Osraan calendar

The Ziauran calendar was the most widely used on Mure, taking into account the specific  and  of Mure relative to its distance from its star. It was implemented and instituted by Ziaurus, the first of the planet-encompassing Third Predorate, in  and incorporated many of the suggested fixes put forth by grafas members of the newly-formed Qabbrat legislative council. Due to such inclusions and appeasements, the calendar saw near universal use among the Murese sienaimiestasikut from its inception onward, lasting even into the Murese Postmodernity.

Description
The Ziauran calendar was a conventional composed of 2,116 Mure days per Mure year. A year, called a kursas in Murese Sith, referred to a single of Mure around the North Star. Years were broken into eight major subdivisions of 264-268 days apiece, each of which was called a kursasyunoks or "little year." These were numbered according to their appearances in the progression of a year (i.e. wotokkursasyunoks for "first little year," yuntokkursasyunoks for "second little year," etc. ). While each of the first seven kursasikutyunoks possessed 264 days, the final kursasyunoks possessed the remaining four holdover days. These days were nicknamed the dienakutvalytimas or "cleaning days" and were acknowledged as federal Third Predorate holidays, generally used by members of the Murese population to wrap up unfinished personal business prior to the start of a new year.

Each kursasyunoks was further divided into eight mekuonas (singular mekuo, meaning "month" ) of exactly 33 days each. The names of these months were also named in accordance with their appearances in their respective kursasikutyunoks (i.e. wotokmekuoyuntokkursasyunoksiyat meaning "first month of the second little year," etc. ). Each of these months was further subdivided into a set of three weeks each called a mekuoyunoks ("little month" as there was no Murese Sith word for "week" ) composed of eleven days each. Unlike months or little years, mekuonasyunoks were not counted or named in relation to their respective month or little year, but instead were named in accordance with their placement in the greater kursas solar year.