Gregorian Calendar

What is Gregorian Calendar?


1.

Gregorian Calendar, the; noun.

(Greek orgin; Roman influenced numbering and charting of the year; Christian belief in the deity and days of occurrences by the deity.)

In the year of 46 B.C. / Before Christ, the Greek, Sosigenes convinced Julius Caesar to reform the Roman Calendar to a more "manageable" form to tax the citizens of the Empire of Rome, as well, as the scheduling of other Roman events.

This "new calendar" influenced by Sosigenes became known as the Julian Calendar.

The calendars that existed before and during the "new" Julian Calendar were the Babylonian Calendar and the Egyptian Calendar.

The Gregorian Calendar came to world prominence during the reign of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582 A.D. / After the Death of Christ.

The Gregorian Calendar came to its revision from the Julian Calendar.

The reason of the Gregorian Calendar was to "correct" the dates of "High Holidays" / Religious observations primarily Easter and to prevent the futher "drift" in these dates without account or reason.

The Gregorian Calendar's year length gave an "error day" of one day in approximately 3,225 years.

The Gregorian Calendar has four significant changes from the Julian Calendar:

1. Ten days were excluded from the previous, Julian Calendar, during October 1582 to realign the Vernal Equinox with March 21 st. -- the first day of Spring and many calendars of the past, also, the first day of the "old calendar's" year.

2. In the Gregorian Calendar all years ending in "00," were selected to be leap years.

3. The Change of the beginning of the Gregorian year to January 1 st. from the date of March 21 st., (the older calendars' first day of the year) came into place.

4. The Julian Calendar as well as other culture calendars had January as the eleventh month, and February as the twelfth and last month of the year -- with March being the first month.

Now, under the Gregorian Calendar, the third month became know as "Mars' month."

From Earth's orbit, Mars is the first planet from its orbit and the fourth from the Sun -- thus realm to change from the Julian Calendar to the Gregorian Calendar.

In order, to keep up with the solar cycle, the Gregorian Calendar was changed once in October 1582. This change had no effect on the weekly cycle.

Note: The U.S. Naval Observatory proved this fact during the year 1932.

As well, from the Gregorian Calendar -- ten days were ommitted from the previous, Julian Calendar, on October 4, 1582.

Thus, what would have been Friday October 5, 1582 became friday October 15, 1582.

From the Gregorian Calendar derived the Christian Calendar with many similarities.

The Chrisitian Calendar has 365 or 366 days. It is divided into 12 months that have no relationship to the motion of the moon as the Gregorain Calendar.

In parallelism, the Christian Calendar has the concepts of weeks grouped into days of the number seven.

Other Calendars to note are / were the French Revolution Calendar and the Orthodox Eccleiastical Calendar that have been and today are still used (the latter) in keeping time .

Thus, time becomes days to weeks to months and to years.

The pure Roman Calendar that Sosigenes influenced, dealt with leap year as other calendars such as the Islamic Calendar does today to "even" out time for specail days of observance.

The current "Christian Calendar" has leap day every four years in February with its additional day of the 29th from February's general 28 days.

Leap year / leap year is called of this name as the week of every fourth year "leaps" an extra day as compared with the other three years thus producing 366 days a year instead of the 365 know days of the other three years.

The Gregorian Calendar came into existance during the reign of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582.

No man truly knows the time, for only the diety knows the time and day.

See calendar, day, week, year

2.

Gregorian Calendar, the; noun.

(Greek orgin; Roman influenced numbering and charting of the year; Christian belief in the deity and days of occurrences by the deity.)

In the year of 46 B.C. / Before Christ, the Greek, Sosigenes convinced Julius Caesar to reform the Roman Calendar to a more "manageable" form to tax the citizens of the Empire of Rome, as well, as the scheduling of other Roman events.

This new calendar influenced by Sosigenes became known as the Julian Calendar.

Calendars that existed before and during the "new" Julian Calendar were the Babylonian Calendar and the Egyptian Calendar.

The Gregorian Calendar came to world prominence during the reign of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582 A.D. / After the Death of Christ.

The Gregorian Calendar came to its revision from the Julian Calendar.

The reason of the Gregorian Calendar was to "correct" the dates of "High Holidays" / Religious observations primarily Easter and to prevent the futher "drift" in these dates without account or reason.

The Gregorian Calendar's year length gave an "error day" of one day in approximately 3,225 years.

The Gregorian Calendar has four significant changes from the Julian Calendar:

1. Ten days were excluded from the previous, Julian Calendar, during October 1582 to realign the Vernal Equinox with March 21 st. -- the first day of Spring and many calendars of the past, also, the first day of the "old calendar's" year.

2. In the Gregorian Calendar all years ending in "00," were selected to be leap years.

3. The Change of the beginning of the Gregorian year to January 1 st. from the date of March 21 st., (the older calendars' first day of the year) came into place.

4. The Julian Calendar as well as other culture calendars had January as the eleventh month, and February as the twelfth and last month of the year -- with March being the first month.

Now, under the Gregorian Calendar, the third month became know as "Mars' month."

From Earth's orbit, Mars is the first planet from its orbit and the fourth from the Sun -- thus realm to change from the Julian Calendar to the Gregorian Calendar.

In order, to keep up with the solar cycle, the Gregorian Calendar was changed once in October 1582. This change had no effect on the weekly cycle.

Note: The U.S. Naval Observatory proved this fact during the year 1932.

As well, from the Gregorian Calendar -- ten days were ommitted from the previous, Julian Calendar, on October 4, 1582.

Thus, what would have been Friday October 5, 1582 became friday October 15, 1582.

From the Gregorian Calendar derived the Christian Calendar with many similarities.

The Chrisitian Calendar has 365 or 366 days. It is divided into 12 months that have no relationship to the motion of the moon as the Gregorain Calendar.

In parallelism, the Christian Calendar has the concepts of weeks grouped into days of the number seven.

Other Calendars to note are / were the French Revolution Calendar and the Orthodox Eccleiastical Calendar that have been and today are still used (the latter) in keeping time .

Thus, time becomes days to weeks to months and to years.

The pure Roman Calendar that Sosigenes influenced, dealt with leap yearas other calendars such as the Islamic Calendar does today to "even" out time for specail days of observance.

The current Christian calendar has leap day every four years in February with its additional day of the 29th from February's general 28 days.

Leap year/ leap yearis called of this name as the week of every fourth year "leaps" an extra day as compared with the other three years thus producing 366 days a year instead of the 365 know days of the other three years.

The Gregorian Calendar came into existance during the reign of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582.

No man truly knows the time, for only the diety knows the time and day.

See calendar, day, week, year

3.

The standard calendar used just about everywhere in the world today. Your wall calendar almost certainly shows dates in the Gregorian calendar.

This program converts dates from the Jewish calendar to the Gregorian calendar.


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