GoArch:History Project

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The Archive History Project seeks to create a thorough, inter-linked timeline of D'ni history, from the earliest known date in D'ni time to the present day. This project is complicated by the fact that this history spans almost 10,000 years and two separate (but related) calendar systems.

Progress

  • D'ni dates: Completed through 14th century DE.
  • Surface dates: Not started.

Please update this progress indicator as you complete work, and make notes as needed on this article's Talk page.

Date formatting

Dates on the Archive should be formatted as "month, day, year" or "vailee, yahr, hahr" depending on the calendar system being used. The first occurrence of any year or hahr should include the calendar system's epoch signifier (BC/CE for surface dates, BE/DE for D'ni dates) to aid in proper identification. As long as subsequent dates are in the same calendar, the signifier can be left off.

Linking dates

The first time a year is mentioned in an article, it should be linked. This link must include the epoch signifier so that it takes visitors to the correct calendar system's entry. For instance, 0 DE or 2007 CE.

When a date has a specific month/vailee and day/yahr associated with it, link the combination as a single entity (e.g. Leefo 1).

When to use each calendar

Events which took place before the fall of D'ni should use the D'ni calendar as their primary dating system. Gregorian dates may be provided if desired, but this can quickly become cumbersome to read. Visitors who want to know what the equivalent Gregorian date is for a D'ni-dated event can open the page for that date to see what it is in other calendars.

Events which took place during the Myst series of games, as well as the Book of Atrus and the Book of D'ni, should also use the D'ni calendar as their primary dating system. Gregorian dates may be used with somewhat more freedom here, as visitors may be more interested in tying these events to our own calendar.

Beginning with the modern-day rediscovery of D'ni in 1987 CE, events should be dated with the Gregorian (surface) calendar. Aside from highly notable events, such as holidays or other high-profile milestones in D'ni history, D'ni dates should be avoided, and left to the visitor to uncover by accessing the relevant year page.

Converting dates

You can use the Archive's date converter to translate between the Gregorian and D'ni calendar. Note that this converter is not precise down to the second across long timespans, but it should suffice when all you need is day-level granularity.

When dealing with dates from before the official adoption of the Gregorian calendar in a given region, you should be aware that the date converter creates Proleptic Gregorian calendar dates, rather than Julian calendar dates. Because of this, you should avoid tying specific surface events which occurred before the adoption of the Gregorian calendar to specific dates in the D'ni calendar. The converter will generally suffice for year-level granularity, but more specific dating is almost guaranteed to be fraught.

Date pages

D'ni calendar

It may be easiest when creating new articles for these timeline elements to copy and paste an existing article's contents as a template to work from.

Yahrtee (days)

Vailee/yahr combinations (like Leefo 1) should only be created when needed. These pages should list events from any hahr (year) that took place on that yahr (day).

Yahrtee pages should indicate how far into the D'ni hahr they are, and how many days remain after it (e.g. "Leefo 1 is the first yahr of the D'ni calendar. There are 289 yahrtee remaining until the end of the hahr.")

Every yahr's page should also include the {{vailee}} template at the top to provide inter-yahr and inter-vailee navigation. This template takes the name of the current vailee as its only parameter.

Vaileetee (months)

Each vailee should also have its own page. This page should list observances during that vailee, as well as any other pertinent information about the vailee itself. This page is not for listing events; that should be done on the yahrtee and hahrtee pages.

Each vailee page should also include the {{vaileetee}} template at the top.

Hahrtee (years)

Every D'ni hahr (year) page must include the {{hahrtee}} template at the top. This template requires two parameters: the D'ni decade and the D'ni century in which that hahr appears.

Events within a hahr should be broken down by type, then date. Currently, the categories for events are:

  • Births - for any person born in that hahr
  • Deaths - for any person who died in that hahr
  • Events - for anything else that happened in that hahr

Events that are only identified by the hahr in which they occurred should be listed first, unless there is some indication that it took place between two other events with more accurate dates. Other events should then be listed chronologically by vailee and yahr (month and day).

Categories

Categories should be placed inside a <noinclude></noinclude> container. This will prevent them from appearing on pages when the contents of the hahr's page are transcluded into other places.

Every hahr page must include the following categories:

The activity category is a hidden organizational category that enables the D'ni decade pages to pull only the contents of that decade from the specific hahr pages that make that decade up. Pages that do not contain the activity category will not be pulled into the decade pages.

Other calendars

Each hahr's page should at the very least indicate the time span covered by that hahr in the Gregorian calendar system (aka "surface time"). Because our calendar and the D'ni calendar are offset from one another and drift slightly due to leap years, you should include the specific month and day on which the hahr began and ended.

"Decades"

If the D'ni decade containing that hahr does not yet exist, it should be created as well. Because the D'ni number system is in base-25, a "decade" is 25 years long, so for instance the decades surrounding 1124 DE are the 1075s DE, the 1100s DE, and the 1125s DE.

Every decade page's title should follow the convention of "<decade>s DE", e.g. "1100s DE".

Decade pages must have the {{Hahrtee fahrah}} template at the top of the page. This template takes the D'ni century ("hahrtee fahrah") as the only parameter. Note that although the D'ni calendar system includes a 0 DE, D'ni centuries start at 1. Each century is 625 years long, because of the D'ni's base-25 number system. Thus, the first century is 0 - 624 DE, the second century is 625 - 1224 DE, and so on.

Decade pages should also list the hahrtee that comprise them. The wording is typically as follows:

The <decade>s DE was a D'ni decade which began on Leefo 1 <first hahr> DE, and ended on Leenovoo 29 <last hahr> DE.

Every decade page must also contain the template {{Activity by year for decade}}, with the special {{PAGENAME}} magic word as the template's parameter. This template will pull every event from each page tagged with that decade's activity category, order them by hahr, and link them. This cuts down on the amount of maintenance and busy-work required to keep every part of the timeline up to date as the Archive expands. You can see an example of what this looks like on the 975s DE page.

Hahrtee fahrah (centuries)

Every D'ni century page must begin with the {{Hahrtee fahrah}} template. As on the Decades pages, this template takes the D'ni century in question as its only parameter (e.g. {{Hahrtee fahrah|2}} for the second D'ni century).

The events list on a century page may be abbreviated to contain fewer entries for a hahr than actually occurred, essentially creating a "highlights" list, which visitors may explore more deeply by visiting the pages for specific hahrtee.

Century pages may also list significant individuals, and provide overviews of complex events (though visitors should be directed to specific Archive entries for full details). Currently our historical records are limited, so there are not likely to be many circumstances where a D'ni century page cries out for a great deal of embellishment beyond simple lists of events.

Gregorian (surface) calendar

Days

Month/day combinations (like April 21) should only be created when needed. These pages should list events from any year that took place on that day.

Day pages should indicate how far into the calendar year they are, and how many days remain after it (e.g. "April 21 is the 111th day of the year (112th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 254 days remaining until the end of the year.")

Every day's page should also include the {{month}} template at the top to provide inter-day and inter-month navigation. This template takes the name of the current month as its only parameter.

Months

Gregorian months (e.g. "April") do not require their own entries. If someone wants to know about a month, they can look it up on Wikipedia.

Years

Every year page must include the {{years}} template at the top. This template requires two parameters: the decade and the century in which that year appears.

Events within a year should be broken down by type, then date. Currently, the categories for events are:

  • Births - for any person born in that year
  • Deaths - for any person who died in that hahr
  • Events - for anything else that happened in that hahr

Events that are only identified by the year in which they occurred should be listed first, unless there is some indication that it took place between two other events with more accurate dates. Other events should then be listed chronologically by month and day.

Categories

Categories should be placed inside a <noinclude></noinclude> container. This will prevent them from appearing on pages when the contents of the year's page are transcluded into other places.

Every year page must include the following categories:

The activity category is a hidden organizational category that enables the decade pages to pull only the contents of that decade from the specific year pages that make that decade up. Pages that do not contain the activity category will not be pulled into the decade pages.

Other calendars

Each year's page should at the very least indicate the time span covered by that year in the D'ni calendar system. Because our calendar and the D'ni calendar are offset from one another and drift slightly due to leap years, you should include the specific yahr and vailee on which the year began and ended.

Decades

If the decade containing that year does not yet exist, it should be created as well. Every decade page's title should follow the convention of "<decade>s BC/CE", e.g. "2000s CE".

Decade pages must have the {{Centuries}} template at the top of the page. This template takes the century as the only parameter.

Decade pages should also list the years that comprise them. The wording is typically as follows:

The <decade>s DE was a Gregorian decade which began on January 1 <first year> BC/CE, and ended on December 31 <last year> BC/CE.

Every decade page must also contain the template {{Activity by year for decade}}, with the special {{PAGENAME}} magic word as the template's parameter. This template will pull every event from each page tagged with that decade's activity category, order them by year, and link them. This cuts down on the amount of maintenance and busy-work required to keep every part of the timeline up to date as the Archive expands.

Centuries

Every century page must begin with the {{Centuries}} template. As on the Decades pages, this template takes the century in question as its only parameter (e.g. {{Centuries|20}} for the 20th century).

The events list on a century page may be abbreviated to contain fewer entries for a year than actually occurred, essentially creating a "highlights" list, which visitors may explore more deeply by visiting the pages for specific years.

Century pages may also list significant individuals, and provide overviews of complex events (though visitors should be directed to specific Archive entries for full details). Currently our historical records are limited, so there are not likely to be many circumstances where a century page cries out for a great deal of embellishment beyond simple lists of events.