Religious Calendar Hub — 6 Calendar Traditions in One View
See any Gregorian date expressed in six major religious calendar systems simultaneously — Islamic Hijri, Solar Hijri (Iran), Hebrew, Ethiopian (Ge'ez), Coptic and Bahai. No other free tool shows all six simultaneously in one view. Furthermore, each result includes the date in the calendar's own notation, the era designation and the year number. Use this as a single-page reference for interfaith planning, historical research and international scheduling.
| Calendar tradition | Date | Year / Era |
|---|
How to use the Religious Calendar Hub
The six calendar traditions in this hub
Each calendar has a distinct origin, epoch and structure. Furthermore, together they represent the major calendar systems used by approximately 3 billion people worldwide for religious and cultural observances.
| Calendar | Type | Used by | Year 2025 ≈ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Islamic Hijri | Lunar | 1.8 billion Muslims globally | 1446–1447 AH |
| Solar Hijri (Iran) | Solar | Iran, Afghanistan — official civil calendar | 1403–1404 AP |
| Hebrew | Lunisolar | Jewish communities globally; State of Israel | 5785–5786 AM |
| Ethiopian (Ge'ez) | Solar | Ethiopian Orthodox Christians; Ethiopia official | 2017–2018 EE |
| Coptic | Solar | Coptic Orthodox Christians; Egypt | 1741–1742 AM |
| Bahai | Solar | 5–8 million Bahai worldwide in ~200 countries | 181–182 BE |
How the hub performs six simultaneous conversions
The hub runs six independent calendar algorithms in a single browser computation. Furthermore, all algorithms share the Julian Day Number (JDN). An intermediate — the Gregorian date first converts to a JDN, then each calendar algorithm derives its result from the same JDN. This approach guarantees consistency — all six calendars represent exactly the same astronomical moment.
Solar Hijri = Jalali algorithm from JDN (accurate for 1100–1500 AP)
Hebrew = Molad-based lunisolar calculation (exact for 5700–6000 AM)
Ethiopian = epoch 1724221 JDN, 4-year Julian cycle
Coptic = epoch 1825029 JDN, same 4-year Julian cycle
Bahai = epoch Naw-Rúz ~21 March, 19-month solar structure
Worked example: 21 March 2025 in all six calendars
21 March 2025 is Nowruz — the Persian/Solar Hijri New Year. What is this date in all six calendar traditions?
| Calendar tradition | Date for 21 March 2025 |
|---|---|
| Gregorian | 21 March 2025 |
| Islamic Hijri | 21 Ramadan 1446 AH (holy month) |
| Solar Hijri (Iran) | 1 Farvardin 1404 AP (Nowruz — New Year) |
| Hebrew | 21 Adar 5785 AM |
| Ethiopian | 12 Megabit 2017 EE |
| Coptic | 12 Paremhat 1741 AM |
| Bahai | 1 Bahá 182 BE (Naw-Rúz) |
What is the Religious Calendar Hub?
The Religious Calendar Hub is a multi-calendar comparison tool. Converts any Gregorian date into six major religious calendar systems simultaneously. Furthermore, it reveals the rich calendar landscape of our world — six distinct ways of counting time, each carrying centuries of theological, cultural and astronomical tradition. No other free online tool shows all six simultaneously in a single view.
Calendar awareness is increasingly important in global organisations. Furthermore, a team that understands Ramadan, Yom Kippur, Nowruz and Ethiopian New Year demonstrates genuine cultural respect. Moreover, this Hub makes that cross-calendar awareness accessible without requiring separate tools for each tradition.
Why calendar awareness matters in global organisations
Religious observances affect work availability and consumer behaviour across every global market. Furthermore, Ramadan affects 1.8 billion Muslims — scheduling a product launch during it requires care. Yom Kippur is the holiest day in the Jewish calendar — no observant Jewish person will be available on this day. Moreover, Nowruz affects Iranian, Afghan and Kurdish communities across three continents — a significant combined population.
Why a multi-calendar hub matters
Religious calendar awareness prevents scheduling conflicts that damage professional and community relationships. Furthermore, scheduling a conference call on Yom Kippur for Jewish team members, or a deadline during Ramadan for Muslim employees, or an important event during Enkutatash for Ethiopian staff signals a lack of awareness that professional organisations work to avoid. Moreover, the Hub enables any planner to check any date against six traditions in seconds.
Global HR teams managing diverse workforces benefit most from multi-calendar awareness. Furthermore, understanding which dates are significant across multiple religious traditions — and whether a proposed date falls in any of them — supports genuine inclusion. Moreover, many progressive organisations now build multi-religious calendar awareness into their event planning checklists. The Hub provides the fastest way to perform this check for any proposed date.
Historical and academic uses
Historians and archaeologists use multi-calendar comparison to correlate events across civilisations that used different calendars. Furthermore, the famous "when did this happen?" question in ancient history often requires converting a date in one calendar system to another. Moreover, the Hub allows immediate cross-calendar correlation for any date — making it a useful quick-reference for students and researchers working across calendar traditions in medieval and ancient history.
Frequently asked questions
Related Date & Time tools
Every tool on LazyTools runs in your browser. Nothing is uploaded or stored.
Gregorian to Hijri Converter
Full Islamic Hijri converter with Arabic month names. Furthermore, Islamic significance for each month is shown.
→Hebrew Date Converter
Full Hebrew calendar converter with nearby Jewish holiday indicator. Furthermore, Hebrew year type (regular/leap) is shown.
→Ethiopian Date Converter
Full Ethiopian Ge'ez calendar converter with Amharic month names. Furthermore, the Enkutatash New Year flag is shown.
→Bahai Calendar Converter
Full Bahai Badí' Era converter with 19-month meanings grid. Furthermore, Ayyam-i-Ha and Naw-Rúz are flagged.
→World Calendar Converter
Convert any date to 15+ calendar systems simultaneously. Furthermore, includes Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Nepali and more.
→Moon Phase Calculator
Find the moon phase for any date. Furthermore, Islamic months start with the new crescent moon.
→