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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!scicom!wats
- From: wats@scicom.AlphaCDC.COM (Bruce Watson)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: French Republical Calendar (Was: Comet calendar)
- Message-ID: <30234@scicom.AlphaCDC.COM>
- Date: 6 Nov 92 19:24:33 GMT
- References: <Bwv83y.Jp9.1@cs.cmu.edu|
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
- Lines: 71
-
- In article <Bwv83y.Jp9.1@cs.cmu.edu| roberts@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov (John Roberts) writes:
- |
- |-From: flb@flb.optiplan.fi ("F.Baube x554")
- |-Subject: Comet =| Millennial Madness ?
- |-Date: 27 Oct 92 12:16:49 GMT
- |
- |-Let's not be too Euro-centric here.
- |
- |-Does anyone know whether Wednesday 14 August 2126
- |-corresponds to any nice, round number in any *other*
- |-calendar systems ?
- |
- |-I'm thinking, something like 31 Urgtember 4999.
- |
- |If I recall my 10th-grade history class correctly, sometime around the time
- |of the French Revolution, France was experimenting with a weird "metric"
- |calendar (probably ten months per year). The only month I ever heard the
- |name of was "Thermidor"(sp?), around July or August. Apparently it didn't
- |catch on.
- |
- |Perhaps some of the French readers of sci.space could comment.
- |
- |John Roberts
- |roberts@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov
-
- There is someone over at soc.history who knows more about the French
- Republical Calendar than I do, but it looks like he doesn't read this
- newsgroup..
-
- The calendar was introduced in 1793, during the revolution, as a
- substitute for the Gregorian. Among reasons for adoption was to
- substitute a rational, scientific calendar for one less so.
-
- There were twelve months each containing 3 decades of ten days each.
- with 5 supplementary days in ordinary years and 6 days in leap years.
- (not metric, still 365/366 days)
-
- Autumn months:
- Vendemiaire = vintage
- Brumaire = mist
- Frimaire = frost
-
- Winter months:
- Nivose = snow
- Pluviose = rain
- Ventose = wind
-
- Spring months:
- Germinal = seed-time
- Floreal = blossom
- Prairial = meadow
-
- Summer months:
- Messidor = harvest
- Thermidor = heat
- Fructidor = fruits
-
- It an attractive idea--getting rid of the Roman Emperors and the
- numerals that have lost their meaning.
-
- The names fit only the northern hemisphere (and really only Europe--
- Here in Colorado, it rarely rains in the winter and there is no
- mist in autumn and we don't have wind, we have *wind*.)
-
- 1 Vendemaire, "Year 1 of Liberty", started on Sept 22, 1793. The
- calendar was used, almost exclusively by administrative bodies,
- usually with the Gregorian date along side until 1805 when France
- went back to the Gregorian. While the calendar didn't take,
- the metric system of weights and measures did.
- --
- Bruce Watson (wats@scicom) Tumbra, Zorkovick; Sparkula zoom krackadomando.
-