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Tadašýl-Žýš

The Tadašýl-Žýš is the name of the constellation system that was used by the Ïlýrhonid Tribe as a basis for the Ïlýrhonidian Calendar, which would be more or less adopted by all other major cultures that sprung from it. Because the Tadašýl-Žýš has 10 constellations, and the Ïlýrhonidians considered 1 hour, or Golte, to be the time it took for the moon Ëmar to move across a single constellation, each day, or Ïzamúte, had 10 hours.

The Tadašýl-Žýš is one of the more elusive topics in Ïlýrhonidian religion. Although treated by modern historians as part of the Kavamïŋ-Ïlýrhonid, the religious system in place for much of the tribe's history, it has always enjoyed a place distinct from the rituals, holidays, and mythology of the religion. This is most likely to do with the uneven number; being a culture that enjoyed symbolism, the tribe could never understand why 10 constellations existed, and not 11 or 12, which would fit more with the 12-family arrangement.

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