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The Calendar Act of 1750 and eleven lost days
YouTube ^ | 2018 | The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered

Posted on 02/01/2023 9:49:49 AM PST by SunkenCiv

The History Guy remembers the Calendar Act of 1750 and eleven lost days. It is a curious calendar-related piece of forgotten history that deserves to be remembered.
The Calendar Act of 1750 and eleven lost days
The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered
1.14M subscribers | 186K views | 5 years ago
The Calendar Act of 1750 and eleven lost days | The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered | 1.14M subscribers | 186K views | 5 years ago

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: 1752; calendar; daylightsavingstime; genealogy; godsgravesglyphs; sunkenciv
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Transcript
0:00Hi, I’m the History Guy. I have a degree in history and I love history,
0:04and if you love history too, this is the channel for you.
0:07Here's an interesting question of historical trivia. What important historical event occurred
0:15on September 5th of 1752, in England? If you don't immediately know, you can try to divide
0:22it from the period. George the Second was King of England, Henry Pelham was Prime Minister,
0:26England was not technically at war, but they were conducting a proxy war against the French
0:31on the Indian subcontinent. And in the colonies, Ben Franklin conducted his famous electricity
0:36experiment with his kite earlier in the year in 1752. And if you still don't know what important
0:42event happened on September 5th, it's in fact a trick question. No historical events of any
0:47importance occurred in England on September 5th of 1752, and we know that because there was no
0:53September 5th…in England…in 1752. And the reason why, is a story that deserves to be remembered.
1:02There's archaeological evidence that people had methods of keeping time based on the
1:07lunar cycles as far back as the Neolithic period. In 2013, archaeologists discovered
1:12a group of pits in Aberdeenshire in England, that appear to correspond with the phases of
1:17the Moon that dates back some 10,000 years, and may be the world's oldest known lunar calendar,
1:23although there is some dispute over that claim. As the phases of the Moon are easy to observe,
1:27they serve as an effective method of tracking time, and lunar calendars are still used today
1:32by some cultures, to determine religious holidays. And while it makes sense to track time based on
1:37the phases of the Moon, there is a problem. As the moon is not in sync with the Sun, and thus,
1:4212 lunar periods is only 354 days. Well short of a solar year. The period of time required
1:48for the earth to make one complete revolution around the Sun. The problem is that tracking
1:53time by the moon means that lunar months will cycle through the seasons, making a lunar
1:58calendar a poor tool regarding one of the most important reasons to track months, agriculture.
2:02The problem is usually addressed through a process called intercalation, in which
2:07additional days are added in order to sync a lunar calendar with the seasons. Since a solar year does
2:14not include a whole number of lunar months, most so-called, lunisolar calendars, count
2:1912 lunar months as a year, but add an additional month every 2 or 3 years, in order to resync the
2:25calendar with the seasons. And thus, different years will have different numbers of days.
2:29There are various methods of interpolation used for lunisolar calendars, although the one used
2:34by the Banks Islands of Vanuatu based on the spawning cycle of the Palolo worm,
2:38is perhaps the most interesting. The early Roman calendar was such a lunar solar calendar. The
2:44Romans tried to synchronize the months with the first crescent moon following a new moon,
2:47resulting in some months of 29 days, and some months more. They then used intercalation
2:52to sync the calendar, every other year they would shorten February, and add a leap month,
2:56or intercalaris. That process is still the reason that February has 28 days on the modern calendar.
3:02Roman debts were typically due on the first of each month, called the calendae, and payments were
3:07tracked in a ledger book called the calendaria, which is the genesis of the term calendar.
3:12But the process was still imperfect, adding approximately four days every four years,
3:17too much to be in line with the solar year, and of course over time that would show,
3:22as the calendar would no longer be in sync with the seasons. So in 46 BC, Julius Caesar consulted
3:28a Greek astronomer named Sosigenes of Alexandria, to create a better calendar. The new calendar
3:34divided a 365 day year into 12 months, with some months 31 days, and some 30, but retaining the
3:40shortened 28-day February. But an intercalation was still required to keep the calendar in sync,
3:45and so one additional day was added to February every four years. The so-called Julian calendar
3:51was used by edict throughout the empire, but it still had a flaw. The average length of a year
3:56on the Julian calendar is 365.25 days, but a solar year is actually slightly shorter,
4:02365.2425 days. A difference of three days every 400 years, or about 2/10 of 1%.
4:10That seems small, but over enough time it became a problem, and was most noticeable in
4:16terms of a specific religious holiday, Easter. Easter is the most important Christian feast,
4:21and it's date traditionally was determined based on a solar event, the vernal equinox.
4:24But the day was actually fixed by the calendar, and Caesar's two-tenths of a percent discrepancy
4:29meant that over sixteen hundred years later, Easter was no longer landing where Easter had
4:33traditionally been celebrated by early Christians relative to the vernal equinox. And so in 1582,
4:39Pope Gregory the thirteenth introduced a calendar reform called, the Gregorian calendar,
4:43that adjusted the Julian calendar so that rather than a leap year every four years, every year
4:49that was exactly divisible by four would be a leap year, except for years that were exactly
4:53divisible by 100. But those century years are leap years, if they are exactly divisible by 400.
5:00And so, for example, the year 2000 should have been a leap year because 2,000 is
5:05evenly divisible by four, but should not have been a leap year because 2,000 is
5:10evenly divisible by 100, but was a leap year because 2,000 is evenly divisible by 400.
5:16The Gregorian calendar is the calendar most commonly used, at least for civil purposes,
5:21throughout the world today. But that was still a problem. In 1501, King Henry the
5:25Seventh of England's oldest son, Arthur the Prince of Wales, married Catherine of Aragon,
5:29the youngest surviving child of King Ferdinand II of Aragon, and Queen Isabella the first of
5:34Castile. The goal of the marriage was to cement an alliance between England and Spain, but just
5:4020 weeks after being married, Arthur died of a sweating sickness. Still trying to make a marital
5:45alliance with Spain, Henry the seventh betrothed his dead son's bride to his second son Henry, just
5:5011 years old. Although the two did not actually marry until 1509, after Henry ascended to the
5:55throne as Henry the eighth, following his father's death. But by 1525 Henry became frustrated as he,
6:01and Catherine, had failed to produce a male heir. One son had died after just seven weeks,
6:05and two more had been stillborn. Moreover, Henry had fallen in love with another woman,
6:09Anne Boleyn, who refused to be seduced so long as she could not be queen. That prompted Henry
6:14to seek an annulment from the Pope, Pope Clement the seventh, claiming that his marriage was
6:18blighted in the eyes of God, because Catherine had been his brother's widow. The Pope refused
6:23on multiple grounds. One of which might well have been that following the sack of Rome in 1527,
6:28the Pope was being held prisoner by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles the Fifth, who happened to be
6:32Catharine of Aragon's nephew. Frustrated, Henry the eighth married Anne Boleyn anyway in 1533,
6:38and the Pope responded by excommunicating Henry, causing England to break with the
6:42Roman Catholic Church, and establish the independent Church of England in 1534.
6:46And England and the Pope were still not on good terms 48 years later, when Pope Gregory
6:51changed the calendar. While the Gregorian calendar became Catholic Canon via a papal bull in 1582,
6:56most Protestant nations, like England, thumbed their nose at Gregory and continued on with
7:00the Julian calendar. In fact, Henry's daughter, Elizabeth the first, briefly considered adopting
7:05a similar reform, but gave up under opposition from Anglican Church bishops who argued that
7:10the Pope was literally, the biblical fourth Great Beast of Daniel. The split was still
7:15an issue in 1754. Understand that George II was only King because, in his grandmother's time,
7:2150 Catholics who were higher in line for the throne have been excluded, based on acts of
7:26parliament, that restricted the royal succession to Protestants. But much of the rest of Europe
7:31had switched in the intervening time, including the other half of the United Kingdom, Scotland,
7:35which had moved to the Gregorian calendar under King James the sixth, in 1600. And Parliament
7:40complained, “That because of the discrepancy in dates between England and most of her neighbors.
7:44Frequent mistakes are occasioned in the dates of deeds, and other writings, and
7:48disputes arise therefrom.” And so, the Calendar Act of 1750 moved England to what was, in effect,
7:55the Gregorian calendar, without actually using that name. To facilitate the change,
8:00and sync with their neighbors, eleven days had to be removed from the calendar in 1752,
8:04to account for the effect of nearly 18 centuries of Julius Caesar's two-tenths
8:09of a percent miscalculation. Citizens of England went to bed on September 2nd 1752, and woke up the
8:16next day on September 14th. Nothing happened on September 5th, because there was no September 5th.
8:23In addition to moving England to the Gregorian calendar, the Calendar Act of 1750 also made the
8:28official start of the new year in England, January 1st. Prior to the Calendar Act,
8:31the New Year actually started in England on March 25th. There has been some historical argument that
8:37there were riots based on the Calendar Act, that people are in the streets shouting, “Give us back
8:40our lost 11 days!” But most historians agree now that no riots occurred, and that that myth started
8:45because of a misunderstanding of some political satire that is written to make fun of Tories, who
8:49tried to make the calendar reform an issue in the election of 1755. England was by no means the last
8:54country to move to the Gregorian calendar. Sweden, for example, tried to start moving gradually,
8:59starting at 1700, and taking out a day a year. But that resulted in a period where they were off
9:03of both the Julian calendar and the Gregorian calendar, and so they gave that up, and they
9:07didn't end up making the change actually until a year after England, when in 1753, they just made a
9:12short February. Many Eastern European countries didn't actually make the move until the 20th
9:17century. In Russia, for example, the move was not made until after the October Revolution of 1917,
9:21and ironically, when the dates are adjusted, the October Revolution didn't occur until November.
9:27Some nations today still use the Julian calendar to determine things like religious holidays,
9:31but use the Gregorian calendar for civil business. Notably, former Protestant and Orthodox countries
9:37adopted the solar part of the Gregorian calendar, but they rejected the lunar part, which was used
9:41to determine the date of Easter. Instead they use a completely different calculation that comes to
9:46the exact same answer, but doesn't give credit to a Catholic pope. And what might seem a historical
9:52triviality to say that nothing happened in England between September 4th and September 13th of 1752,
9:58because they skip those 11 days. It is undoubtedly extremely useful, that despite
10:03all our other disagreements, the vast majority of the world at least agrees on today's date.
10:08I'm the History Guy and I hope you enjoyed this edition of my series, 5 minutes of history,
10:12short snippets of forgotten history five and ten minutes long. And if you did enjoy it, please go
10:15ahead and click that thumbs up button which is there on your left. If you have any questions,
10:19or comments, feel free to write those in the comment section, I'll be happy to respond. And
10:22if you'd like five minutes more of forgotten history, all you need to do is subscribe.

1 posted on 02/01/2023 9:49:49 AM PST by SunkenCiv
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...
My first encounter with this information was due to a plasticized playing-card-sized two-sided perpetual calendar that Popular Science mag used to send out for subscription renewals. Later I found that George Washington and the other Founders often wrote both their birth dates. Finally, doing genealogy, one runs across this somewhat often.

Nations changed their adoption of the Gregorian at different times, spanning over two hundred years I think (the last major one being the USSR, Russia was still on the old calendar).

2 posted on 02/01/2023 9:53:00 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/guide/chron.shtml


3 posted on 02/01/2023 9:53:34 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

When your most accurate timepiece is a sundial, then eleven ‘lost’ days are nothing to fret about..................


4 posted on 02/01/2023 9:56:00 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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https://en.wikipedia.org//wiki/Adoption_of_the_Gregorian_calendar


5 posted on 02/01/2023 9:56:02 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

“No historical events of any importance occurred in England on September 5th of 1752, and we know that because there was no September 5th…in England…in 1752”

What would be fun would be to just invent a bunch of fake “English historical events” for Sept. 5 1752, and put them up on a website. Then see how long before anyone notices.


6 posted on 02/01/2023 9:59:02 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman

When Pope Gregory XIII proposed the calendar change in 1582, he decreed that the day after October 4 would be October 15. The change at the time was only 10 days. St. Teresa of Avila died on the night of Oct. 4/15, 1582. Her feast day is Oct. 15 (Oct. 4 was already that of a major saint—Francis of Assisi). England waited until 1752 because it wasn’t going to follow a decree from the pope. Many Protestant countries also delayed but not as long as England did.


7 posted on 02/01/2023 10:06:21 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: SunkenCiv

I lost 11 days! I want REPARATIONS!

</sarc>


8 posted on 02/01/2023 10:07:57 AM PST by A Formerly Proud Canadian ( Ceterum autem censeo Justinius True-dope-us esse delendam)
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To: SunkenCiv

>>Prior to the Calendar Act, the New Year actually started in England on March 25th.

Which makes dates in genealogical research more fun. Is the year for a date between 1/1 and 3/24 the original one or adjusted to current usage?


9 posted on 02/01/2023 10:08:52 AM PST by FarCenter
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To: Boogieman

Would be a good thing to work into a reboot of “Back to the Future”.


10 posted on 02/01/2023 10:13:10 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Sounds like an episode of Dr. Who. The TARDIS refuses to go to London on September 5th 1752 saying that it doesn’t exist.


11 posted on 02/01/2023 10:22:21 AM PST by KarlInOhio (Gain of Pfunction. Gain of Pfunding. Gain of Pfizer )
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To: SunkenCiv

eleven days to stop the curve...


12 posted on 02/01/2023 10:22:52 AM PST by teeman8r (Armageddon won't be pretty, but it's not like it's the end of the world or something )
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To: SunkenCiv

Interesting trivia: Alaska once had two Fridays in a row.

The United States flag was raised on October 18, 1867 (N.S.), now called Alaska Day, and the region changed from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar. Therefore, for residents, Friday, October 6, 1867 was followed by Friday, October 18, 1867—two Fridays in a row because of the 12 day shift in the calendar minus one day for the date-line shift.

After October 6, 1867 (O.S., October 17, N.S.) Alaska assigned the day to the date of the preceding sunrise in Washington, instead of the date of the next sunrise in Moscow. Instead of being Moscow time + 13 HR they were Washington Time - 4 HR. Which meant it was Friday all over again.


13 posted on 02/01/2023 10:36:32 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit.)
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To: Verginius Rufus

At the time that St. Teresa died, the day began at sunset, and since she was alive at the time of sunset on October 4th, the date of her death should be October 15th.


14 posted on 02/01/2023 10:39:41 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit.)
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To: SunkenCiv

I never really understood why so many cultures and peoples wouldn’t just track moons and sun cycles separately?

The moon is easy, because you can see it waxing and waning with your own eyes every day, and most people can scratch off 14 days in their head without keeping strict track.

The solar year is much harder to keep track. Seasons change unpredictably, and if you live a stable life and your not nomadic or a sailor, you can see where the sun rises and sets using familiar landmarks. Even better to use a sun dial, the more accurate the taller and pointier it is. It just doesn’t work in bad weather, but who doesn’t have sunshine at least ever couple of days.

I guess the sense of need comes in when people want to assign moon phases to the year phases and have them both mean the same thing every year. It’s fine to schedule something 3 moons from now, or 2 years from now, but doesn’t work to tell someone that you’ll meet them 1 year and two moons from now. That would be differently interpreted than 15 moons and you’d be off by as much as those 8 days.


15 posted on 02/01/2023 11:35:19 AM PST by z3n (Kakistocracy)
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To: SunkenCiv

I always have fun when I lecture about our first and greatest President, George Washington. His birthday changed during his lifetime!


16 posted on 02/01/2023 12:07:28 PM PST by oldplayer
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To: SunkenCiv

The reform was instigated by the Catholic Church. Catholic countries most adopted in immediately. Britain not until 1750. Russia not until 1917. Orthodox Churches still use the old calendar and have Christmas 2 weeks later.


17 posted on 02/01/2023 12:42:25 PM PST by xxqqzz
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To: SunkenCiv

.


18 posted on 02/01/2023 3:01:16 PM PST by Coffee... Black... No Sugar (“Salute the Marines.” - Joe )
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To: xxqqzz

The Orthodox Church is all wrong. The Gregorian calendar guarantees that March 21 will always be the beginning of Spring, etc.

Anyone who favors the Julian calendar is out of touch with the reality of the seasons.


19 posted on 02/01/2023 7:06:57 PM PST by Fractal Trader
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To: xxqqzz

Thanks!


20 posted on 02/01/2023 8:55:00 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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