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Happy new year? Guys that’s in like a week. Oh right, I’m on the Julian Calendar.
Good day everyone, Julian here for DNews. Have you ever wondered why the calendar is
the way it is? What drove us in the western world to have a 365 day year? Turns out it’s
an interplay between astronomy, religion, and history.
The calendar we use right now is the Gregorian calendar, so named because it was implemented
by Pope Gregory the thirteenth in 1582. Why would the pope be interested in the calendar?
[[*RE-TRACKED on 12/18 - Cars have faces shoot*]]Well Easter was traditionally supposed to fall
on the Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox, March 21st, but it had
started slipping later and later behind the solar event. Gregory was worried they were
missing Christ’s rebirthday, so he commissioned italian scientist Aloysius Lilius to fix it
and make sure they were on Jesus’ good side. When they made the switch, the catholic world
jumped forward a full 10 days. And you thought daylight savings was bad. Many non-catholic
countries wouldn’t adopt the Gregorian calendar for hundreds of years still. Russia switched
after their October revolution in 1917, which under the new system, technically began in
November.
The reason the Gregorian Calendar is more accurate with our solar cycle is because it
changed how we approached leap years. It still has a leap year every 4 years, like the Julian
Calendar, except for years that are divisible by 100, except except for years that are divisible
by 400. So 2000 was a leap year, but 2100 will not be.
Why this wonky system for leap years? As it turns out, our revolution around the sun is
not a perfect 365 days, but 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds. Before Julius Caesar
became emperor the calendar was all over the place, literally being manipulated by the
roman high priest for political reasons. Sometimes years were lengthened to keep allies in office,
sometimes they were shortened to kick rivals out quicker.
Julius Caesar put a stop to that by standardizing the Julian calendar. Introduced in 45 BCE,
or what to the romans was 709 as they counted years from the founding of the city of Rome.
His calendar had 365 days every year with an extra day every 4. It still made the average
year length 11 minutes and 14 seconds too long, but that wouldn’t be evident until
hundreds of years passed. To honor him for reforming the calendar, the roman senate changed
the name of Caesar's birth month to July. They’d honor him again a year later by murdering
him on the infamous ides of March
I always wondered, if Caesar could change the calendar willy nilly, why didn’t he
just get rid of March? Way to drop the ball, Caesar.
The reason we’re in the year 2015 though and not 2768 is because in 525 Christian Monk
Dionysius Exiguus determined that Jesus was born in the roman year 753, and started counting
over again from there. Because of him we get the terms BC for before Christ, and AD, which
does not stand for After Death but actually Anno Domini, which in Latin means “The Year
of Our Lord.” In the academic and scientific communities, to keep things neutral and welcoming
to people of all faiths, you’ll often see the terms BCE and CE for Before Common Era
and Common Era.
Of course the Gregorian Calendar is far from the only calendar in use around the world
today. Many calendars from cultures with less pronounced seasons actually rely on the cycles
of the moon instead of the Sun. But for predicting the change of seasons, equinoxes, solstices,
and when certain constellations will be visible, the Gregorian is the one we prefer for its
regularity. At least until 4909, when it’ll be a day ahead.
If you already blew it on your new years resolution, I’d say switch to the Julian calendar and
try again next week. But first check out Catie’s video on what you did wrong over here.
I’ve never lived by a different calendar but I’m sure a lot of you out there watching
do. What’s it like going by a system where the seasons aren’t the same dates each year?
Do you use the gregorian calendar too? Let us know in the comments, and I’ll see you
next time on DNews.