Assamese And English Calendar 1972 Top -

: 1972 was a leap year with 366 days. Historically, it was also the first and only year to have two leap seconds added (on June 30 and December 31), making it the longest year in UTC history.

A “top” calendar went beyond dates. It included daily Panchang data: assamese and english calendar 1972 top

October 1972 Sun 1 — Bohaag 3 Mon 2 — Bohaag 4 Tue 3 — Bohaag 5 Wed 4 — Bohaag 6 Thu 5 — Bohaag 7 Fri 6 — Bohaag 8 Sat 7 — Bohaag 9 Sun 8 — Bohaag 10 Mon 9 — Bohaag 11 Tue 10 — Bohaag 12 Wed 11 — Bohaag 13 Thu 12 — Bohaag 14 Fri 13 — Bohaag 15 Sat 14 — Joi 1 Sun 15 — Joi 2 Mon 16 — Joi 3 Tue 17 — Joi 4 Wed 18 — Joi 5 Thu 19 — Joi 6 Fri 20 — Joi 7 Sat 21 — Joi 8 Sun 22 — Joi 9 Mon 23 — Joi 10 Tue 24 — Joi 11 Wed 25 — Joi 12 Thu 26 — Joi 13 Fri 27 — Joi 14 Sat 28 — Joi 15 Sun 29 — Joi 16 Mon 30 — Joi 17 Tue 31 — Joi 18 : 1972 was a leap year with 366 days

In this article, we will dive deep into why the 1972 bilingual calendar remains a “top” reference point, how to read its unique structure, major festivals, and where to find the most accurate digital or printable versions today. It included daily Panchang data: October 1972 Sun

The edition is a cultural artifact. It tells us how Assamese society balanced the colonial legacy of the Gregorian calendar with the indigenous luni-solar system. It reminds us that in 1972, a farmer in Dhemaji and a tea planter in Jorhat used the same grid to plan their lives—one looking at the moon, the other at the office memo.

For collectors, the version is valuable because it captures the exact dates of socio-religious events. Here are the highlights: