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Proleptic Gregorian calendar

Extension of the Gregorian calendar before its introduction


Extension of the Gregorian calendar before its introduction

The proleptic Gregorian calendar extends the Gregorian calendar backward, proleptically, to dates before its 1582 introduction, creating a consistent dating system across history. For example, when U.S. President George Washington was born on 11 February 1731, Great Britain and its colonies still used the Julian calendar, also referred to as Old Style dating. When Britain finally adopted the Gregorian calendar in September 1752, Washington's birth date became 22 February 1732. During his life, both dates were observed and commemorated, but the latter is the one used and recognized since then.

Usage

ISO 8601:2004 (clause 3.2.1 The Gregorian calendar) allows use of the proleptic Gregorian calendar for dates before its introduction only if the parties to the communication agree. Most scholars of the Maya civilization also use it, especially when converting Long Count dates (1st century BC – 10th century AD).

The best practice for citation of historically contemporary documents is to cite the date as expressed in the original text and to notate any contextual implications and conclusions regarding the calendar used and equivalents in other calendars. This practice permits others to re-evaluate the original evidence.

For these calendars one can distinguish two systems of numbering years BC. Bede and later historians did not enumerate any year as zero (nulla in Latin; see Year zero); therefore the year preceding AD 1 is 1 BC. In this system, the year 1 BC is a leap year (likewise in the proleptic Julian calendar). Mathematically, it is more convenient to include a year 0 and represent earlier years as negative numbers for the specific purpose of facilitating the calculation of the number of years between a negative (BC) year and a positive (AD) year. This is the convention in astronomical year numbering and the international standard date system, ISO 8601. In these systems, the year 0 is a leap year.

Although the nominal Julian calendar began in 45 BC, leap years between 45 BC and 1 BC were irregular. Thus the Julian calendar with quadrennial leap years was only used from the end of AD 4 until 1582 or later (contingent on the specific nation in question).

The proleptic Gregorian calendar is sometimes used in computer software to simplify identifying pre-Gregorian dates, e. g. in PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, PHP, CIM, Delphi and Python.

Julian calendar differences

Before the official and first introduction of the Gregorian calendar, the differences between Julian and proleptic Gregorian calendar dates are as follows:

The table below assumes a Julian leap day of 29 February, but the Julian leap day, that is, the bissextile day (ante diem bis sextum Kalendas Martias in Latin) was accomplished by repeating 24 February . Therefore, the dates between 24 and 29 February in all leap years were irregular.

Note: When converting a date in a year which is leap in the Julian calendar but not in the Gregorian, 29 February is included in the calculation when the conversion crosses the border of February and March.

Julian rangeProleptic Gregorian rangeGregorian ahead byJulian rangeGregorian rangeDifferenceOrthodox Julian rangeGregorian rangeJulian behind by
From 3 March AD 4
(beginning of quadrennial leap years)
to 1 March 100From 1 March AD 4
to 28 February 100−2 days
From 2 March 100
to 29 February 200From 1 March 100
to 28 February 200−1 day
From 1 March 200
to 28 February 300From 1 March 200
to 28 February 3000 days
From 29 February 300
to 27 February 500From 1 March 300
to 28 February 5001 day
From 28 February 500
to 26 February 600From 1 March 500
to 28 February 6002 days
From 27 February 600
to 25 February 700From 1 March 600
to 28 February 7003 days
From 26 February 700
to 24 February 900From 1 March 700
to 28 February 9004 days
From 25 February 900
to 23 February 1000From 1 March 900
to 28 February 10005 days
From 24 February 1000
to 22 February 1100From 1 March 1000
to 28 February 11006 days
From 23 February 1100
to 21 February 1300From 1 March 1100
to 28 February 13007 days
From 22 February 1300
to 20 February 1400From 1 March 1300
to 28 February 14008 days
From 21 February 1400
to 19 February 1500From 1 March 1400
to 28 February 15009 days
From 20 February 1500
to 4 October 1582From 1 March 1500
to 14 October 158210 days
From
toFrom
to10 days
From
toFrom
to11 days
From
toFrom
to12 days
From
toFrom
to13 days
From
toFrom
to13 days

References

References

  1. (n.d.). "George Washington's Birthday". National Archives.
  2. (n.d.). "Timeline of George Washington's Birthday". Mount Vernon.
  3. (1982). "The proceedings of the Maya hieroglyphic workshop". University of Texas.
  4. Spathaky, Mike. "Old Style New Style Dates and the Change to the Gregorian Calendar". GENUKI.
  5. (30 September 2021). "B.4. History of Units". PostgreSQL Documentation.
  6. "8.1.3. date Objects". Python v3.8.2 documentation.
  7. Greece was the last country to officially convert from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, so that {{date. 1923/02/15 was followed the next day by {{date
  8. The Russian, Serbian, and Macedonian Orthodox churches still use the Julian calendar for calculating holy days such as Easter. {{citation-needed. (November 2023)
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