That sounds an awful lot like the calendar we use today, doesn’t it? Well, almost, but not quite. It turns out that one leap year every four years is just a smidge too much. A tropical year—the time it takes the earth to complete exactly one revolution around the sun—is 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds. This means that, once standard and leap years have been averaged together, the Julian Calendar year is longer than an actual tropical year by around 0.0077 days, or 11 minutes.
That may not seem like much time, but it adds up. Over the course of a thousand years, the Julian Calendar will drift almost 8 days ahead of the tropical year.
And so it did. By the late 16th century, the calendar used by most of the Western world was 10 days at variance from the actual orbit of the earth.
It was time to make a change to a more accurate solar calendar. The motivating force behind the switch was Pope Gregory XIII, acting on concerns about errors in calculating the date for Easter. A reform commission was assembled, and after considerable study and consultation with expert mathematicians, its members agreed on a new calendar with a small but significant change. Unlike the Julian Calendar, the Gregorian Calendar has a leap year every four years except for years which are divisible by 100 but not by 400. Those years are common years of 365 days.
The reason most people in the Western world today aren’t aware of these centennial common years is that we’ve never experienced one. The most recent centennial common year was in 1900, and the next one will be in 2100. The year 2000 was a leap year, because 2000 is divisible by 400.
The Gregorian Calendar went into effect in October of 1582 by means of a papal bull, which had no authority beyond the Roman Catholic Church and the papal states. That same year, Philip II of Spain decreed that the switch be made in his dominions, comprising not only Spain but also Portugal and much of Italy. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth also adopted the new calendar.
By Aloysius Lilius - Biblioteca del Vaticano |
Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox Churches continued with the Julian Calendar, as did Protestant nations, who resisted what they saw as a Catholic innovation. The British ultimately found a work-around with their Calendar (New Style) Act of 1750, which established a system for the computation of Easter that achieved the same result without referencing Pope Gregory XIII. Britain and the British Empire, which at that time included the eastern part of the future United States, adopted the new calendar in 1752. Sweden followed in 1753.
Alert readers familiar with American history will notice that 1752 was just a little bit before the French and Indian War. If you've done any reading about that conflict, you've probably come across some parenthetical adjustments between the date systems used in different parts of Europe. During this period, the Julian Calendar was 11 days at variance from the Gregorian. So the birthdate of George Washington, who was born under the Julian Calendar, can be written as February 11, 1731/32 (Old Style, depending on whether the writer is using the English or Continental start to the new year), or as February 22, 1732 (New Style).
At various times throughout the following centuries, other nations in Europe and worldwide adopted the Gregorian Calendar, with Saudi Arabia being the most recent addition in 2016. Ethiopia continues to use its own calendar of 13 months, which is 7-8 years behind the Gregorian and has a new year that falls in the Gregorian September. Nepal uses a lunisolar calendar 56-57 years ahead of the Gregorian calendar, with a new year in mid-April.
Today’s world is far more tightly interconnected than that of the sixteenth century. A uniform system of global timekeeping has clear advantages across many sectors, including international finance and trade, transportation and logistics, telecommunications and internet, science and research, military and defense, emergency and disaster response, and education and academia. The Gregorian Calendar didn't altogether unite the world in a global timekeeping standard, but it went a long way toward streamlining operations and ensuring clarity in planning, record-keeping, and communications.
Kit Hawthorne makes her home in south central Texas on her husband’s ancestral farm, which has been in the family for seven generations. When not writing, she can be found reading, drawing, sewing, quilting, reupholstering furniture, playing Irish pennywhistle, refinishing old wood, cooking huge amounts of food for the pressure canner, or wrangling various dogs, cats, horses, and people. Visit her at https://kithawthorne.com/.
Thank you for posting today. Hoping you and your family have a wonderful holiday season.
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