Eras based on astronomical speculation
During the period of elaboration of the classical Hindu astronomy, which was definitively expounded in the treatises called siddhāntas and by authors such as Aryabhata (born ad 476), Varāhamihira, Brahmagupta (7th century ad), etc., the ancient Vedic notions on the cycle of years, embracing round numbers of solar and lunar years together, were developed. On the one hand, greater cycles were calculated in order to include the revolutions of planets, and the theory was elaborated of a general conjunction of heavenly bodies at 0° longitude after the completion of each cycle. On the other hand, cosmologists speculated as to the existence of several successive cycles constituting successive periods of evolution and involution of the universe. The period calculated as the basis of the chronology of the universe was the mahāyuga, consisting of 4,320,000 sidereal years. It was divided into four yugas, or stages, on the hypothesis of an original “order” (dharma) established in the first stage, the Kṛta Yuga, gradually decaying in the three others, the Tretā, Dvāpara, and Kali yugas. The respective durations of these four yugas were 1,728,000, 1,296,000, 864,000, and 432,000 years. According to the astronomer Aryabhata, however, the duration of each of the four yugas was the same—i.e., 1,080,000 years. The basic figures in these calculations were derived from the Brahmanical reckoning of a year of 10,800 muhūrta (see calendar: The Hindu calendar), together with combinations of other basic numbers, such as four phases, 27 nakṣatras, etc. The movement of the equinoxes was at the same time interpreted not as a circular precession but as a libration (periodic oscillation) at the rate of 54 seconds of arc per year. It is in accordance with these principles that the calculation of the beginning of the Kali Yuga was done in order to fix for this chronology a point starting at the beginning of the agreed world cycle. Such a beginning could not be observed, since it was purely theoretical, consisting of a general conjunction of planets at longitude 0°, the last point of the nakṣatra Revati (Pisces). It has been calculated as corresponding to February 18, 3102 bc (old style), 0 hour, and taken as the beginning of the Kali era. In this era, the years are mostly reckoned as elapsed and solar or luni-solar.
In Hindu tradition the beginning of the Kali era was connected with (1) events of the Mahābhārata war; (2) King Yudhiṣṭhira’s accession to the throne; (3) 36 years later, King Parikṣit’s consecration; and (4) the death of Lord Krishna. Years of the era are still regularly given in Hindu almanacs.
An era resting upon a fictitious assumption of a complete 100-year revolution of the Ursa Major, the Great Bear (saptarṣi), around the northern pole was the Saptarṣi, or Laukika, era (3076 bc), formerly used in Kashmir and the Punjab. The alleged movement of this constellation has been used in Purāṇa compilations and even by astronomers for indicating the centuries.
Two chronological cycles were worked out on a basis of the planet Jupiter’s revolutions, one corresponding to a single year of Jupiter consisting of 12 solar years and the other to five of Jupiter’s years. The second, the bṛhaspaticakra, starts, according to different traditions, from ad 427 or from 3116 bc. Before ad 907 one year was periodically omitted in order to keep the cycle in concordance with the solar years. Since 907 the special names by which every year of the cycle is designated are simply given to present years of the almanac.
Side-by-side with Hindu and foreign eras adopted in India, several eras were created in the country under foreign influence, chiefly of the Mughal emperor Akbar: Bengali San (ad 593), Amli of Orissa and Vilayati (ad 592), Faṣlī (ad 590, 592, or 593 according to the district), and Sursan of Mahārāshtra (599).