An ethnoarithmetic excursion into the Javanese calendar
N. Karjanto, F. Beauducel

TL;DR
This paper explores the complex Javanese calendar's mathematical structure, introduces a new congruence formula for pasaran days, and discusses its cultural significance and educational potential.
Contribution
It presents a novel congruence formula for calculating Javanese pasaran days and links mathematical concepts with cultural practices.
Findings
A new congruence formula for pasaran calculation
The calendar integrates multiple cultural time cycles
Educational insights for teaching number theory
Abstract
A perpetual calendar, a calendar designed to find out the day of the week for a given date, employs a rich arithmetical calculation using congruence. Zeller's congruence is a well-known algorithm to calculate the day of the week for any Julian or Gregorian calendar date. Another rather infamous perpetual calendar has been used for nearly four centuries among Javanese people in Indonesia. This Javanese calendar combines the Saka Hindu, lunar Islamic, and western Gregorian calendars. In addition to the regular seven-day, lunar month, and lunar year cycles, it also contains five-day pasaran, 35-day wetonan, 210-day pawukon, octo-year windu, and 120-year kurup cycles. The Javanese calendar is used for cultural and spiritual purposes, including a decision to tie the knot among couples. In this chapter, we will explore the relationship between mathematics and the culture of Javanese people…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematics Education and Pedagogy · Mathematics Education and Teaching Techniques · History and Theory of Mathematics
