Mayan Calendar Converter — Long Count, Tzolkin & Haab
Convert any Gregorian date to three Mayan calendar systems simultaneously — the Long Count, the Tzolkin (260-day sacred calendar) and the Haab (365-day civil calendar). The Tzolkin shows the number (1–13), the day name and the symbolic meaning. The Haab shows the day and month name. Furthermore, the Calendar Round — the combined 52-year Tzolkin-Haab cycle — is displayed as a single date notation that ancient Maya used for dating.
| Calendar round detail | Value |
|---|
How to use the Mayan Calendar Converter
The three Mayan calendar systems
The Maya used three interlocking calendar systems simultaneously. Furthermore, each served a different purpose — historical record-keeping, religious ritual and civil administration.
| Calendar | Length | Purpose | Structure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long Count | Unlimited | Historical dates — absolute position | baktun.katun.tun.uinal.kin |
| Tzolkin | 260 days | Sacred — divination, ceremonies | 13 numbers × 20 day names |
| Haab | 365 days | Civil — agriculture, seasons | 18 months × 20 days + 5-day Wayeb |
| Calendar Round | 52 Haab years | Dating within a lifetime | Tzolkin + Haab combined position |
The Long Count units
The Long Count counts days from the Mayan creation date. Furthermore, each position uses a base-20 system except the third position (tun) which uses base-18. This gives the famous "vigesimal" (base-20) counting system of the Maya. Moreover, 1 baktun equals 144,000 days — approximately 394 solar years.
How Mayan calendar conversion works
The conversion uses the GMT (Goodman-Martinez-Thompson) correlation constant of JDN 584283 — the Julian Day Number of the Mayan creation date (13 August 3114 BCE in the Gregorian proleptic calendar). Furthermore, subtracting this from the target date's JDN gives the total Long Count days since creation.
uinal = floor(total/20) mod 18 (0–17)
tun = floor(total/360) mod 20 (0–19)
Tzolkin number = (total + 3) mod 13 + 1 (1–13)
Tzolkin day = total mod 20 (one of 20 named days)
The GMT correlation debate
The GMT correlation constant 584283 is the most widely accepted mapping of Mayan Long Count dates to Julian Day Numbers. Furthermore, this was established by Goodman, Martinez and Thompson through correlation with historical records. Moreover, some researchers use the variant 584285 — differing by two days. The GMT 584283 constant matches the majority of available historical and astronomical evidence.
Worked example: 21 December 2012 — the end of the 13th Baktun
21 December 2012 was widely anticipated as significant because it marked the end of the 13th Baktun in the Mayan Long Count. What is the full Mayan date for this day?
| Calendar system | Date for 21 December 2012 |
|---|---|
| Long Count | 13.00.00.00.00 |
| Tzolkin | 4 Ahau (Ahau = Flower/Sun, the 20th day name) |
| Haab | 3 Kankin |
| Calendar Round | 4 Ahau / 3 Kankin |
What is the Mayan calendar?
The Mayan calendar is three interlocking systems developed by the ancient Maya of Mesoamerica. Furthermore, the Long Count, Tzolkin and Haab each serve different social and religious functions. All three were used simultaneously for over a millennium — often inscribed together on stone monuments.
The Long Count is a linear count of days from the Mayan creation date — 13 August 3114 BCE in the proleptic Gregorian calendar. Furthermore, it enabled the Maya to record dates across centuries — essential for their astronomical observations. Moreover, Mayan stone monuments (stelae) typically record all three calendar dates together.
The Tzolkin — the sacred calendar
The Tzolkin has 260 days — a cycle still used by Maya communities in Guatemala. Furthermore, it combines 13 numbers with 20 named days. Each Tzolkin day carries deities, symbolic meanings and ritual significance. Moreover, Maya daykeepers still use the Tzolkin for guidance and naming ceremonies in highland communities.
The Haab — the solar calendar
The Haab is an 18-month civil calendar of 365 days — close to the solar year. Furthermore, 18 months of 20 days each give 360 days plus the unlucky 5-day Wayeb. Moreover, the Haab governed agriculture, festivals and administrative cycles in Mayan society.
Why the Mayan calendar is studied today
The Mayan calendar is one of the most sophisticated independent time-keeping systems ever developed. Furthermore, Mayan astronomers tracked Venus, the Moon and Sun with exceptional precision. Moreover, the Long Count's precision enabled accurate eclipse prediction centuries in advance.
The living Maya calendar tradition continues in Guatemalan highland communities. Furthermore, Mayan daykeepers still practise the 260-day Tzolkin calendar for ceremonial guidance, naming of children and agricultural decisions. Moreover, the Mayan calendar has attracted worldwide interest — particularly around key Long Count dates like 13.00.00.00.00 on 21 December 2012.
Mayan astronomy and calendar accuracy
The Mayan Haab calendar's 365 days is close to but not equal to the solar year of 365.2422 days. Furthermore, the Maya were aware of this discrepancy — some researchers believe the Dresden Codex contains a sophisticated correction mechanism similar to modern leap years. Moreover, the Venus calendar in the Dresden Codex tracks the 584-day Venus synodic period so accurately that it required no correction for several centuries.
Frequently asked questions
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