Ethiopian time, explained

13 months · a 12-hour clock that starts at dawn · two liturgical computi on one page.

The Ethiopian clock: sunrise = 12:00

The Ethiopian day begins at dawn, not midnight. When the sun rises over Addis Ababa at approximately 6:00 AM Gregorian, it is 12:00 in Ethiopian time — the start of hour one. Counting continues through the day, so:

Tip: subtract six hours from the Gregorian clock (mod 12) and you have the Ethiopian time. The Today strip on the converter page does this live — you can watch the shift second by second.

Ethiopian time periods

A day in Ethiopia is split into four named stretches. Each block is six hours long and restarts the 12-hour Ethiopian clock at either “12” (dawn / dusk) or “6” (midday / midnight).

24-hour day cycle · sunrise at 06:00 EAT = 12:00 ET
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EAT hour

Period Amharic Western (EAT) Ethiopian clock

13 months — and Pagumē

Ethiopia's calendar has twelve months of exactly thirty days each, plus a short thirteenth month called Pagumē with 5 days (6 in leap years, when the Ethiopian year number modulo 4 equals 3). The Ethiopian year runs roughly 8 years behind the Gregorian year, because the two calendars use different dates for the Annunciation.

Here is the full map of Ethiopian months to Gregorian ranges. These ranges shift by one day every four years because of the different leap rules.

Ethiopian month Gregorian range
Meskerem (New Year) 11 September – 10 October
Tikimt 11 October – 9 November
Hidar 10 November – 9 December
Tahsas 10 December – 8 January
Tir 9 January – 7 February
Yakatit 8 February – 9 March
Maggabit 10 March – 8 April
Miyazya 9 April – 8 May
Ginbot 9 May – 7 June
Sene 8 June – 7 July
Hamle 8 July – 6 August
Nehasa 7 August – 6 September
Pagume 6 – 10 September (5 days, or 6 in leap years)

The four Ethiopian seasons

Ethiopia sits in the tropical zone between the Equator and the Tropic of Cancer. Unlike a two-season tropical climate, Ethiopia has four distinct seasons — named in Ge'ez and aligned with the Ethiopian calendar, not the northern meteorological quarters.

Year cycle · Ethiopian months overlaid on Gregorian months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Season Amharic Gregorian months Ethiopian months Character

The season names come from Ge'ez and describe agriculture, not solar position — that is why "summer" in Ethiopia is the rainy season, not the hottest one.

Bahre Hasab — the computus of movable feasts

Holidays such as Fasika (Easter), Siklet (Good Friday), and Hosaena (Palm Sunday) are not fixed dates — they move each year. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church computes them with Bahre Hasab, a set of rules derived from the Julian Paschal cycle. Once Fasika is located, every other movable day is simply an offset: Siklet is two days before, Hosaena is seven days before, Great Lent begins fifty-five days before, Pentecost is forty-nine days after.

Between Fasika and Pentecost the weekly Wednesday/Friday fast is suspended — the fifty-day Paskha season. The status chip in the converter reflects this automatically.

Wednesday & Friday fasting

The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church keeps a fast every Wednesday and Friday throughout the year, from midnight until about 3:00 PM local time. No meat, dairy, eggs, or animal products are eaten on these days.

Why these two days?

When the Wed/Fri fast is set aside

There are only a few exceptions where Wednesday and Friday fasting is not kept:

  1. The 50 days after Fasika (Paskha) From Easter Sunday through Pentecost, the whole 50-day season is a celebration of the Resurrection, and all weekly fasting is suspended.
  2. Genna and Timkat falling on a Wed/Fri If Genna (Ethiopian Christmas, Tahsas 29) or Timkat (Epiphany, Tir 11) lands on a Wednesday or Friday, the fast is broken so the feast can be celebrated.
  3. Other major feasts Meskel and the major Marian feasts, when they coincide with a Wed/Fri, are also treated as feast days rather than fast days.

The Today strip and the converter's Fasting row follow these rules automatically — click any calendar cell to see why a specific day is a fast or a feast.

Holidays on this site

Closed days (banks and offices shut) are marked in red on the calendar and collected in a strip at the top of the printable page.