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- From: claus@tondering.dk (Claus Tondering)
- Newsgroups: sci.astro,soc.history,sci.answers,soc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Calendar FAQ, v. 2.6 (modified 24 June 2003) Part 1/3
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: sci.astro,soc.history
- X-Last-Updated: 2003/06/24
- Summary: This posting contains answers to Frequently Asked Questions about
- the Christian, Hebrew, Persian, Islamic, Chinese and various
- historical calendars.
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 17 Apr 2004 11:27:44 GMT
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- Archive-name: calendars/faq/part1
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: 2003/06/24
- Version: 2.6
- URL: http://www.tondering.dk/claus/calendar.html
-
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT
- CALENDARS
- Part 1 of 3
-
- Version 2.6 - 24 June 2003
-
- Copyright and disclaimer
- ------------------------
- This document is Copyright (C) 2003 by Claus Tondering.
- E-mail: claus@tondering.dk.
- The document may be freely distributed, provided this
- copyright notice is included and no money is charged for
- the document.
-
- This document is provided "as is". No warranties are made as
- to its correctness.
-
- Introduction
- ------------
- This is the calendar FAQ. Its purpose is to give an overview
- of the Christian, Hebrew, Persian, and Islamic calendars in
- common use. It will provide a historical background for the
- Christian calendar, plus an overview of the French
- Revolutionary calendar, the Maya calendar, and the Chinese
- calendar.
-
- Comments are very welcome. My e-mail address is given above.
-
- I would like to thank
- - Dr Monzur Ahmed of the University of Birmingham, UK,
- - Michael J Appel,
- - Jay Ball,
- - Tom Box,
- - Chris Carrier,
- - Simon Cassidy,
- - Claus Dobesch,
- - Leofranc Holford-Strevens,
- - David B. Kelley of the Hamamatsu University School of
- Medicine in Japan,
- - H. Koenig,
- - Graham Lewis,
- - Duncan MacGregor,
- - Marcos Montes,
- - James E. Morrison,
- - Waleed A. Muhanna of the Fisher College of Business,
- Columbus, Ohio, USA,
- - Stefan Potthast,
- - Yves Sagnier of the Centre d'Etudes de la Navigation
- Aerienne,
- - Paul Schlyter of the Swedish Amateur Astronomer's Society,
- - Dr John Stockton
- for their help with this document.
-
- Changes in version 2.6
- ----------------------
- The names for the six additional days of the French
- revolutionary calendar have been corrected.
- A few minor corrections have been made.
-
- Changes in version 2.5
- ----------------------
- A new section 2.12.4 has been added and the following sections
- renumbered.
- The description of the calculation of the Epact in section
- 2.12.5 has been rewritten.
- Chapter 5 about the Persian calendar has been added and the
- following chapters renumbered.
- Section 10.5 now mentions a couple of calendar books.
- A few minor corrections have been made.
-
- Writing dates and years
- -----------------------
- Dates will be written in the British format (1 January)
- rather than the American format (January 1). Dates will
- occasionally be abbreviated: "1 Jan" rather than "1 January".
-
- Years before and after the "official" birth year of Christ
- will be written "45 BC" or "AD 1997", respectively. I prefer
- this notation over the secular "45 BCE" and "1997 CE"
- (See also section 2.13.4.)
-
- The 'mod' operator
- ------------------
- Throughout this document the operator 'mod' will be used to
- signify the modulo or remainder operator. For example,
- 17 mod 7=3 because the result of the division 17/7 is 2 with a
- remainder of 3.
-
- The text in square brackets
- ---------------------------
- Square brackets [like this] identify information that I am
- unsure about and about which I would like more
- information. Please write me at claus@tondering.dk.
-
-
- Index:
- ------
-
- In part 1 of this document:
-
- 1. What Astronomical Events Form the Basis of Calendars?
- 1.1. What are equinoxes and solstices?
- 2. The Christian Calendar
- 2.1. What is the Julian calendar?
- 2.1.1. What years are leap years?
- 2.1.2. What consequences did the use of the Julian
- calendar have?
- 2.2. What is the Gregorian calendar?
- 2.2.1. What years are leap years?
- 2.2.2. Isn't there a 4000-year rule?
- 2.2.3. Don't the Greek do it differently?
- 2.2.4. When did country X change from the Julian to
- the Gregorian calendar?
- 2.3. What day is the leap day?
- 2.4. What is the Solar Cycle?
- 2.5. What day of the week was 2 August 1953?
- 2.6. When can I reuse my 1992 calendar?
- 2.7. What is the Roman calendar?
- 2.7.1. How did the Romans number days?
- 2.8. What is the proleptic calendar?
- 2.9. Has the year always started on 1 January?
- 2.10. Then what about leap years?
- 2.11. What is the origin of the names of the months?
-
- In part 2 of this document:
-
- 2.12. What is Easter?
- 2.12.1. When is Easter? (Short answer)
- 2.12.2. When is Easter? (Long answer)
- 2.12.3. What is the Golden Number?
- 2.12.4. How does one calculate Easter then?
- 2.12.5. What is the Epact?
- 2.12.6. How does one calculate Gregorian Easter then?
- 2.12.7. Isn't there a simpler way to calculate Easter?
- 2.12.8. Is there a simple relationship between two
- consecutive Easters?
- 2.12.9. How frequently are the dates for Easter repeated?
- 2.12.10. What about Greek Orthodox Easter?
- 2.12.11. Did the Easter dates change in 2001?
- 2.13. How does one count years?
- 2.13.1. How did Dionysius date Christ's birth?
- 2.13.2. Was Jesus born in the year 0?
- 2.13.3. When does the 3rd millennium start?
- 2.13.4. What do AD, BC, CE, and BCE stand for?
- 2.14. What is the Indiction?
- 2.15. What is the Julian period?
- 2.15.1. Is there a formula for calculating the Julian
- day number?
- 2.15.2. What is the modified Julian day number?
- 2.15.3. What is the Lilian day number?
- 2.16. What is the correct way to write dates?
- 3. The Hebrew Calendar
- 3.1. What does a Hebrew year look like?
- 3.2. What years are leap years?
- 3.3. What years are deficient, regular, and complete?
- 3.4. When is New Year's day?
- 3.5. When does a Hebrew day begin?
- 3.6. When does a Hebrew year begin?
- 3.7. When is the new moon?
- 3.8. How does one count years?
- 4. The Islamic Calendar
- 4.1. What does an Islamic year look like?
- 4.2. So you can't print an Islamic calendar in advance?
- 4.3. How does one count years?
- 4.4. When will the Islamic calendar overtake the Gregorian
- calendar?
- 4.5. Doesn't Saudi Arabia have special rules?
- 5. The Persian Calendar
- 5.1. What does a Persian year look like?
- 5.2. When does the Persian year begin?
- 5.3. How does one count years?
- 5.4. What years are leap years?
-
- In part 3 of this document:
-
- 6. The Week
- 6.1. What is the origin of the 7-day week?
- 6.2. What do the names of the days of the week mean?
- 6.3. What is the system behind the planetary day names?
- 6.4. Has the 7-day week cycle ever been interrupted?
- 6.5. Which day is the day of rest?
- 6.6. What is the first day of the week?
- 6.7. What is the week number?
- 6.8. How can I calculate the week number?
- 6.9. Do weeks of different lengths exist?
- 7. The French Revolutionary Calendar
- 7.1. What does a Republican year look like?
- 7.2. How does one count years?
- 7.3. What years are leap years?
- 7.4. How does one convert a Republican date to a Gregorian one?
- 8. The Maya Calendar
- 8.1. What is the Long Count?
- 8.1.1. When did the Long Count start?
- 8.2. What is the Tzolkin?
- 8.2.1. When did the Tzolkin start?
- 8.3. What is the Haab?
- 8.3.1. When did the Haab start?
- 8.4. Did the Mayas think a year was 365 days?
- 9. The Chinese Calendar
- 9.1. What does the Chinese year look like?
- 9.2. What years are leap years?
- 9.3. How does one count years?
- 9.4. What is the current year in the Chinese calendar?
- 10. Frequently Asked Questions about this FAQ
- 10.1. Why doesn't the FAQ describe calendar X?
- 10.2. Why doesn't the FAQ contain information X?
- 10.3. Why don't you reply to my e-mail?
- 10.4. How do I know that I can trust your information?
- 10.5. Can you recommend any good books about calendars?
- 10.6. Do you know a web site where I can find information
- about X?
- 11. Date
-
-
- 1. What Astronomical Events Form the Basis of Calendars?
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- Calendars are normally based on astronomical events, and the two most
- important astronomical objects are the sun and the moon. Their cycles
- are very important in the construction and understanding of calendars.
-
- Our concept of a year is based on the earth's motion around the sun.
- The time from one fixed point, such as a solstice or equinox, to the
- next is called a "tropical year". Its length is currently 365.242190
- days, but it varies. Around 1900 its length was 365.242196 days, and
- around 2100 it will be 365.242184 days. (This definition of the
- tropical year is not quite accurate, see section 1.1 for more
- details.)
-
- Our concept of a month is based on the moon's motion around the earth,
- although this connection has been broken in the calendar commonly used
- now. The time from one new moon to the next is called a "synodic
- month", and its length is currently 29.5305889 days, but it
- varies. Around 1900 its length was 29.5305886 days, and around 2100 it
- will be 29.5305891 days.
-
- Note that these numbers are averages. The actual length of a
- particular year may vary by several minutes due to the influence of
- the gravitational force from other planets. Similarly, the time
- between two new moons may vary by several hours due to a number of
- factors, including changes in the gravitational force from the sun,
- and the moon's orbital inclination.
-
- It is unfortunate that the length of the tropical year is not a
- multiple of the length of the synodic month. This means that with 12
- months per year, the relationship between our month and the moon
- cannot be maintained.
-
- However, 19 tropical years is 234.997 synodic months, which is very
- close to an integer. So every 19 years the phases of the moon fall on
- the same dates (if it were not for the skewness introduced by leap
- years). 19 years is called a Metonic cycle (after Meton, an astronomer
- from Athens in the 5th century BC).
-
- So, to summarise: There are three important numbers to note:
- A tropical year is 365.24219 days.
- A synodic month is 29.53059 days.
- 19 tropical years is close to an integral number of synodic months.
-
- The Christian calendar is based on the motion of the earth around the
- sun, while the months retain no connection with the motion of the moon.
-
- On the other hand, the Islamic calendar is based on the motion of the
- moon, while the year has no connection with the motion of the earth
- around the sun.
-
- Finally, the Hebrew calendar combines both, in that its years are
- linked to the motion of the earth around the sun, and its months are
- linked to the motion of the moon.
-
-
- 1.1. What are equinoxes and solstices?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Equinoxes and solstices are frequently used as anchor points for
- calendars. For people in the northern hemisphere:
-
- - Winter solstice is the time in December when the sun reaches its
- southernmost latitude. At this time we have the shortest day. The
- date is near 21 December.
-
- - Summer solstice is the time in June when the sun reaches its
- northernmost latitude. At this time we have the longest day. The
- date is near 21 June.
-
- - Vernal equinox is the time in March when the sun passes the equator
- moving from the southern to the northern hemisphere. Day and night
- have approximately the same length. The date is near 20 March.
-
- - Autumnal equinox is the time in September when the sun passes the
- equator moving from the northern to the southern hemisphere. Day and
- night have approximately the same length. The date is near
- 22 September.
-
- For people in the southern hemisphere these events are shifted half a
- year.
-
- The astronomical "tropical year" is frequently defined as the time
- between, say, two vernal equinoxes, but this is not actually true.
- Currently the time between two vernal equinoxes is slightly greater
- than the tropical year. The reason is that the earth's position in its
- orbit at the time of solstices and equinoxes shifts slightly each year
- (taking approximately 21,000 years to move all the way around the
- orbit). This, combined with the fact that the earth's orbit is not
- completely circular, causes the equinoxes and solstices to shift with
- respect to each other.
-
- The astronomer's mean tropical year is really a somewhat artificial
- average of the period between the time when the sun is in any given
- position in the sky with respect to the equinoxes and the next time
- the sun is in the same position.
-
-
- 2. The Christian Calendar
- -------------------------
-
- The "Christian calendar" is the term traditionally used to designate
- the calendar commonly in use, although its connection with
- Christianity is highly debatable.
-
- The Christian calendar has years of 365 or 366 days. It is divided into
- 12 months that have no relationship to the motion of the moon. In
- parallel with this system, the concept of "weeks" groups the days in
- sets of 7.
-
- Two main versions of the Christian calendar have existed in recent
- times: The Julian calendar and the Gregorian calendar. The difference
- between them lies in the way they approximate the length of the
- tropical year and their rules for calculating Easter.
-
-
- 2.1. What is the Julian calendar?
- ---------------------------------
-
- The Julian calendar was introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BC. It was
- in common use until the 1500s, when countries started changing to the
- Gregorian calendar (section 2.2). However, some countries (for
- example, Greece and Russia) used it into the 1900s, and the Orthodox
- church in Russia still uses it, as do some other Orthodox churches.
-
- In the Julian calendar, the tropical year is approximated as 365 1/4
- days = 365.25 days. This gives an error of 1 day in approximately 128
- years.
-
- The approximation 365 1/4 is achieved by having 1 leap year every 4
- years.
-
-
- 2.1.1. What years are leap years?
- ---------------------------------
-
- The Julian calendar has 1 leap year every 4 years:
-
- Every year divisible by 4 is a leap year.
-
- However, the 4-year rule was not followed in the first years after the
- introduction of the Julian calendar in 45 BC. Due to a counting error,
- every 3rd year was a leap year in the first years of this calendar's
- existence. The leap years were:
-
- 45 BC(?), 42 BC, 39 BC, 36 BC, 33 BC, 30 BC,
- 27 BC, 24 BC, 21 BC, 18 BC, 15 BC, 12 BC, 9 BC,
- AD 8, AD 12, and every 4th year from then on.
-
- Authorities disagree about whether 45 BC was a leap year or not.
-
- There were no leap years between 9 BC and AD 8 (or, according to some
- authorities, between 12 BC and AD 4). This period without leap years
- was decreed by emperor Augustus in order to make up for the surplus of
- leap years introduced previously, and it earned him a place in the
- calendar as the 8th month was named after him.
-
- It is a curious fact that although the method of reckoning years after
- the (official) birthyear of Christ was not introduced until the 6th
- century, by some stroke of luck the Julian leap years coincide with
- years of our Lord that are divisible by 4.
-
-
- 2.1.2. What consequences did the use of the Julian calendar have?
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Julian calendar introduces an error of 1 day every 128 years. So
- every 128 years the tropical year shifts one day backwards with
- respect to the calendar. Furthermore, the method for calculating the
- dates for Easter was inaccurate and needed to be refined.
-
- In order to remedy this, two steps were necessary: 1) The Julian
- calendar had to be replaced by something more adequate. 2) The extra
- days that the Julian calendar had inserted had to be dropped.
-
- The solution to problem 1) was the Gregorian calendar described in
- section 2.2.
-
- The solution to problem 2) depended on the fact that it was felt that
- 21 March was the proper day for vernal equinox (because 21 March was
- the date for vernal equinox during the Council of Nicaea in AD
- 325). The Gregorian calendar was therefore calibrated to make that day
- vernal equinox.
-
- By 1582 vernal equinox had moved (1582-325)/128 days = approximately
- 10 days backwards. So 10 days had to be dropped.
-
-
-
- 2.2. What is the Gregorian calendar?
- ------------------------------------
-
- The Gregorian calendar is the one commonly used today. It was proposed
- by Aloysius Lilius, a physician from Naples, and adopted by Pope
- Gregory XIII in accordance with instructions from the Council of Trent
- (1545-1563) to correct for errors in the older Julian Calendar. It was
- decreed by Pope Gregory XIII in a papal bull on 24 February 1582. This
- bull is named "Inter Gravissimas" after its first two words.
-
- In the Gregorian calendar, the tropical year is approximated as
- 365 97/400 days = 365.2425 days. Thus it takes approximately 3300
- years for the tropical year to shift one day with respect to the
- Gregorian calendar.
-
- The approximation 365 97/400 is achieved by having 97 leap years
- every 400 years.
-
-
- 2.2.1. What years are leap years?
- ---------------------------------
-
- The Gregorian calendar has 97 leap years every 400 years:
-
- Every year divisible by 4 is a leap year.
- However, every year divisible by 100 is not a leap year.
- However, every year divisible by 400 is a leap year after all.
-
- So, 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, and 2200 are not leap years. But 1600,
- 2000, and 2400 are leap years.
-
- (Destruction of a myth: There are no double leap years, i.e. no
- years with 367 days. See, however, the note on Sweden in section
- 2.2.4.)
-
-
- 2.2.2. Isn't there a 4000-year rule?
- ------------------------------------
-
- It has been suggested (by the astronomer John Herschel (1792-1871)
- among others) that a better approximation to the length of the
- tropical year would be 365 969/4000 days = 365.24225 days. This would
- dictate 969 leap years every 4000 years, rather than the 970 leap
- years mandated by the Gregorian calendar. This could be achieved by
- dropping one leap year from the Gregorian calendar every 4000 years,
- which would make years divisible by 4000 non-leap years.
-
- This rule has, however, not been officially adopted.
-
-
- 2.2.3. Don't the Greek do it differently?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- When the Orthodox church in Greece finally decided to switch to the
- Gregorian calendar in the 1920s, they tried to improve on the
- Gregorian leap year rules, replacing the "divisible by 400" rule by
- the following:
-
- Every year which when divided by 900 leaves a remainder of 200
- or 600 is a leap year.
-
- This makes 1900, 2100, 2200, 2300, 2500, 2600, 2700, 2800 non-leap
- years, whereas 2000, 2400, and 2900 are leap years. This will not
- create a conflict with the rest of the world until the year 2800.
-
- This rule gives 218 leap years every 900 years, which gives us an
- average year of 365 218/900 days = 365.24222 days, which is certainly
- more accurate than the official Gregorian number of 365.2425 days.
-
- However, this rule is *not* official in Greece.
-
-
- 2.2.4. When did country X change from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The papal bull of February 1582 decreed that 10 days should be dropped
- from October 1582 so that 15 October should follow immediately after
- 4 October, and from then on the reformed calendar should be used.
-
- This was observed in Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Spain. Other Catholic
- countries followed shortly after, but Protestant countries were
- reluctant to change, and the Greek orthodox countries didn't change
- until the start of the 1900s.
-
-
-
- Changes in the 1500s required 10 days to be dropped.
- Changes in the 1600s required 10 days to be dropped.
- Changes in the 1700s required 11 days to be dropped.
- Changes in the 1800s required 12 days to be dropped.
- Changes in the 1900s required 13 days to be dropped.
-
- (Exercise for the reader: Why is the error in the 1600s the same as
- in the 1500s.)
-
- The following list contains the dates for changes in a number of
- countries. It is very strange that in many cases there seems to be
- some doubt among authorities about what the correct days are.
- Different sources give very different dates in some cases. The list
- below does not include all the different opinions about when the
- change took place.
-
- Albania: December 1912
-
- Austria: Different regions on different dates
- Brixen, Salzburg and Tyrol:
- 5 Oct 1583 was followed by 16 Oct 1583
- Carinthia and Styria:
- 14 Dec 1583 was followed by 25 Dec 1583
- See also Czechoslovakia and Hungary
-
- Belgium: See the Netherlands
-
- Bulgaria: 31 Mar 1916 was followed by 14 Apr 1916
-
- Canada: Different areas changed at different times.
- Newfoundland and Hudson Bay coast:
- 2 Sep 1752 was followed by 14 Sep 1752
- Mainland Nova Scotia:
- Gregorian 1605 - 13 Oct 1710
- Julian 2 Oct 1710 - 2 Sep 1752
- Gregorian since 14 Sep 1752
- Rest of Canada:
- Gregorian from first European settlement
-
- China: The Gregorian calendar replaced the Chinese calendar
- in 1912, but the Gregorian calendar was not used
- throughout the country until the communist revolution
- of 1949.
-
- Czechoslovakia (i.e. Bohemia and Moravia):
- 6 Jan 1584 was followed by 17 Jan 1584
-
- Denmark (including Norway):
- 18 Feb 1700 was followed by 1 Mar 1700
-
- Egypt: 1875
-
- Estonia: 31 Jan 1918 was followed by 14 Feb 1918
-
- Finland: Then part of Sweden. (Note, however, that Finland later
- became part of Russia, which then still used the
- Julian calendar. The Gregorian calendar remained
- official in Finland, but some use of the Julian
- calendar was made.)
-
- France: 9 Dec 1582 was followed by 20 Dec 1582
- Alsace: 5 Feb 1682 was followed by 16 Feb 1682
- Lorraine: 16 Feb 1760 was followed by 28 Feb 1760
- Strasbourg: February 1682
-
- Germany: Different states on different dates:
- Catholic states on various dates in 1583-1585
- Prussia: 22 Aug 1610 was followed by 2 Sep 1610
- Protestant states: 18 Feb 1700 was followed by 1 Mar 1700
- (Many local variations)
-
- Great Britain and Dominions:
- 2 Sep 1752 was followed by 14 Sep 1752
-
- Greece: [9 Mar 1924 was followed by 23 Mar 1924
- (Some sources say 1916 and 1920)]
-
- Hungary: 21 Oct 1587 was followed by 1 Nov 1587
-
- Ireland: See Great Britain
-
- Italy: 4 Oct 1582 was followed by 15 Oct 1582
-
- Japan: The Gregorian calendar was introduced to supplement the
- traditional Japanese calendar on 1 Jan 1873.
-
- Latvia: During German occupation 1915 to 1918
-
- Lithuania: 1915
-
- Luxemburg: 14 Dec 1582 was followed by 25 Dec 1582
-
- Netherlands (including Belgium):
- Zeeland, Brabrant, and the "Staten Generaal":
- 14 Dec 1582 was followed by 25 Dec 1582
- Holland:
- 1 Jan 1583 was followed by 12 Jan 1583
- Limburg and the southern provinces (currently Belgium):
- 20 Dec 1582 was followed by 31 Dec 1582
- or
- 21 Dec 1582 was followed by 1 Jan 1583
- Groningen:
- 10 Feb 1583 was followed by 21 Feb 1583
- Went back to Julian in the summer of 1594
- 31 Dec 1700 was followed by 12 Jan 1701
- Gelderland:
- 30 Jun 1700 was followed by 12 Jul 1700
- Utrecht and Overijssel:
- 30 Nov 1700 was followed by 12 Dec 1700
- Friesland:
- 31 Dec 1700 was followed by 12 Jan 1701
- Drenthe:
- 30 Apr 1701 was followed by 12 May 1701
-
- Norway: Then part of Denmark.
-
- Poland: 4 Oct 1582 was followed by 15 Oct 1582
-
- Portugal: 4 Oct 1582 was followed by 15 Oct 1582
-
- Romania: 31 Mar 1919 was followed by 14 Apr 1919
- [The Greek Orthodox parts of the country may have
- changed later.]
-
- Russia: 31 Jan 1918 was followed by 14 Feb 1918
- [In the eastern parts of the country the change may
- not have occurred until 1920.]
-
- Scotland: Much confusion exists regarding Scotland's change. Different
- authorities disagree about whether Scotland changed together
- with the rest of Great Britain, or if they had changed
- earlier.
-
- Spain: 4 Oct 1582 was followed by 15 Oct 1582
-
- Sweden (including Finland):
- 17 Feb 1753 was followed by 1 Mar 1753 (see note below)
-
- Switzerland:
- Catholic cantons: 1583, 1584 or 1597
- Protestant cantons:
- 31 Dec 1700 was followed by 12 Jan 1701
- (Many local variations)
-
- Turkey: Gregorian calendar introduced 1 Jan 1927
-
- United States: Different areas changed at different times.
- Along the Eastern seaboard: With Great Britain in 1752.
- Mississippi valley: With France in 1582.
- Texas, Florida, California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico:
- With Spain in 1582
- Washington, Oregon: With Britain in 1752.
- Alaska: October 1867 when Alaska became part of the USA.
-
- Wales: See Great Britain
-
- Yugoslavia: 1919
-
- Sweden has a curious history. Sweden decided to make a gradual change
- from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar. By dropping every leap year
- from 1700 through 1740 the eleven superfluous days would be omitted
- and from 1 Mar 1740 they would be in sync with the Gregorian
- calendar. (But in the meantime they would be in sync with nobody!)
-
- So 1700 (which should have been a leap year in the Julian calendar)
- was not a leap year in Sweden. However, by mistake 1704 and 1708
- became leap years. This left Sweden out of synchronisation with both
- the Julian and the Gregorian world, so they decided to go *back* to
- the Julian calendar. In order to do this, they inserted an extra day
- in 1712, making that year a double leap year! So in 1712, February had
- 30 days in Sweden.
-
- Later, in 1753, Sweden changed to the Gregorian calendar by dropping 11
- days like everyone else.
-
-
- 2.3. What day is the leap day?
- ------------------------------
-
- It is 24 February!
-
- Weird? Yes! The explanation is related to the Roman calendar and is
- found in section 2.7.1.
-
- From a numerical point of view, of course 29 February is the extra
- day. But from the point of view of celebration of feast days, the
- following correspondence between days in leap years and non-leap
- years has traditionally been used:
-
- Non-leap year Leap year
- ------------- ----------
- 22 February 22 February
- 23 February 23 February
- 24 February (extra day)
- 24 February 25 February
- 25 February 26 February
- 26 February 27 February
- 27 February 28 February
- 28 February 29 February
-
- For example, the feast of St. Leander has been celebrated on 27
- February in non-leap years and on 28 February in leap years.
-
- Many countries are gradually changing the leap day from the 24th to
- the 29th. This affects countries such as Sweden and Austria that
- celebrate "name days" (i.e. each day is associated with a name).
-
-
- 2.4. What is the Solar Cycle?
- -----------------------------
-
- In the Julian calendar the relationship between the days of the week
- and the dates of the year is repeated in cycles of 28 years. In the
- Gregorian calendar this is still true for periods that do not cross
- years that are divisible by 100 but not by 400.
-
- A period of 28 years is called a Solar Cycle. The "Solar Number" of a
- year is found as:
-
- Solar Number = (year + 8) mod 28 + 1
-
- In the Julian calendar there is a one-to-one relationship between the
- Solar Number and the day on which a particular date falls.
-
- (The leap year cycle of the Gregorian calendar is 400 years, which is
- 146,097 days, which curiously enough is a multiple of 7. So in the
- Gregorian calendar the equivalent of the "Solar Cycle" would be 400
- years, not 7*400=2800 years as one might be tempted to believe.)
-
-
- 2.5. What day of the week was 2 August 1953?
- --------------------------------------------
-
- To calculate the day on which a particular date falls, the following
- algorithm may be used (the divisions are integer divisions, in which
- remainders are discarded):
-
- a = (14 - month) / 12
- y = year - a
- m = month + 12*a - 2
- For Julian calendar: d = (5 + day + y + y/4 + (31*m)/12) mod 7
- For Gregorian calendar: d = (day + y + y/4 - y/100 + y/400 + (31*m)/12) mod 7
-
- The value of d is 0 for a Sunday, 1 for a Monday, 2 for a Tuesday, etc.
-
- Example: On what day of the week was the author born?
-
- My birthday is 2 August 1953 (Gregorian, of course).
-
- a = (14 - 8) / 12 = 0
- y = 1953 - 0 = 1953
- m = 8 + 12*0 - 2 = 6
- d = (2 + 1953 + 1953/4 - 1953/100 + 1953/400 + (31*6)/12) mod 7
- = (2 + 1953 + 488 - 19 + 4 + 15 ) mod 7
- = 2443 mod 7
- = 0
-
- I was born on a Sunday.
-
-
- 2.6. When can I reuse my 1992 calendar?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- Let us first assume that you are only interested in which dates fall
- on which days of the week; you are not interested in the dates for
- Easter and other irregular holidays.
-
- Let us further confine ourselves to the years 1901-2099.
-
- With these restrictions, the answer is as follows:
-
- - If year X is a leap year, you can reuse its calendar in year X+28.
-
- - If year X is the first year after a leap year, you can reuse its
- calendar in years X+6, X+17, and X+28.
-
- - If year X is the second year after a leap year, you can reuse its
- calendar in years X+11, X+17, and X+28.
-
- - If year X is the third year after a leap year, you can reuse its
- calendar in years X+11, X+22, and X+28.
-
- Note that the expression X+28 occurs in all four items above. So you
- can always reuse your calendar every 28 years.
-
- But if you also want your calendar's indication of Easter and other
- Christian holidays to be correct, the rules are far too complex to be
- put to a simple formula. Sometimes calendars can be reused after just
- six years. For example, the calendars for the years 1981 and 1987 are
- identical, even when it comes to the date for Easter. But sometimes a
- very long time can pass before a calendar can be reused; if you happen
- to have a calendar from 1940, you won't be able to reuse it until the
- year 5280!
-
-
- 2.7. What is the Roman calendar?
- --------------------------------
-
- Before Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar in 45 BC, the
- Roman calendar was a mess, and much of our so-called "knowledge" about
- it seems to be little more than guesswork.
-
- Originally, the year started on 1 March and consisted of only 304 days
- or 10 months (Martius, Aprilis, Maius, Junius, Quintilis, Sextilis,
- September, October, November, and December). These 304 days were
- followed by an unnamed and unnumbered winter period. The Roman king
- Numa Pompilius (c. 715-673 BC, although his historicity is disputed)
- allegedly introduced February and January (in that order) between
- December and March, increasing the length of the year to 354 or 355
- days. In 450 BC, February was moved to its current position between
- January and March.
-
- In order to make up for the lack of days in a year, an extra month,
- Intercalaris or Mercedonius, (allegedly with 22 or 23 days though some
- authorities dispute this) was introduced in some years. In an 8 year
- period the length of the years were:
- 1: 12 months or 355 days
- 2: 13 months or 377 days
- 3: 12 months or 355 days
- 4: 13 months or 378 days
- 5: 12 months or 355 days
- 6: 13 months or 377 days
- 7: 12 months or 355 days
- 8: 13 months or 378 days
- A total of 2930 days corresponding to a year of 366 1/4 days. This
- year was discovered to be too long, and therefore 7 days were later
- dropped from the 8th year, yielding 365.375 days per year.
-
- This is all theory. In practice it was the duty of the priesthood to
- keep track of the calendars, but they failed miserably, partly due to
- ignorance, partly because they were bribed to make certain years long
- and other years short. Furthermore, leap years were considered unlucky
- and were therefore avoided in time of crisis, such as the Second Punic
- War.
-
- In order to clean up this mess, Julius Caesar made his famous calendar
- reform in 45 BC. We can make an educated guess about the length of the
- months in the years 47 and 46 BC:
-
- 47 BC 46 BC
- January 29 29
- February 28 24
- Intercalaris 27
- March 31 31
- April 29 29
- May 31 31
- June 29 29
- Quintilis 31 31
- Sextilis 29 29
- September 29 29
- October 31 31
- November 29 29
- Undecember 33
- Duodecember 34
- December 29 29
- --- ---
- Total 355 445
-
- The length of the months from 45 BC onward were the same as the ones
- we know today.
-
- Occasionally one reads the following story:
- "Julius Caesar made all odd numbered months 31 days long, and
- all even numbered months 30 days long (with February having 29
- days in non-leap years). In 44 BC Quintilis was renamed
- 'Julius' (July) in honour of Julius Caesar, and in 8 BC
- Sextilis became 'Augustus' in honour of emperor Augustus. When
- Augustus had a month named after him, he wanted his month to
- be a full 31 days long, so he removed a day from February and
- shifted the length of the other months so that August would
- have 31 days."
- This story, however, has no basis in actual fact. It is a fabrication
- possibly dating back to the 14th century.
-
-
- 2.7.1. How did the Romans number days?
- --------------------------------------
-
- The Romans didn't number the days sequentially from 1. Instead they
- had three fixed points in each month:
- "Kalendae" (or "Calendae"), which was the first day of the month.
- "Idus", which was the 13th day of January, February, April,
- June, August, September, November, and December, or
- the 15th day of March, May, July, or October.
- "Nonae", which was the 9th day before Idus (counting Idus
- itself as the 1st day).
-
- The days between Kalendae and Nonae were called "the 5th day before
- Nonae", "the 4th day before Nonae", "the 3rd day before Nonae", and
- "the day before Nonae". (There was no "2nd day before Nonae". This was
- because of the inclusive way of counting used by the Romans: To them,
- Nonae itself was the first day, and thus "the 2nd day before" and "the
- day before" would mean the same thing.)
-
- Similarly, the days between Nonae and Idus were called "the Xth day
- before Idus", and the days after Idus were called "the Xth day before
- Kalendae (of the next month)".
-
- Julius Caesar decreed that in leap years the "6th day before Kalendae
- of March" should be doubled. So in contrast to our present system, in
- which we introduce an extra date (29 February), the Romans had the
- same date twice in leap years. The doubling of the 6th day before
- Kalendae of March is the origin of the word "bissextile". If we
- create a list of equivalences between the Roman days and our current
- days of February in a leap year, we get the following:
-
- 7th day before Kalendae of March 23 February
- 6th day before Kalendae of March 24 February
- 6th day before Kalendae of March 25 February
- 5th day before Kalendae of March 26 February
- 4th day before Kalendae of March 27 February
- 3rd day before Kalendae of March 28 February
- the day before Kalendae of March 29 February
- Kalendae of March 1 March
-
- You can see that the extra 6th day (going backwards) falls on what is
- today 24 February. For this reason 24 February is still today
- considered the "extra day" in leap years (see section 2.3). However,
- at certain times in history the second 6th day (25 Feb) has been
- considered the leap day.
-
- Why did Caesar choose to double the 6th day before Kalendae of March?
- It appears that the leap month Intercalaris/Mercedonius of the
- pre-reform calendar was not placed after February, but inside it,
- namely between the 7th and 6th day before Kalendae of March. It was
- therefore natural to have the leap day in the same position.
-
-
- 2.8. What is the proleptic calendar?
- ------------------------------------
-
- The Julian calendar was introduced in 45 BC, but when historians date
- events prior to that year, they normally extend the Julian calendar
- backward in time. This extended calendar is known as the "Julian
- Proleptic Calendar".
-
- Similarly, it is possible to extend the Gregorian calendar backward in
- time before 1582. However, this "Gregorian Proleptic Calendar" is
- rarely used.
-
- If someone refers to, for example, 15 March 429 BC, they are probably
- using the Julian proleptic calendar.
-
- In the Julian proleptic calendar, year X BC is a leap year, if X-1 is
- divisible by 4. This is the natural extension of the Julian leap year
- rules.
-
-
- 2.9. Has the year always started on 1 January?
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- For the man in the street, yes. When Julius Caesar introduced his
- calendar in 45 BC, he made 1 January the start of the year, and it was
- always the date on which the Solar Number and the Golden Number (see
- section 2.12.3) were incremented.
-
- However, the church didn't like the wild parties that took place at
- the start of the new year, and in AD 567 the council of Tours declared
- that having the year start on 1 January was an ancient mistake that
- should be abolished.
-
- Through the middle ages various New Year dates were used. If an
- ancient document refers to year X, it may mean any of 7 different
- periods in our present system:
-
- - 1 Mar X to 28/29 Feb X+1
- - 1 Jan X to 31 Dec X
- - 1 Jan X-1 to 31 Dec X-1
- - 25 Mar X-1 to 24 Mar X
- - 25 Mar X to 24 Mar X+1
- - Saturday before Easter X to Friday before Easter X+1
- - 25 Dec X-1 to 24 Dec X
-
- Choosing the right interpretation of a year number is difficult, so
- much more as one country might use different systems for religious and
- civil needs.
-
- The Byzantine Empire used a year starting on 1 Sep, but they didn't
- count years since the birth of Christ, instead they counted years
- since the creation of the world which they dated to 1 September 5509 BC.
-
- Since about 1600 most countries have used 1 January as the first day
- of the year. Italy and England, however, did not make 1 January official
- until around 1750.
-
- In England (but not Scotland) three different years were used:
- - The historical year, which started on 1 January.
- - The liturgical year, which started on the first Sunday in advent.
- - The civil year, which
- from the 7th to the 12th century started on 25 December,
- from the 12th century until 1751 started on 25 March,
- from 1752 started on 1 January.
-
-
- 2.10. Then what about leap years?
- ---------------------------------
-
- If the year started on, for example, 1 March, two months later than
- our present year, when was the leap day inserted?
-
- [The following information is to the best of my knowledge true. If
- anyone can confirm or refute it, please let me know.]
-
- When it comes to determining if a year is a leap year, since AD 8 the
- Julian calendar has always had 48 months between two leap days. So, in
- a country using a year starting on 1 March, 1439 would have been a
- leap year, because their February 1439 would correspond to February
- 1440 in the January-based reckoning.
-
-
- 2.11. What is the origin of the names of the months?
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- A lot of languages, including English, use month names based on Latin.
- Their meaning is listed below. However, some languages (Czech and
- Polish, for example) use quite different names.
-
- January Latin: Januarius. Named after the god Janus.
- February Latin: Februarius. Named after Februa, the purification
- festival.
- March Latin: Martius. Named after the god Mars.
- April Latin: Aprilis. Named either after the goddess Aphrodite or
- the Latin word "aperire", to open.
- May Latin: Maius. Probably named after the goddess Maia.
- June Latin: Junius. Probably named after the goddess Juno.
- July Latin: Julius. Named after Julius Caesar in 44 BC. Prior
- to that time its name was Quintilis from the word
- "quintus", fifth, because it was the 5th month in the old
- Roman calendar.
- August Latin: Augustus. Named after emperor Augustus in 8
- BC. Prior to that time the name was Sextilis from the
- word "sextus", sixth, because it was the 6th month in the
- old Roman calendar.
- September Latin: September. From the word "septem", seven, because
- it was the 7th month in the old Roman calendar.
- October Latin: October. From the word "octo", eight, because it
- was the 8th month in the old Roman calendar.
- November Latin: November. From the word "novem", nine, because it
- was the 9th month in the old Roman calendar.
- December Latin: December. From the word "decem", ten, because it
- was the 10th month in the old Roman calendar.
-
- --- End of part 1 ---
-
-
-