Traditional Chinese timekeeping explained

Traditional Chinese timekeeping refers to the time standards for divisions of the day used in China until the introduction of the Shixian calendar in 1628 at the beginning of the Qing dynasty.[1]

Han-era system

Dating from the Han dynasty, the third chapter of the Huainanzi outlines 15 hours during daylight. These are dawn, morning light, daybreak, early meal, feast meal, before noon, noon, short shadow, evening, long shadow, high setting, lower setting, sunset, twilight, rest time .[2] These correspond to each hour from 06:00 to 20:00 on the 24-hour clock.

Eastern Han to Ming system

The system used between the Eastern Han and Ming dynasties comprised two standards to measure the time in a solar day. Times during daylight were measured in the shí-kè standard, and at night were measured using the gēng-diǎn standard.

Heavenly stems! colspan="5"
Earthly branches
Stem Gēng Branch Shí
(traditional)
Shí
(Song dynasty)
1jiǎ19:12yìgēng123:0000:00
221:36èrgēng2chǒu01:0002:00
3bǐng00:00sāngēng3yín03:0004:00
4dīng02:24sìgēng4mǎo05:0006:00
504:48wǔgēng5chén07:0008:00
607:12morning609:0010:00
7gēng09:36midmorning711:0012:00
8xīn12:00noon8wèi13:0014:00
9rén14:24late afternoon9shēn15:0016:00
10guǐ16:48evening10yǒu17:0018:00
1119:0020:00
12hài21:0022:00

During daylight: shí-kè

The Chinese: shí-kè ( -) system is derived from the position of the sun.

Dual hour: shí

Each Chinese: shí was of the time between one midnight and the next, making it roughly double the modern hour. These dual hours are named after the earthly branches in order, with midnight in the first Chinese: shí. This first Chinese: shí traditionally occurred from 23:00 to 01:00 on the 24-hour clock, but was changed during the Song dynasty so that it fell from 00:00 to 02:00, with midnight at the beginning.

Starting from the end of the Tang dynasty into the Song dynasty, each Chinese: shí was divided in half, with the first half called the initial hour and the second called the central hour . The change of the midnight hour in the Song dynasty could thus be stated as going from the central hour of the first Chinese: shí to the initial hour of the first Chinese: shí .

One-hundredth of a day: kè

Days were also divided into smaller units, called Chinese: . One Chinese: was usually defined as of a day until 1628, though there were short periods before then where days had 96, 108 or 120 Chinese: .[3] Chinese: literally means "mark" or "engraving", referring to the marks placed on sundials[4] or water clocks[5] to help keep time.

Using the definition of Chinese: as of a day, each Chinese: is equal to 0.24 hours, 14.4 minutes, or 14 minutes 24 seconds. Every Chinese: shí contains 8 Chinese: , with 7 or 8 full Chinese: and partial beginning or ending Chinese: . These fractional Chinese: are multiples of Chinese: , or 2 minutes 24 seconds. The 7 or 8 full Chinese: within each Chinese: shí were referred to as "major Chinese: " . Each of a Chinese: was called a "minor Chinese: " .[6]

Describing the time during daylight

Both Chinese: shí and Chinese: were used to describe the time, through one of two ways:

  1. Eight Chinese: mode. Before the Tang dynasty, the Chinese: shí were noted first, then each of the major Chinese: were counted up to 8.
    1. As an example, counting by major Chinese: from the first Chinese: shí to the second: zǐ, zǐ yī kè, zǐ èr kè, zǐ sān kè, zǐ sì kè, zǐ wǔ kè, zǐ liù kè, zǐ qī kè, zǐ bā kè, chǒu .
    2. The time xū yī kè would be read as "1 Chinese: after Chinese: xū shí", making the time 20:09:36.
  2. Four Chinese: mode. After the Tang dynasty's division of the Chinese: shí, it was still noted first, but with an added description of which half of the Chinese: shí the Chinese: was taking place in. Since this narrowed the range of the possible major Chinese: down to four, it was only necessary to specify the major Chinese: between one and four.
    1. This changes the first example above to: zǐ initial, zǐ initial 1 kè, zǐ initial 2 kè, zǐ initial 3 kè, zǐ initial 4 kè, zǐ central, zǐ central 1 kè, zǐ central 2 kè, zǐ central 3 kè, zǐ central 4 kè, chǒu initial .
    2. The time sì central 3 kè would be read as "the third Chinese: in the second half of ", corresponding to the time 11:31:12.

Smaller time units

Fēn

Chinese: were subdivided into smaller units, called fēn . The number of fēn in each Chinese: varied over the centuries, but a fēn was generally defined as of a day. Using this definition, one fēn is equal to 14.4 seconds. This also means that a fēn is of a major Chinese: and of a minor Chinese: .

Miǎo

In 1280, Guo Shoujing's Shòushí Calendar subdivided each fēn into 100 miǎo .[7] Using the definition of fēn as 14.4 seconds, each miǎo was 144 milliseconds long.

Shùn and niàn

Each fen was subdivided into shùn, and shùn were subdivided into niàn .

The Mahāsāṃghika, translated into Chinese as the Móhēsēngzhī Lǜ (Taishō Tripiṭaka 1425) describes several units of time, including shùn or shùnqǐng and niàn. According to this text, niàn is the smallest unit of time at 18 milliseconds and a shùn is 360 milliseconds.[8] It also describes larger units of time, including a tánzhǐ which is 7.2 seconds long, a luóyù which is 2 minutes 24 seconds long, and a xūyú, which is of a day at 48 minutes long.

During night: gēng-diǎn system

The Gēng-diǎn ( -) system uses predetermined signals to define the time during the night.

One-tenth of a day: gēng

Gēng is a time signal given by drum or gong. The drum was sounded by the drum tower in city centers, and by night watchman hitting a gong in other areas. The character for gēng, literally meaning "rotation" or "watch", comes from the rotation of watchmen sounding these signals.

The first gēng theoretically comes at sundown, but was standardized to fall at central 1, or 19:12. The time between each gēng is of a day, making a gēng 2.4 hours—or 2 hours 24 minutes—long.

The 5 gēngs in the night are numbered from one to five: yì gēng (alternately chū gēng for "initial watch"); èr gēng ; sān gēng ; sì gēng ; and wǔ gēng . The 5 gēngs in daytime are named after times of day listed in the Book of Sui, which describes the legendary Yellow Emperor dividing the day and night into ten equal parts. They are morning ; midmorning, ; noon, ; afternoon ; and evening .[9]

As a 10-part system, the gēng are strongly associated with the 10 celestial stems, especially since the stems are used to count off the gēng during the night in Chinese literature.

One-sixtieth of a day: Diǎn

Diǎn, or point, marked when the bell time signal was rung. The time signal was released by the drum tower or local temples.

Each diǎn or point is of a day, making them 0.4 hours, or 24 minutes, long. Every sixth diǎn falls on the gēng, with the rest evenly dividing every gēng into 6 equal parts.

Describing the time during the night

Gēng and diǎn were used together to precisely describe the time at night.

Counting from the first gēng to the next would look like this: yìgēng, yìgēng 1 diǎn, yìgēng 2 diǎn, yìgēng 3 diǎn, yìgēng 4 diǎn, yìgēng 5 diǎn, èrgēng .

Given the time sāngēng 2 diǎn, you would read it as "two diǎn after sāngēng", and find the time to be 00:48.

The night length is inconsistent during a year. The nineteenth volume of the Book of Sui says that at the winter solstice, a day was measured to be 60% night, and at the summer solstice, only 40% night. The official start of night thus had a variation from 0 to 1 gēng.

This variation was handled in different ways. From the start of the Western Han dynasty in 206 BC until 102 AD, yìgēng was moved back one Chinese: every 9th day from the winter solstice to the summer solstice, and moved forward one Chinese: every 9th day from summer solstice to the winter solstice.[10] The Xia Calendar, introduced in 102 AD, added or subtracted a Chinese: to the start of night whenever the sun moved 2.5° north or south from its previous position.

Traditional units in context

Relationships between traditional Chinese time units
Diǎn00:00:00
Sāngēng
00:24:00
Sāngēng 1 diǎn
00:48:00
Sāngēng 2 diǎn
01:12:00
Sāngēng 3 diǎn
01:36:00
Sāngēng 4 diǎn
02:00:00
Sāngēng 5 diǎn
02:24:00
Sìgēng
02:48:00
Sìgēng 1 diǎn
03:12:00
Sìgēng 2 diǎn
03:36:00
Sìgēng 3 diǎn
04:00:00
Sìgēng 4 diǎn
04:24:00
Sìgēng 5 diǎn
04:48:00
Wǔgēng
05:12:00
Wǔgēng 1 diǎn
05:36:00
Wǔgēng 2 diǎn
06:00:00
Wǔgēng 3 diǎn
06:24:00
Wǔgēng 4 diǎn
06:48:00
Wǔgēng 5 diǎn
07:12:00
Morning
07:36:00
Morning 1 diǎn
08:00:00
Morning 2 diǎn
08:24:00
Morning 3 diǎn
08:48:00
Morning 4 diǎn
09:12:00
Morning 5 diǎn
09:36:00
Midmorning
10:00:00
Midmorning 1 diǎn
10:24:00
Midmorning 2 diǎn
10:48:00
Midmorning 3 diǎn
11:12:00
Midmorning 4 diǎn
11:36:00
Midmorning 5 diǎn
12:00:00
Noon
12:24:00
Noon 1 diǎn
12:48:00
Noon 2 diǎn
13:12:00
Noon 3 diǎn
13:36:00
Noon 4 diǎn
14:00:00
Noon 5 diǎn
14:24:00
Afternoon
14:48:00
Afternoon 1 diǎn
15:12:00
Afternoon 2 diǎn
15:36:00
Afternoon 3 diǎn
16:00:00
Afternoon 4 diǎn
16:24:00
Afternoon 5 diǎn
16:48:00
Evening
17:12:00
Evening 1 diǎn
17:36:00
Evening 2 diǎn
18:00:00
Evening 3 diǎn
18:24:00
Evening 4 diǎn
18:48:00
Evening 5 diǎn
19:12:00
Yìgēng
19:36:00
Yìgēng 1 diǎn
20:00:00
Yìgēng 2 diǎn
20:24:00
Yìgēng 3 diǎn
20:48:00
Yìgēng 4 diǎn
21:12:00
Yìgēng 5 diǎn
21:36:00
Èrgēng
22:00:00
Èrgēng 1 diǎn
22:24:00
Èrgēng 2 diǎn
22:48:00
Èrgēng 3 diǎn
23:12:00
Èrgēng 4 diǎn
23:36:00
Èrgēng 5 diǎn
Gēng00:00:00
Sāngēng
02:24:00
Sìgēng
04:48:00
Wǔgēng
07:12:00
Morning
09:36:00
Midmorning
12:00:00
Noon
14:24:00
Afternoon
16:48:00
Evening
19:12:00
Yìgēng
21:36:00
Èrgēng
Kè (only major kè)00:00:0000:14:2400:28:4800:43:1200:57:3601:12:0001:26:2401:40:4801:55:1202:09:3602:24:0002:38:2402:52:4803:07:1203:21:3603:36:0003:50:2404:04:4804:19:1204:33:3604:48:0005:02:2405:16:4805:31:1205:45:3606:00:0006:14:2406:28:4806:43:1206:57:3607:12:0007:26:2407:40:4807:55:1208:09:3608:24:0008:38:2408:52:4809:07:1209:21:3609:36:0009:50:2410:04:4810:19:1210:33:3610:48:0011:02:2411:16:4811:31:1211:45:3612:00:0012:14:2412:28:4812:43:1212:57:3613:12:0013:26:2413:40:4813:55:1214:09:3614:24:0014:38:2414:52:4815:07:1215:21:3615:36:0015:50:2416:04:4816:19:1216:33:3616:48:0017:02:2417:16:4817:31:1217:45:3618:00:0018:14:2418:28:4818:43:1218:57:3619:12:0019:26:2419:40:4819:55:1220:09:3620:24:0020:38:2420:52:4821:07:1221:21:3621:36:0021:50:2422:04:4822:19:1222:33:3622:48:0023:02:2423:16:4823:31:1223:45:36
Shí (post-Tang)00:00:00
Zǐ initial
01:00:00
Zǐ central
02:00:00
Chǒu initial
03:00:00
Chǒu central
04:00:00
Yín initial
05:00:00
Yín central
06:00:00
Mǎo initial
07:00:00
Mǎo central
08:00:00
Chén initial
09:00:00
Chén central
10:00:00
Sì initial
11:00:00
Sì central
12:00:00
Wǔ initial
13:00:00
Wǔ central
14:00:00
Wèi initial
15:00:00
Wèi central
16:00:00
Shēn initial
17:00:00
Shēn central
18:00:00
Yǒu initial
19:00:00
Yǒu central
20:00:00
Xū initial
21:00:00
Xū central
22:00:00
Hài initial
23:00:00
Hài central
Shí (ancient)00:00:00
Zǐshí
01:00:00
Chǒushí
03:00:00
Yínshí
05:00:00
Mǎoshí
07:00:00
Chénshí
09:00:00
Sìshì
11:00:00
Wǔshí
13:00:00
Wèishí
15:00:00
Shēnshí
17:00:00
Yǒushí
19:00:00
Xūshí
21:00:00
Hàishí
23:00:00
Zǐshí

Modern applications

Chinese still uses characters from these systems to describe time, even though China has changed to the UTC standards of hours, minutes, and seconds.

Chinese: shí is still used to describe the hour. Because of the potential for confusion, xiǎoshí (literally "small hour") is sometimes used for the hour as part of a 24-hour cycle, and shíchen is used for the hour as part of the old 12-hour cycle.

Diǎn is also used interchangeably with Chinese: shí for the hour. It can also be used to talk about the time on the hour—for example, 8 o' clock is written as 8 diǎn .

Fēn is also used for minutes. To avoid confusion, sometimes the word fēnzhōng is used to clarify that one is talking about modern minutes. The time 09:45 can thus be written as "9 Chinese: shí, 45 fēn" or "9 diǎn, 45 fēn" .

Chinese: has been defined as of a day since 1628, so the modern Chinese: equals 15 minutes and each double hour contains exactly 8 Chinese: . Since then, Chinese: has been used as shorthand to talk about time in of a double hour or of a single hour. Their usage is similar to using "quarter hour" for 15 minutes or "half an hour" for 30 minutes in English. For example, 6:45 can be written as "6 diǎn, 3 Chinese: " .

Miǎo is now the standard term for a second. Like fēn, it is sometimes written as miǎozhōng to clarify that someone is talking about modern seconds.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Kiyoshi Yabuuchi . Astronomical tables in China, from the Wutai to the Ch'ing dynasties . Japanese Studies in the History of Science . 2 . 1963 . 94–100 . 0090-0176.
  2. Book: . Tiānwén xùn . Patterns of Heaven . zh:天文訓 . https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%B7%AE%E5%8D%97%E5%AD%90/%E5%A4%A9%E6%96%87%E8%A8%93 . .
  3. Sôma. Mitsuru. Kawabata. Kin-aki. Tanikawa. Kiyotaka. 2004-10-25. Units of Time in Ancient China and Japan. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. en. 56. 5. 887–904. 10.1093/pasj/56.5.887. 0004-6264. 2004PASJ...56..887S.
  4. Book: F. Richard . Stephenson . F. Richard Stephenson . Green . David A. . Dave Green (astrophysicist) . Historical supernovae and their remnants . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 2002 . 15–16 . 0-19-850766-6.
  5. Book: . Xu Shen . Xu Shen . Volume eleven . https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E8%AA%AA%E6%96%87%E8%A7%A3%E5%AD%97/11 . Translation: The water clock holds the water in the copper pot, and marks the scale on the rule. There are 100 marks which represent a day..
  6. Book: . zh:曆象彙編/曆法典/第099卷 . Calendar compilations/Calendar quotations/Volume 99 . https://zh.wikisource.org/zh/%E6%AC%BD%E5%AE%9A%E5%8F%A4%E4%BB%8A%E5%9C%96%E6%9B%B8%E9%9B%86%E6%88%90/%E6%9B%86%E8%B1%A1%E5%BD%99%E7%B7%A8/%E6%9B%86%E6%B3%95%E5%85%B8/%E7%AC%AC099%E5%8D%B7.
  7. Encyclopedia: Jean-Claude . Martzloff . Chinese mathematical astronomy . Helaine Selin . Helaine . Selin . Mathematics across cultures . Dordrecht . Kluwer . 2000 . 373–407 . 0-7923-6481-3.
  8. Book: zh:摩訶僧祗律 . Móhēsēngzhī Lǜ . Mahāsāṃghika. Taishō Tripiṭaka 1425 . http://tripitaka.cbeta.org/en/T22n1425_017 . Rough translation: Definition of xūyú: 20 niàn is 1 shùnqǐng. 20 shùn is 1 tánzhǐ. 20 tánzhǐ is one luóyù. 20 luóyù is one xūyú. In the longest day there are 18 xūyú, and in the shortest night there are 12 xūyú. In the shortest day there are 12 xūyú and in the longest night there are 18 xūyú..
  9. Book: . Zhì dì 14 tiānwén shàng . Treatise 14, On Astronomy . zh:志第14 天文上 . https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/zh:%E9%9A%8B%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B719 . "Water clocks" . Rough translation: Daytime has morning, midmorning, noon, late afternoon, evening. Night has first, second, third, fourth, fifth..
  10. Petersen . Jens Østergård . 1992 . The Taiping Jing and the A.D. 102 Clepsydra Reform . Acta Orientalia . 53 . Copenhagen . 122–158 .