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Living the stories written

What was it? 1582 or thereabouts, one October 4th some Pope named Gregory decides we need a different calendar. Poof! The next day becomes October the 15th (I remember my dad would have missed his October 10th birthday that year - though I’m not sure they were celebrated much then), and the New Year seems like it ought to start January 1st since January - funnily enough - is named after the Roman God Janus of beginnings and transitions and the like. Much neater than the old April 1st - though I’m not sure if that became a joke before or after - or March 25th or just spring-ish or whatever suited people of various regions. Everybody eventually landing on the same page. I like going back and looking at the beginnings of things and marveling at how they grow and solidify into habit barely thought of. The group of dudes getting together to decide which direction the Bible would steer the masses. The faceless men I grumble at every Spring Forward to daylight savings time. The humble tentative beginnings of so many of our holiday traditions, favorite recipes, mindless acts we carry out throughout every day of our lives as we flip switches and turn keys and press buttons. It all started somewhere, sometimes with a dream, sometimes a blunder, I doubt ever with an understanding of just how firmly it would shape a future world. I hardly ever retain every detail, but I never fail to end my investigations with a sense of perspective. A lightening of the grip of weighty importance to things simply contrived one day for some reason or other long forgotten. We take ourselves too seriously and apply “necessity” too generously.
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Lugwho · 61-69, M
We waited till 1752 to adopt the new fangled calendar in the Kingdom of Great Britain, as it was then. At the same time we moved the first day of the year from 25th March to 1st January. So, Happy New Year, in three months!
Lugwho · 61-69, M
@JustNik Once I become world supreme leader, everyone will play conkers.
JustNik · 51-55, F
@Lugwho Oh it’s a game! I thought it sounded like October was an unpleasant month where you are. 🤣 I’ll just hope it’s klutz-friendly. 😅
Lugwho · 61-69, M
@JustNik Played in the autumn, with horse chestnuts.

[media=https://youtu.be/XEAMLWKY9ck]
OldBrit · 61-69, M
Ps the reason Gregory XIII needed new calendar was because the earth being inconsiderate and not rotating exactly to a whole number of days. The Nicene council had long ago fixed Easter to a date determined by the vernal equinox. But without leap years etc that was moving out of position. Hence the "We need to reset here" and the add a day every 4 years unless the year is divisible by 100 unless that is also divisible by 400. Hence why 2000 was a leap year, 3000 will not be.
JustNik · 51-55, F
@OldBrit I knew someone would remember more than me! 😄 Thinking it’ll be nothing short of a miracle if anyone’s around to notice no leap year in 3000. 😂
OldBrit · 61-69, M
Whole reason it's January was some Roman administration thing. They needed to appoint some console or something but that could only be done at start of the year, middle of March then. So they moved beginning of the year to January 1st. Now you think they could just have change the other rule but 🤷🏼‍♂
helenS · 36-40, F
@OldBrit The word "October" is a relic from the days when the new year started in March. "October" means "Eighth", it's the 8th month when you start counting from March.
OldBrit · 61-69, M
@helenS September, November, December similarly
JustNik · 51-55, F
@OldBrit Politicians never change. 🤣

 
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