Japanese era name (年号, nengō, lit. year name) is a common calendar scheme used in Japan to count years. For example, the year 2006 is Heisei 18, and 2007 would be Heisei 19.
Like similar systems in East Asia, the era name system was originally derived from Chinese Imperial practice, although the Japanese system is independent from the Chinese or Korean calendar systems. Unlike other similar systems, the Japanese era name is still in use. Government offices usually require era names and years for official papers.
Sometimes an era name is expressed with the first letter of the romanized name. For example, S55 means Shōwa 55. At 64 years, Shōwa is the longest era to date.
Era names indicate the various reasons for their adoption. For instance, the nengō Wado (和銅) during the Nara period was declared due to the discovery of copper deposits in Japan. Since the Heian period, Confucian thoughts and ideas have been reflected in era names, such as Daido (大同), Konin (弘仁) and Tencho (天長). Nengō are normally written with two kanji, except during the Nara period when four Kanji names were sometimes adopted to follow the Chinese trend. Tenpyo Kanpo (天平感宝), Tenpyo Shoho (天平勝宝), Tenpyo Hoji (天平宝字) and Tenpyo Jingo (天平神護) are among the famous nengō names in four characters. In Japan, there currently exist a total number of 247 era names since Taika until the present Heisei. Despite such large number of era names, only seventy-two kanji were used. Out of the seventy-two kanji, thirty of them were used only once, while the rest were repeatedly used in different combinations to create new era names.
Since the ascension of the Meiji Emperor (明治天皇), it has been the practice to change era names only upon imperial succession. This practice became the law in 1979. Upon his death, an emperor is thereafter referred to with the name of the era marked by his reign. (For example, the 124th Emperor, Hirohito (裕仁), is posthumously known as the Shōwa Emperor(昭和天皇).)
In modern practice, the first year of a reign (元年 gannen) starts immediately upon the emperor's ascension to the throne, but always ends on December 31. Subsequent years follow the Gregorian calendar. Meiji (明治), the nengō declared in 1868, continued until the death of the Meiji emperor in 1912. His son's reign, the Taisho (大正) era, lasted until December 25 1926 when the Shōwa (昭和) era was proclaimed. The first year of the Shōwa era thus consisted only of the last few days of December 1926. After the death of the Shōwa emperor (昭和天皇) in 1989, the present reign of the Heisei emperor (平成天皇) began. 1989 is known as both "Shōwa 64" and "Heisei Gannen (平成元年)", although technically Shōwa 64 ended on January 7 with Hirohito's death.
Note that it is protocol in Japan that the reigning emperor is almost always referred to as Tennō Heika (天皇陛下, His Majesty the Emperor). Less frequently, the more informal Kinjō Tennō (今上天皇, current emperor) is used. The use of the emperor's given name is extremely rare in Japanese even today. To call the current emperor by the current era name Heisei, even in English, would be a faux pas, as it is and will be his posthumous name. These conventions are the source of great confusion not only in other languages, but also for the Japanese themselves.
To convert a Japanese year to a Western year, find the first year of the nengō (=era name, see list below). When found, subtract 1, and add the number of the Japanese year. For example, the 23rd year of the Showa Era (Showa 23) would be 1948:
1926 − 1 = 1925, then 1925 + 23 = 1948.
Southern Court
Northern Court
Reunification
Retaining the nengō system’s way to count years forward from the start, gannen of a new era, it has been proposed to introduce a “Jōmon Era” count to facilitate archeological dating:
| Period | Gregorian years | Jōmon Era |
| Jōmon Gannen | 10000 BCE | 1 JE |
| Incipient Jōmon | 10000 –7500 BCE | 1– 2500 JE |
| Initial Jōmon | 7500 – 4000 BCE | 2501 – 6000 JE |
| Early Jōmon | 4000 – 3000 BCE | 6001 – 7000 JE |
| Middle Jōmon | 3000 – 2000 BCE | 7001 – 8000 JE |
| Late Jōmon | 2000 – 1000 BCE | 8001 – 9000 JE |
| Final Jōmon | 1000 – 300 BCE | 9001 – 9700 JE |
| Japan Imperial power founded | 660 BCE | 9341 JE |
| Yayoi period | 251 BCE – 250 CE | 9750 –10250 JE |
The Jōmon count has won no official acknowledgement and so far rests with the scholar's notes. But it should be noted that JE coincides with an other proposed calendar reform, the Holocene Era. Years of today are transformed by simply adding 1 before the year in both systems.
Japanische Zeitrechnung | Japanse jaartelling | 元号一覧 (日本) | Ery japońskie | Japonska leta po gregorijanskem koledarju | 日本年號索引
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