The Aztecs relied on a 365-day agricultural calendar, this calendar showed which times of year it was best to plant and harvest. This agricultural calendar accurately showed the tie it took for the Earth to travel around the sun.
It is not know precisely who or where the first 365 day calendar was invented or used. Many cultures on many continents used and invented it independently.
There are either 365 or 366 days in a calendar year because it takes between 365 and 366 days for the earth to orbit the sun once.
Here is a link to a moon phase calendar: * http://www.calendar-365.com/moon/moon-calendar.html
so they could keep track of the days and special event and holidays they had
In 46 BCE, Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar by extending the common year from 355 days to 365 days. Two years later, the month of Quintilis was renamed July in his honor. 36 years after that, the month of Sextilis was renamed August in honor of his successor, Augustus Caesar.
they were just as accurate as the one we use now with 365 days
The Aztec calendar recognised 365 days
maya
Obid created the 365 calendar
No. The Aztecs are credited with making the 365-day calendar.
The ancient Egyptians had a 360 day calendar, but i do believe they were the founders of the 365 calendar. Hope it help :)
Egypt were the first ones to use the 365-day calendar
It was a 365-day calendar similar to our present-day calendar.
NO
The Egyptian
The Mayan calendar consisted of several interlocking calendars, such as the Tzolk'in (260-day ritual calendar) and the Haab' (365-day solar calendar). These calendars worked together to create the Long Count calendar, which was used for tracking longer periods of time.
There are 365 days.how many their are in a regular calendar