Tarikh Shamsi B Miladi Upd «REAL · 2024»
Converting Tarikh Shamsi (Solar Hijri) to (Gregorian) involves bridging two systems with different starting points, month lengths, and leap year rules. The Solar Hijri calendar is the official calendar of Iran and Afghanistan. Core Comparison Features Year Structure Tarikh Shamsi
The correct conversion is: 1399-01-01 (Tarikh Shamsi) = March 20, 2020 (Miladi) tarikh shamsi b miladi
Year Zero: The Solar Hijri calendar begins with the Hijra (migration) of Prophet Muhammad in 622 AD. Year Length: 365 days (366 in leap years),
Here’s an interesting and practical guide to understanding Tarikh Shamsi (Solar Hijri) vs. Miladi (Gregorian) — two of the most widely used calendar systems in the Middle East and the world. Taghvim
- Year Length: 365 days (366 in leap years), closely matching the solar year.
- Start of the Year: Nowruz – the first day of spring (usually March 20 or 21 in the Gregorian calendar).
- Months: 12 months. The first six months have 31 days, the next five have 30 days, and the last month (Esfand) has 29 days (30 in leap years).
- Regions Used Officially: Iran and Afghanistan.
Taghvim.com: A popular site that provides a clear interface for converting both ways between Persian and Gregorian calendars.
How to Convert Shamsi to Miladi
The Shamsi calendar (also called the Solar Hijri or Jalali calendar) is used officially in Iran and Afghanistan. The Miladi (Gregorian) calendar is the international standard.
- Find the Gregorian date of the most recent Nowruz (vernal equinox in Tehran time).
- If your target Gregorian date is on or after that Nowruz, the Shamsi year = Gregorian year – 621, and the month/day is counted forward.
- If your target Gregorian date is before that Nowruz, the Shamsi year = Gregorian year – 622, and you are in the previous Shamsi year’s months (Dey, Bahman, Esfand).
- If the Shamsi date is before the current year’s equinox offset, adjust accordingly. But a general rule:
GY = SY + 621for dates between March 21 and December 31.
GY = SY + 622for dates between January 1 and March 20? No – because Shamsi year Y starts in March of Gregorian year Y+621.