave little historical comment about the moon’s disappearance.
The larger moon that still hangs in the night sky is called
Raed in the Yuoric language. Small fragments of the broken moon Vaden can still be seen on some nights.