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History of Christmas

Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar to be based on the sun rather than the moon, establishing a 365.25 day year divided into 12 months. However, the Julian calendar still overestimated the length of the year. By the 16th century, the calendar was 10 days off. Pope Gregory XIII corrected this in 1582 by removing 10 days and establishing the Gregorian calendar still used today. Protestant Europe did not adopt this change, so England was 11 days ahead of continental Europe by the 18th century. To realign with the Gregorian calendar, England passed an act in 1751 stating September 2nd would be followed by September 14th, removing 11 days. However, some people misunderstood and rioted,
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views1 page

History of Christmas

Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar to be based on the sun rather than the moon, establishing a 365.25 day year divided into 12 months. However, the Julian calendar still overestimated the length of the year. By the 16th century, the calendar was 10 days off. Pope Gregory XIII corrected this in 1582 by removing 10 days and establishing the Gregorian calendar still used today. Protestant Europe did not adopt this change, so England was 11 days ahead of continental Europe by the 18th century. To realign with the Gregorian calendar, England passed an act in 1751 stating September 2nd would be followed by September 14th, removing 11 days. However, some people misunderstood and rioted,
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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History of Old Christmas Day

Until the time of Julius Caesar the Roman year was organized round
the phases of the moon. For many reasons this was hopelessly
inaccurate so, on the advice of his astronomers, Julius instituted a
calendar centered round the sun. It was decreed that one year was to
consist of three hundred and sixty-five and a quarter days, divided into
twelve months; the month of Quirinus was renamed 'July' to
commemorate the Julian reform. Unfortunately, despite the introduction
of leap years, the Julian calendar overestimated the length of the year
by eleven minutes fifteen seconds, which comes to one day every on
hundred and twenty-eight years. By the sixteenth century the calendar
was ten days out. In 1582 reforms instituted by Pope Gregory XIII
lopped the eleven minutes fifteen seconds off the length of a year and
deleted the spare ten days. This new Gregorian calendar was adopted
throughout Catholic Europe.

 Protestant Europe was not going to be told what day it was by the
Pope, so it kept to the old Julian calendar. This meant that London was
a full ten days ahead of Paris. The English also kept the 25 th of March
as New Year's Day rather than the 1 st of January. By the time England
came round to adopting the Gregorian calendar, in the middle of the
eighteenth century, England was eleven days ahead of the Continent.

A Calendar Act was passed in 1751 which stated that in order to bring
England into line, the day following the 2nd of September 1752 was to
be called the 14th, rather than the 3rd of September. Unfortunately,
many people were not able to understand this simple manoeuvre and
thought that the government had stolen eleven days of their lives. In
some parts there were riots and shouts of 'give us back our eleven
days!'

Before the calendar was reformed, England celebrated Christmas on


the equivalent of the 6th of January by our modern, Gregorian
reckoning. That is why in some parts of Great Britain people still call
the 6th of January, Old Christmas Day.

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