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The
Julian calendar is named for Julius
Caesar, who ordered its adoption in 45
B.C. Caesar's calendar, which
consisted of 11 months of 30 or 31
days and a 28-day February (extended
to 29 days in leap years), was
actually quite accurate: it erred from
the real solar calendar by only about
111/2 minutes a year.
After
centuries, though, even a small
inaccuracy like this adds up. By the
15th century the Julian calendar had
drifted behind the solar calendar by
about a week, so that the vernal
equinox was falling around March 12
instead of March 20.
In
1582 Pope Gregory XIII ordered another
reform of the calendar, which became
known as the Gregorian calendar. The
date was advanced by 11 days and a new
corrective device was introduced:
century years such as 1700 or 1800
would no longer be counted as leap
years, unless they were (like 1600 or
2000) divisible by 400.
If
somewhat inelegant, this system is
undeniably effective, and is still in
official use in the United States. The
Gregorian calendar year differs from
the solar year by only 26
seconds—accurate enough, since this
only adds up to one day's difference
every 3,323 years.
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