Title: The Roman Calendar
1The Roman Calendar
2The early Roman Calendar
- The original Roman calendar was made up of about
304 days, starting in Martius (March) and ending
in December. They knew that the sun took about
355 or so days to revolve around the sun, but
just sort of ignored them, after December and
before March. - There have been so many revisions to the
calendar, because of how many errors were
recognized, that dates, etc., that what we have
are often based on best evidence available, and
may not always be exact.
3Ianuarius and Februarius
- The original calendar was attributed to Romulus.
Eventually, one of Romes other kings, Numa
Pompilius, added Ianuarius and Februarius. The
year was now officially 355 days long. - (There were days between the end of December and
the beginning of Martius, but these were not
named just sort of existed in limbo.)?
4The early Roman Calendar
- There were three main days, dependent on the
phases of the moon - the Kalends (thus, the word calendar), the
first day of the month (when the moon would first
appear in a sickle shape, first day after a new
moon) - The Ides, the middle of the month, (usually the
13th day but sometimes the 15th , corresponding
to a full moon) and - The Nones, nine days before the Ides (which is
usually the 5th day of the month but the 7th in
long months, and indicating the fourth quarter of
the moon).
5How did they name their days?
- If the Romans only three days had names, how did
they tell the rest of them apart? They would
always figure out how many days there were until
the next named day, and count backwards from
there. - The day before a named day was known as the
pridie, or literally day before. - They counted differently than we do they always
included the first and last in a series when they
counted, in modern times we only include the end
of the series.
6Anything but the ides, nones, or kalends.....
- For example, the day before the nones of January
(Ianuarius) would be January 4th in modern times,
but pridie nones ianuarius in ancient times. - Two days before the nones would be January 3
today, but ante diem (days before) III in ancient
times. - Three days before the nones would be January 2,
or ante diem IV.
7Modern Calendar
8Ancient Calendar
9Caesar takes over
- Julius Caesar was credited with many things in
ancient Rome, but one of his most famous (and
important) acts was to redo the calendar. - The calendar was a mess in 46 B.C., based on a
lunar year instead of a solar one summer months
were taking place near the winter, etc. He added
90 days to that one year to get the months back
where they we supposed to be, and, after having
spent so much time in Egypt, pretty much stole
their calendar of 365 ¼ days. - After his assassination, the priests in charge of
keeping track of the calendar (who were pretty
much responsible for messing it up in the first
place) misunderstood and made leap years every
three years instead of every four. - He also moved the beginning of the year from
Martius to Ianuarius, which caught on some places
but not in others. - The new calendar preserved the counting system of
the original, but no longer relied upon a lunar
cycle.
10Emperors honored.
- The senate decided to honor Caesar after his
death by renaming Quintilis after him, which is
why we now have July. - Augustus realized the priests mistake, that by 8
B.C. too many leap years had been added, so he
ordered no more leap years happen until things
caught up. To thank him, the senate renamed
Sextilis after him.
11The rest?
www.roman-britian.org/calendar.htm
12So where were the emperors?
- Thwarted attempts by warped emperors to rename
months - Caligula renamed September Germanicus after his
father in AD37, but this was overturned following
his assassination and the subsequent condemnation
of his memory by the senate in AD42. - September was once more renamed Germanicus in
AD 89, this time by the Emperor Domitian
following his triumph over the Germanic Chatti
tribe he also renamed October Domitianus as
this was the month in which he was born. Domitian
was also assassinated, his name condemned, and
his acts overturned in AD96. - www.roman-britian.org/calendar.htm
13Other crazy emperors..
- Commodus (emperor 180 192AD, and just as crazy
as the movie Spartacus implied) actually renamed
all of the months after himself, since he had
given himself twelve names by this time (all
indicating how amazing he was, names like Pius,
Invictus, Hercules (whom he thought he was),
etc..) - Nero tried to rename Aprilis, Maius, and Iunius
as Neroneus, Claudius, and Germanicus.
14What's that BCE all about???
- There is a move to replace the letters AD for
designating the starting point of the modern
calendar. The phrase which they stand for, year
of our lord, might offend people from other
religions whose Lord, if they have one, was born
in a different year. AD can now be written CE for
Common Era, and BC, which stands for Before
Christ, can be written BCE. - http//www.wilkiecollins.demon.co.uk/roman/calhis.
htm
15Whats that all about???
- Dionysius Exiguus in 531 AD determined when Jesus
was born, and dated years from his birth. Thus,
BC and AD. Scholars vary in how many years off he
was estimates range from 4 years off to 25
(although that seems a stretch and not as
reliable closer to four or seven seems most
likely). - Actually, a pretty amazing feat when you consider
the era and lack of internet, never mind a simple
library!
16But if the Romans didnt use BC
- If the Romans didnt know that their years were
BC, how did they name them? - During the time of the republic and into the
early years of the empire, the years were named
after the two men who were consuls at that time
(consuls were still elected in the early empire
as the emperors tried to pretend Rome was still a
republic). No two men were ever consul together
more than once, so although this system worked,
it was awkward. - Eventually they begin naming years AUC ab urbe
condita in other words, from the start of the
city of Rome itself. 1 AUC would be 753 BC. - Figure out what the year is today if we were
still using AUC!
17What happened next?
- Pope Gregory XIIIth changed the calendar in 1582,
to account for the fact that a year is not
exactly 365 ¼ days long. - There will be a leap year only on
century-changing years only when the century is
exactly divisible by 400. So 2000 was a leap
year, but 2100 will not be.
18Riots happened next!
- The Roman Catholic world went crazy when Pope
Gregory first did this because, in order to get
the calendar back in line once more with
equinoxes and seasons and things like that, they
had to subtract 13 days. - Since most people were uneducated, they thought
that 13 days had been deducted from their
lifespans. - Ever since then, 13 has been considered an
unlucky number! (Actually, I made that up, but it
seems pretty logical to me!)? - www.roman-britian.org/calendar.htm
19History..
- What was going on in 1582?
- This is in the midst of the Reformation, when
Martin Luther was doing things like nailing
theses to doors and English kings were creating
their own religions so they could divorce their
wives. - Not everyone adopted the Popes change
immediately since so many places were rebelling
against the Pope, even if what he did made sense
they werent going to follow it.
20Adoption through the ages.
- The Greek Orthodox and Russian Orthodox churches
have never adopted the Gregorian calendar, and
have always used the Julian. Its why some
holidays fall on different days than other
Christian religions. - Im not sure how that works since the Russian
government adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1918
(good-bye czars, welcome Bolsheviks).
21The Brits adopt Gregory
- The British isles and colonies adopted the
Gregorian calendar in 1752. - Their new year had begun up until this time on
March 25 (traditional date of spring equinox). - By this time the Julian calendar was eleven days
behind the Gregorian, so that year September 14
came after September 2, no 3 through 13. - http//penelope.uchicago.edu/grout/encyclopaedia_
romana/calendar/romancalendar.html
22Other countries adopt.....
- Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, and the
Netherlands adopt the Gregorian calendar around
1700. - Sweden adopted the calendar in 1753.
- Most Baltic nations switched right after World
War I (collapse of the Ottoman empire), and
Turkey itself adopted this calendar in 1926. - Japan signed on in 1873, Korea in 1896, Egypt in
1875. - Alaska adopted the calendar in 1867. Lost an
entire week that year. - http//europeanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa
041301a.htm
23France goes fou
- So France for the most part adopts the Gregorian
calendar in 1582. However, from 1792 to 1805,
they created their own French Republic Calendar,
with months of 30 days and a few extra days
thrown in here and there. A French poet named
Fabre d'Eglantine renamed the months Wind, Frost,
Blossom, Seed Time, etc. He was later
guillotined. - Napoleon takes power, and restores the calendar
back to Gregorian. - http//www.norbyhus.dk/calendar.html
24Days of the Week
- A planetary week of seven days is thought to have
started in Persian theology, and by the end of
the first century AD was in pretty common use
throughout the entire Mediterranean world. The
Roman week was eight days long until the time of
Constantine, which followed the ancient Etruscan
custom of seven days followed by a market day.
Many places found themselves having to pay
attention to both, dealing with Roman rulers and
local people at the same time. - www.roman-britian.org/calendar.htm
-
25Days of the week .
www.roman-britian.org/calendar.htm
26Days of the week Episode III.
- I am NOT going into the Norse god bit feel free
to go to roman-britian.org if you want to know
more. - For those that have studied/know other modern
Romance languages, do those Roman days sound
familiar?
27fragment of calendar excavated from the Forum
28the letters A H indicate market days, every
eighth daythe letters after the numbers
indicate what type of day it was C
comitiales, or days when assemblies are allowed
F fasti, ordinary citizens are allowed to do
what they need to, but courts cannot be in
session, although judges can carry on official
duties N dies nefasti, no judicial events can
occur at all NP dies nefasti publici,
ordinary citizens are not supposed to work unless
absolutely necessary
(and could be fined if they were seen doing
physical labor), slaves are allowed a day off
work, EN dies endotercisi, nefasti in the
morning and evening, but fasti in the middle of
the day there were more but these are the main
ones..
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31creating your own Roman calendar for this year
- Always label your kalends, ides, and nones first.
- Then label each pridie.
- Then, counting backwards, label each ante diem.
Believe me, if you count forwards you will
invariably make a mistake! - The four long months were October, Martius,
Maius, and Quintilis (Iulius). - Abbreviate where possible!!!!