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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!ucbvax!CMR.NCSL.NIST.GOV!roberts
- From: roberts@CMR.NCSL.NIST.GOV (John Roberts)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: Calendar and Zodiac
- Message-ID: <9207300231.AA10192@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov>
- Date: 30 Jul 92 02:31:37 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Organization: National Institute of Standards and Technology
- formerly National Bureau of Standards
- Lines: 35
-
-
- -From: arromdee@jyusenkyou.cs.jhu.edu (Ken Arromdee)
- -Subject: Re: Calendar and Zodiac
- -Date: 29 Jul 92 20:10:07 GMT
- -Organization: Johns Hopkins University CS Dept.
-
- -In article <9207291235.AA05080@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov> roberts@CMR.NCSL.NIST.GOV (John Roberts) writes:
- ->In the British Empire, the month of September, 1752 lost 11 days (the day
- ->after September 2 was September 14). It was the renters who complained,
- ->because they had to pay a full month's rent.
-
- -OK. I've had it. Could someone in alt.folklore.urban please clear this up?
-
- -The way I've usually heard this is as a "rebuttal" to the notion of
- -superstitious peasants who felt that they lost 11 days out of their life
- -because of the calendar change; the explanation, you see, is that they were
- -upset about having to pay the extra 11 days rent, so they weren't acting on
- -superstition at all.
-
- -But even this seems rather suspicious to me. It implies a bit too much of a
- -lack of common sense on the part of landlords. Does anyone know if this is
- -what _really_ happened?
-
- I don't think it was lack of sense on the part of the landlords - I think
- it was part of the the legal decisions that brought about the change.
-
- By the way, the Orthodox church still uses the Julian calendar (in the US
- and Russia, anyway, and presumably elsewhere). I believe the skew is currently
- 14 days, and should remain so until AD 2100. Since the determination of the
- date of Easter is partly a function of the phase of the moon, the lag between
- the two observations of Easter is variable.
-
- John Roberts
- roberts@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov
-
-