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I just added another wheel of the year diagram to Wikimedia Commons, and subsequently to this page. I was inspired to make this calendar for me personally, and chose not to use the more modern uses of mabon, litha and ostara. I notice that the dates I've used, which come from https://wheeloftheyear.soundragon.su/ do not correspond with the dates of the older diagram. Happy to receive feedback. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Douginamug (talk • contribs) 21:06, 8 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Darker Dreams I quickly found several sources mentioning astrological dates for cross-quarter days, although none of them appear to be of high reputability:
https://www.starmythworld.com/mathisencorollary/2011/05/what-are-cross-quarter-days.html - doesn't speak to tradition, explicitly goes out to calculate cross quarters mathematically. Which is interesting, possibly something to include in the text of the page along side information like Seasonal lag, but not the topic of the page, and not something that should be substituted for accepted dates in a major image for the page.
I do think your version is a visual improvement, and will generally vote for increasing information. But, it seems important to keep the dates that have been recognized and celebrated by active Pagans for decades, and can be found in dozens of books on the religion(s), as the primary marked dates when illustrating the subject. Doing otherwise may not be *original* research, but it's going to create unnecessary confusion in people looking for information and looks pretty disrespectful towards the existing, active, modern practitioners. Darker Dreams (talk) 04:11, 3 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Darker Dreams I agree with you that the popular dates for the cross-quarter days are the firsts of the respective months, and that a prominent diagram with the astrological dates would therefore be inappropriate per WP:FALSEBALANCE
However, the argumentation that the astrological dates don't "speak to tradition" or are "disrespectful towards the existing ... practitioners" does not preclude their notability. If other people are using astrological dates, they belong, in a balanced way, in Wikipedia. Is there a particularly good book among the dozens you mentioned that does a good job of tracing the dates of celebration? I'd be interested to have a read.
For now, I'll think about how I could amend the diagram to the popular dates. I also wonder if there are enough, good sources to justify an "astrological dates" section towards the end of the page with the diagram as is: I'll have a look. DougInAMugtalk21:22, 4 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I don't remember for sure off the top of my head which books talk through the development of the modern Wheel of the Year calendar, but Drawing Down the Moon (book) seems like a reasonable bet. Pretty much any book on Wicca, modern Druidry, or eclectic Paganism will have that same calendar. Most books on Heathenry will at least acknowledge it. As for how to include the astronomical cross-days information in the text, or include the diagram as-is, I'd look to how Seasonal lag is included. Darker Dreams (talk) 15:09, 6 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Zlax I recommend you read the above discussion to understand why @Darker Dreams reverted your edit. You also seem to have used a source you authored to reference a point. I think this practice borders on WP:COI but I'm not sure. Welcome to Wikipedia! DougInAMugtalk20:39, 11 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
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