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Dominical letter

Dominical letters or Sunday letters are a method used to determine the day of the week for particular dates. When using this method, each year is assigned a letter (or pair of letters for leap years) depending on which day of the week the year starts. The Dominical letter for the current year 2024 is GF.

Dominical letters are derived from the Roman practice of marking the repeating sequence of eight letters A–H (commencing with A on January 1) on stone calendars to indicate each day's position in the eight-day market week (nundinae). The word is derived from the number nine due to their practice of inclusive counting. After the introduction of Christianity a similar sequence of seven letters A–G was added alongside, again commencing with January 1. The dominical letter marks the Sundays. Nowadays they are used primarily as part of the computus, which is the method of calculating the date of Easter.

A common year is assigned a single dominical letter, indicating which lettered days are Sundays in that particular year (hence the name, from Latin dominica for Sunday). Thus, 2023 is A, indicating that all A days are Sunday, and by inference, January 1, 2023, is a Sunday. Leap years are given two letters, the first valid for January 1 – February 28 (or February 24, see below), the second for the remainder of the year.

In leap years, the leap day may or may not have a letter. In the Catholic version it does, but in the 1662 and subsequent Anglican versions it does not. The Catholic version causes February to have 29 days by doubling the sixth day before March 1, inclusive, thus both halves of the doubled day have a dominical letter of F.[1][2][3] The Anglican version adds a day to February that did not exist in common years, February 29, thus it does not have a dominical letter of its own.[4][5] After the 1662 reform there was correspondence between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the printer of the Book of Common Prayer, in which it was explained that the feast day of St Matthias now fell on February 24 every year.

In either case, all other dates have the same dominical letter every year, but the days of the dominical letters change within a leap year before and after the intercalary day, February 24 or February 29.

History and arrangement edit

According to Thurston 1909, p. 109 dominical letters are:

a device adopted from the Romans by the old chronologers to aid them in finding the day of the week corresponding to any given date, and indirectly to facilitate the adjustment of the 'Proprium de Tempore' to the 'Proprium Sanctorum' when constructing the ecclesiastical calendar for any year. The Church, on account of her complicated system of movable and immovable feasts... has from an early period taken upon herself as a special charge to regulate the measurement of time. To secure uniformity in the observance of feasts and fasts, she began, even in the patristic age, to supply a computus, or system of reckoning, by which the relation of the solar and lunar years might be accommodated and the celebration of Easter determined. Naturally she adopted the astronomical methods then available, and these methods and the terminology belonging to them having become traditional, are perpetuated in a measure to this day, even after the reform of the calendar, in the prolegomena to the Breviary and Missal.

The Romans were accustomed to divide the year into nundinæ, periods of eight days; and in their marble fasti, or calendars, of which numerous specimens remain, they used the first eight letters of the alphabet [A to H] to mark the days of which each period was composed. When the Oriental seven-day period, or week, was introduced in the time of Augustus, the first seven letters of the alphabet were employed in the same way to indicate the days of the new division of time. In fact, fragmentary calendars on marble still survive in which both a cycle of eight letters – A to H – indicating nundinae, and a cycle of seven letters – A to G – indicating weeks, are used side by side (see "Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum", 2nd ed., I, 220. -The same peculiarity occurs in the Philocalian Calendar of A.D. 356, ibid., p. 256). This device was imitated by the Christians, and in their calendars the days of the year from 1 January to 31 December were marked with a continuous recurring cycle of seven letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, G. A was always set against 1 January, B against 2 January, C against 3 January, and so on. Thus F fell to 6 January, G to 7 January; A again recurred on 8 January, and also, consequently, on 15 January, 22 January, and 29 January. Continuing in this way, 30 January was marked with a B, 31 January with a C, and 1 February with a D. Supposing this to be carried on through all the days of an ordinary year (i.e. not a leap year), it will be found that a D corresponds to 1 March, G to 1 April, B to 1 May, E to 1 June, G to 1 July, C to 1 August, F to 1 September, A to 1 October, D to 1 November, and F to 1 December – a result which Durandus recalled by the following distich:

Alta Domat Dominus, Gratis Beat Equa Gerentes

Contemnit Fictos, Augebit Dona Fideli.

Another one is "Add G, beg C, fad F," and yet another is "At Dover dwell George Brown, Esquire; Good Christopher Finch; and David Fryer."

Dominical letter cycle edit

Months  
January, October
A
May
B
August
C
February, March, November
D
June
E
September, December
F
April, July
G
January, April, July
AG
October
BA
May
CB
February, August
DC
March, November
ED
June
FE
September, December
GF
  • If the letter ( ) of the first day of a month is the same as the dominical letter for the year, the month will have a Friday the 13th. That is to say, if the first day is Sunday, the 13th day will be Friday.

Thurston 1909 continues:

Now, as a moment's reflection shows, if 1 January is a Sunday, all the days marked by A will also be Sundays; if 1 January is a Saturday, Sunday will fall on 2 January, which is a B, and all the other days marked B will be Sundays; if 1 January is a Monday, then Sunday will not come until 7 January, a G, and all the days marked G will be Sundays ...

It is plain, however, that when leap year occurs, a complication is introduced. February has then twenty-nine days. According to the Anglican and civil calendars this extra day is added at the end of the month; according to the Catholic ecclesiastical calendar 24 February is counted twice. But in either case 1 March is then one day later in the week than 1 February, or, in other words, for the rest of the year the Sundays come a day earlier than they would in a common year. This is expressed by saying that a leap year has two Dominical Letters, the second being the letter which precedes that with which the year started.

Of course, "24 February" is not "counted twice". The 23rd is ante diem vii kalendas Martias, the next day in a leap year is a.d. bis sextum kal. Mart., the next day is the regular a.d.vi kal. Mart., and so to the end of the month. For example, this year, 2024 (=GF), all days preceding the leap day will correspond to a common-year G calendar, and all days afterward will correspond to a common-year F calendar. The relevant line of the Februarius page in the Kalendarium of a 1913 Breviarium Romanum reads:

5 |f|vj|24|S. MATHIAE APOSTOLI, dupl. 2. class.

The first column is the epact, a replacement for the golden number, from which the age of the moon was computed and announced in some English cathedrals prior to the Reformation. The second column is the letter, the third the Roman date and the fourth the modern date. A note at the foot of the page reads:

In anno bissextili mensis Februarius est dierum 29. et Festum S. Mathiae celebratur die 25. Februarii et bis dicitur sexto Kalendas, id est die 24. et die 25. et littera Dominicalis, quae assumpta fuit in mense Januario, mutatur in praecedentem; ut si in Januario littera Dominicalis fuerit A, mutatur in praecedentem, quae est g. etc.; et littera f bis servit, 24. et 25.

(In a bissextile year the month February is of 29 days and the Feast of St. Matthias is celebrated on 25 February, and twice is said on the sixth Kalends, that is on the 24th and 25th, and the Sunday letter, which was assumed in the month of January, is changed to the preceding; so if in January the Sunday letter may have been A, it is changed to the preceding, which is G. etc.; and letter F twice serves, 24th and 25th.)

Dominical letters of the years edit

The dominical letter of a year provides the link between the date and the day of the week on which it falls. The following are the correspondences between dominical letters and the day of the week on which their corresponding years is day and date:

The Gregorian calendar repeats every 400 years (i. e., every four centuries). Of the 400 years in one Gregorian cycle, there are:

  • 44 common years for each single Dominical letter D and F;
  • 43 common years for each single Dominical letter A, B, C, E, and G;
  • 15 leap years for each double Dominical letter AG and CB;
  • 14 leap years for each double Dominical letter ED and FE;
  • 13 leap years for each double Dominical letter BA, DC, and GF.

Thus 58 out of 400 years begin as A, C, or F, while 57 begin as D or E and 56 begin as B or G. The end of a year preceding a given year has the next letter (meaning A years are preceded by years ending as B), so 58 of 400 years end as B, D or G, whereas 57 end as E or F and 56 end as C or A. This means, for example, that Juneteenth and Christmas fall on a Saturday or Monday (C and A years, resp.) 56 times and Wednesday or Thursday (F and E years, resp.) 57 times, whereas they fall on Friday, Sunday or Tuesday (D, B and G years, resp.) 58 times in the span of four centuries.

The Julian calendar repeats every 28 years. Of the 28 years in one Julian cycle, there are:

  • 3 common years for each single Dominical letter A, B, C, D, E, F, and G;
  • 1 leap year for each double Dominical letter BA, CB, DC, ED, FE, GF, and AG.

Calculation edit

The dominical letter of a year can be calculated based on any method for calculating the day of the week, with letters in reverse order compared to numbers indicating the day of the week.

 
The solar cycle and dominical letter on the Jubilee clock of the Zimmer tower

For example:

  • ignore periods of 400 years
  • considering the second letter in the case of a leap year:
    • for one century within two multiples of 400, go forward two letters from BA for 2000, hence C, E, G.
    • for remaining years, go back one letter every year, two for leap years (this corresponds to writing two letters, no letter is skipped).
    • to avoid up to 99 steps within a century, the table below can be used.
Year mod 28 #
00 06 12 17 23 0
01 07 12 18 24 6
02 08 13 19 24 5
03 08 14 20 25 4
04 09 15 20 26 3
04 10 16 21 27 2
05 11 16 22 00 1

Red for the first two months of leap years.

For example, to find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913:

  • 1900 is G and 13 corresponds to 5
  • G + 5 = G − 2 = E, 1913 is E

Similarly, for 2007:

  • 2000 is BA and 7 corresponds to 6
  • A + 6 = A − 1 = G, 2007 is G

For 2065:

  • 2000 is BA and 65 mod 28 = 9 corresponds to 3
  • A + 3 = A − 4 = D, 2065 is D

The odd plus 11 method edit

A simpler method suitable for finding the year's dominical letter was discovered in 2010. It is called the "odd plus 11" method.[6]

The procedure accumulates a running total T as follows:

  1. Let T be the year's last two digits.
  2. If T is odd, add 11.
  3. Let T = T/2.
  4. If T is odd, add 11.
  5. Let T = T mod 7.
  6. Count forward T letters from the century's dominical letter (A, C, E or G see above) to get the year's dominical letter.

The formula is

 

De Morgan's rule edit

This rule was stated by Augustus De Morgan:

  1. Add 1 to the given year.
  2. Take the quotient found by dividing the given year by 4 (neglecting the remainder).
  3. Take 16 from the centurial figures of the given year if that can be done.
  4. Take the quotient of III divided by 4 (neglecting the remainder).
  5. From the sum of I, II and IV, subtract III.
  6. Find the remainder of V divided by 7: this is the number of the Dominical Letter, supposing A, B, C, D, E, F, G to be equivalent respectively to 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0.[7]

So the formulae (using the floor function) for the Gregorian calendar is

 

It is equivalent to

 

and

      (where   = last two digits of the year,   = century part of the year).

For example, to find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913:

1. (1 + 1913 + 478 + 0 − 3) mod 7 = 2
2. (1913 + 478 + 4 − 19 − 1) mod 7 = 2
3. (13 + 3 + 15 -1) mod 7 = 2
Hence, the Dominical Letter is E in the Gregorian calendar.

De Morgan's rules no. 1 and 2 for the Julian calendar:

  and  

To find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913 in the Julian calendar:

  • (1913 + 478 − 3) mod 7 = 1
Hence, the Dominical Letter is F in the Julian calendar.

In leap years the formulae above give the Dominical Letter for the last ten months of the year. To find the Dominical Letter for the first two months of the year to the leap day (inclusive) subtract 1 from the calculated number representing the original Dominical Letter; if the new number is less than 0, it must be changed to 6.

Dominical letter in relation to the Doomsday Rule edit

The "doomsday" concept in the doomsday algorithm is mathematically related to the Dominical letter. Because the letter of a date equals the dominical letter of a year (DL) plus the day of the week (DW), and the letter for the doomsday is C except for the portion of leap years before February 29 in which it is D, we have:

 

Note: G = 0 = Sunday, A = 1 = Monday, B = 2 = Tuesday, C = 3 = Wednesday, D = 4 = Thursday, E = 5 = Friday, and F = 6 = Saturday, i.e. in our context, C is mathematically identical to 3.

Hence, for instance, the doomsday of the year 2013 is Thursday, so DL = (3–4) mod 7 = 6 = F. The dominical letter of the year 1913 is E, so DW = (3–5) mod 7 = 5 = Friday.

Doomsday Dominical letter
Common year Leap year
Sunday C DC
Monday B CB
Tuesday A BA
Wednesday G AG
Thursday F GF
Friday E FE
Saturday D ED

All in one table edit

If the year of interest is not within the table, use a tabular year which gives the same remainder when divided by 400 (Gregorian calendar) or 700 (Julian calendar). In the case of the Revised Julian calendar, find the date of Easter Sunday (see the section "Calculating Easter Sunday", subsection "Revised Julian calendar" below) and enter it into the "Table of letters for the days of the year" below. If the year is a leap year, the dominical letter for January and February is found by inputting the date of Easter Monday. Note the different rules for leap years:

  • Gregorian calendar: every year which divides exactly by 4, but of century years only those which divide exactly by 400; therefore ignore the left-hand letter given for a century year which is not a leap year.
  • Julian calendar: every year which divides exactly by 4.
  • Revised Julian calendar: every year which divides exactly by 4, but of century years only those which give the remainder 200 or 600 when divided by 900.[8]
Julian
calendar
 
500
1200
1900
2600
 
600
1300
2000
2700
(0)
700
1400
2100
2800
100
800
1500
2200
2900
200
900
1600
2300
 
300
1000
1700
2400
 
400
1100
1800
2500
 
(Proleptic)
Gregorian
calendar
(0)
(400)
(800)
(1200)
1600
2000
2400
2800
  (100)
(500)
(900)
(1300)
1700
2100
2500
2900
  (200)
(600)
(1000)
(1400)
1800
2200
2600
 
  (300)
(700)
(1100)
(1500)
1900
2300
2700
 
00Gregorian BA   C   E   G
00J 28 56 84 CB DC ED FE GF AG
01 29 57 85 G A B C D E F
02 30 58 86 F G A B C D E
03 31 59 87 E F G A B C D
04 32 60 88 DC ED FE GF AG BA CB
05 33 61 89 B C D E F G A
06 34 62 90 A B C D E F G
07 35 63 91 G A B C D E F
08 36 64 92 FE GF AG BA CB DC ED
09 37 65 93 D E F G A B C
10 38 66 94 C D E F G A B
11 39 67 95 B C D E F G A
12 40 68 96 AG BA CB DC ED FE GF
13 41 69 97 F G A B C D E
14 42 70 98 E F G A B C D
15 43 71 99 D E F G A B C
16 44 72 CB DC ED FE GF AG BA
17 45 73 A B C D E F G
18 46 74 G A B C D E F
19 47 75 F G A B C D E
20 48 76 ED FE GF AG BA CB DC
21 49 77 C D E F G A B
22 50 78 B C D E F G A
23 51 79 A B C D E F G
24 52 80 GF AG BA CB DC ED FE
25 53 81 E F G A B C D
26 54 82 D E F G A B C
27 55 83 C D E F G A B
Golden Number
(this is (Year+1)
mod 19 and if the
remainder is 0
the Golden Number is 19)
Paschal Full Moon
(Easter is the following Sunday)
Julian
calendar
Gregorian
(1900–2199)
1 Apr 5 Apr 14
2 Mar 25 Apr 3
3 Apr 13 Mar 23
4 Apr 2 Apr 11
5 Mar 22 Mar 31
6 Apr 10 Apr 18
7 Mar 30 Apr 8
8 Apr 18 Mar 28
9 Apr 7 Apr 16
10 Mar 27 Apr 5
11 Apr 15 Mar 25
12 Apr 4 Apr 13
13 Mar 24 Apr 2
14 Apr 12 Mar 22
15 Apr 1 Apr 10
16 Mar 21 Mar 30
17 Apr 9 Apr 17
18 Mar 29 Apr 7
19 Apr 17 Mar 27
Table of letters for the
days of the year
(2 Sunday letters in leap years,
the one for March to December
preceding the one for January
and February in the series,
1 Sunday letter in common years)
Days of month
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
(29) (30) (31)        
Months Jan Oct   A B C D E F G
Feb Mar Nov D E F G A B C
  Apr Jul   G A B C D E F
  May     B C D E F G A
  Jun     E F G A B C D
    Aug   C D E F G A B
    Sep Dec F G A B C D E

Years with special dominical letters edit

When a country switched to the Gregorian calendar, there could be some unusual combinations of dominical letters.

Some examples edit

  • 1582: Many Catholic countries switched to the Gregorian calendar Friday October 15. The table above indicates that year 1582 had the dominical letter G in the Julian calendar and C in the Gregorian one. So the dominical letters for 1582 in these Catholic countries became GC for mixing the two calendars used in this legal year, a special combination not seen before and after with a single calendar used in the same legal year.
  • 1752: The British Empire and its colonies switched to the Gregorian calendar Thursday September 14. 1752, a leap year, had in the Julian calendar dominical letters ED and in the Gregorian one dominical letters BA, so the dominical letters for 1752 in Britain were EDA, a very special combination which also only applies to this legal year.

Calculating Easter Sunday edit

Enter the "all in one table" to find the date of the paschal full moon, then use the "week table" below to find the day of the week on which it falls. Easter is the following Sunday.

Week table: Julian and Gregorian calendars for AD years since March 1 AD 4 edit

Note that this table does not work for AD years at the early stage of the real Julian calendar before March 1 AD 4[9] or for any BC year, except when using the Julian calendar rules for proleptic dates (which are different from effective historic dates, whose effective calendar in use depended on the location of dated events or the location of the person using the calendar, sometimes differently between political/civil or religious purposes in places where both calendars still coexisted). The duration of months, and the number and placement of intercalated days also changed inconsistently before AD 42 in the early local Julian calendars which used native names for the months, depending on places and years, causing finally a lot of confusion in the population (so dating events precisely in that period is often difficult, unless they are correlated with observed lunar cycles, or with days of the week, or with another calendar).

In these early AD years and in all BC years, with the effective Julian calendars used locally to align the counting of years (but still with the tradition inherited from the earlier Roman calendar for noting days in each year), a variable number of days at end of the months (after the last day of its ides but before the last day of calends which started the next month) were also still counted relatively from the start of the next named month (on the last day of its calends), and years were theoretically starting on March 1 (but with the last days of the year in February also counted from the New Year's Day in March). As well, all these early years were effectively counted inclusively and positively from a different, much earlier epoch in other eras, such as the supposed foundation of Rome, or the accession to power of a local ruler (and still not relatively to the supposed date of birth of Christ, which was fixed later arbitrarily by a Christian reform for the modern Julian calendar so that this epoch for the Christian era starts now on January 1 in proleptic year AD 1 of the modern Julian calendar, but the real date of birth of Christ is still not known precisely but certainly falls before, somewhere in the last few BC years).

Instructions

For Julian dates before 1300 and after 1999 the year in the table which differs by an exact multiple of 700 years should be used. For Gregorian dates after 2299, the year in the table which differs by an exact multiple of 400 years should be used. The values "r0" through "r6" indicate the remainder when the Hundreds value is divided by 7 and 4 respectively, indicating how the series extend in either direction. Both Julian and Gregorian values are shown 1500–1999 for convenience.

The corresponding numbers in the far left hand column on the same line as each component of the date (the hundreds, remaining digits and month) and the day of the month are added together. This total is then divided by 7 and the remainder from this division located in the far left hand column. The day of the week is beside it. Bold figures (e.g., 04) denote leap year. If a year ends in 00 and its hundreds are in bold it is a leap year. Thus 19 indicates that 1900 is not a Gregorian leap year, (but bold 19 in the Julian column indicates that it is a Julian leap year, as are all Julian x00 years). 20 indicates that 2000 is a leap year. Use bold Jan and Feb only in leap years.

Century digits Remaining year digits Month Day of
week
Number
Julian
(r ÷ 7)
Gregorian
(r ÷ 4)
r5 19 16 20 r0 (00) 06 17 23 28 34 45 51 56 62 73 79 84 90 Jan Oct Sat 0
r4 18 15 19 r3 01 07 12 18 29 35 40 46 57 63 68 74 85 91 96 May Sun 1
r3 17 02 13 19 24 30 41 47 52 58 69 75 80 86 97 Feb Aug Mon 2
r2 16 18 22 r2 03 08 14 25 31 36 42 53 59 64 70 81 87 92 98 Feb Mar Nov Tue 3
r1 15 09 15 20 26 37 43 48 54 65 71 76 82 93 99 Jun Wed 4
r0 14 17 21 r1 04 10 21 27 32 38 49 55 60 66 77 83 88 94 Sep Dec Thu 5
r6 13 05 11 16 22 33 39 44 50 61 67 72 78 89 95 Jan Apr Jul Fri 6

For determination of the day of the week (January 1, 2000, Saturday)

  • the day of the month: 1
  • the month: 6
  • the year: 0
  • the century mod 4 for the Gregorian calendar and mod 7 for the Julian calendar 0
  • adding 1 + 6 + 0 + 0 = 7. Dividing by 7 leaves a remainder of 0, so the day of the week is Saturday.

Revised Julian calendar edit

  • Use the Julian portion of the table of paschal full moons. Use the "week table" (remembering to use the "Julian" side) to find the day of the week on which the paschal full moon falls. Easter is the following Sunday and it is a Julian date. Call this date JD.
  • Subtract 100 from the year.
  • Divide the result by 100. Call the number obtained (omitting fractions) N.
  • Evaluate 7N/9. Call the result (omitting fractions) S.
  • The Revised Julian calendar date of Easter is JD + S − 1.

Example. What is the date of Easter in 2017?

2017 + 1 = 2018. 2018 ÷ 19 = 106 remainder 4. Golden number is 4. Date of paschal full moon is April 2 (Julian). From "week table" April 2, 2017 (Julian) is Saturday. JD = April 3. 2017 − 100 = 1917. 1917 ÷ 100 = 19 remainder 17. N = 19. 19 × 7 = 133. 133 ÷ 9 = 14 remainder 7. S = 14. Easter Sunday in the Revised Julian calendar is April 3 + 14 − 1 = April 16.

Calculate the day of the week in the Revised Julian calendar edit

Note that the date (and hence the day of the week) in the Revised Julian and Gregorian calendars is the same up until February 28, 2800, and that for large years it may be possible to subtract 6300 or a multiple thereof before starting so as to reach a year within or closer to the table.

To look up the weekday of any date for any year using the table, subtract 100 from the year, divide the number obtained by 100, multiply the resulting quotient (omitting fractions) by seven and divide the product by nine. Note the quotient (omitting fractions). Enter the table with the Julian year, and just before the final division add 50 and subtract the quotient noted above.

Example: What is the day of the week of 27 January 8315?

8315 − 6300 = 2015, 2015 − 100 = 1915, 1915 ÷ 100 = 19 remainder 15, 19 × 7 = 133, 133 ÷ 9 = 14 remainder 7. 2015 is 700 years ahead of 1315, so 1315 is used. From the table: for hundreds (13): 6. For remaining digits (15): 4. For month (January): 0. For date (27): 27. 6 + 4 + 0 + 27 + 50 − 14 = 73. 73 ÷ 7 = 10 remainder 3. Day of week = Tuesday.

Dominical letter edit

To find the dominical letter, calculate the day of the week for either January 1 or October 1. If it is Sunday, the Sunday Letter is A, if Saturday B, and similarly backwards through the week and forwards through the alphabet to Monday, which is G.

Leap years have two letters, so for January and February calculate the day of the week for January 1 and for March to December calculate the day of the week for October 1.

Leap years are all years that divide exactly by four, with the following exceptions:

Gregorian calendar – all years divisible by 100, except those that divide exactly by 400.

Revised Julian calendar – all years divisible by 100, except those with a remainder of 200 or 600 when divided by 900.

Clerical utility edit

The dominical letter had another practical utility in the period prior to the annual printing of the Ordo divini officii recitandi, in which period, therefore, Christian clergy were often required to determine the Ordo independently. Easter Sunday may be as early as March 22 or as late as April 25, and consequently there are 35 possible days on which it may occur; each dominical letter includes 5 potential dates of these 35, and thus there are 5 possible ecclesiastical calendars for each letter. The Pye or Directorium which preceded the present Ordo took advantage of this principle by delineating all 35 possible calendars and denoting them by the formula "primum A", "secundum A", "tertium A", et cetera. Hence, based on the dominical letter of the year and the epact, the Pye identified the correct calendar to use. A similar table, adapted to the reformed calendar and in more convenient form, is included in the beginning of every breviary and missal under the heading "Tabula Paschalis nova reformata".

Saint Bede does not seem to have been familiar with dominical letters, given his "De temporum ratione"; in its place he adopted a similar device of Greek origin consisting of seven numbers, which he denominated "concurrentes" (De Temp. Rat., Chapter LIII). The "concurrents" are numbers that denote the days of the week on which March 24 occurs in the successive years of the solar cycle, 1 denoting Sunday, 2 (feria secunda) for Monday, 3 for Tuesday, et cetera; these correspond to dominical letters F, E, D, C, B, A, and G, respectively.

Use for computer calculation edit

Computers are able to calculate the Dominical letter for the first day of a given month in this way (function in C), where:

  • m = month
  • y = year
  • s = "style"; 0 for Julian, otherwise Gregorian.
char dominical(int m, int y, int s) {  int leap = y % 4 == 0 && (s == 0 || y % 100 != 0 || y % 400 == 0),  a = (y % 100) % 28,  b = (s == 0) * ( (y%700)/100 + a/4 * 2 + 4 + ((a%4+1)*!leap + (m+9)/12*leap) * 6 ) % 7  + (s != 0) * ( ((y%400)/100 + a/4 + 1) * 2 + ((a%4+1)*!leap + (m+9)/12*leap) * 6 ) % 7;  b += (b == 0) * 7;  return (char)(b + 64); } 

Years are also given a dominical letter or pair of dominical letters according to the first day in January and last day in December: when they are equal, only the first letter is given. The dominical letter of the last day of December just precedes in the ordered cycle (G,F,E,D,C,B,A), the dominical letter of the first day in January for the next year.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Archer 1941, p. 5.
  2. ^ Blackburn & Holford-Strevens 1999, p. 829.
  3. ^ Calendarium February 15, 2005, at the Wayback Machine (Calendar attached to the papal bull "Inter gravissimas").
  4. ^ "Anno vicesimo quarto Georgii II. c. 23" (1751), The Statutes at Large, from Magna Charta to the end of the Eleventh Parliament of Great Britain, Anno 1761, ed. Danby Pickering, p. 194.
  5. ^ Fotheringham 1929, pp. 735–747.
  6. ^ Fong & Walters 2011.
  7. ^ Thurston 1909.
  8. ^ Shields, Miriam Nancy (1924). "The new calendar of the Eastern churches". Practical Astronomy. 32: 407–411. Bibcode:1924PA.....32..407S.
  9. ^ Bennett, Christopher J (2004). "The early Augustan calendars in Rome and Egypt". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 147: 165–168. JSTOR 20191595. The later literary sources describe a period of 12 years without an intercalary day after the reform. This number has always been slightly problematic. Since the reform occurred in 8 B.C., it implies that intercalation resumed in A.D. 5. But A.D. 5 was not a Julian leap year, so the next actual intercalation was in A.D. 8, not 12 but 15 years after the reform. This discrepancy has traditionally been reconciled by interpreting "resumption of intercalation" to mean that accumulation of quarter days started in A.D. 5.

Sources edit

  • Archer, Peter (1941). The Christian Calendar and the Gregorian Reform. New York: Fordham University Press. ASIN B01K942KH2.
  • Blackburn, Bonnie J.; Holford-Strevens, Leofranc (1999). The Oxford Companion to the Year. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-214231-3.
  • Fong, Chamberlain; Walters, Michael K. (2011). "Methods for Accelerating Conway's Doomsday Algorithm (part 2)". 7th International Congress of Industrial and Applied Mathematics. arXiv:1010.0765.
  • Fotheringham, J. K. (1929). "Explanation: The Calendar". The Nautical Almanac and Astronomical Ephemeris for the year 1931. London: HMSO.
  • Thurston, Herbert (1909). "Dominical Letter" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading edit

dominical, letter, sunday, letters, method, used, determine, week, particular, dates, when, using, this, method, each, year, assigned, letter, pair, letters, leap, years, depending, which, week, year, starts, current, year, 2024, derived, from, roman, practice. Dominical letters or Sunday letters are a method used to determine the day of the week for particular dates When using this method each year is assigned a letter or pair of letters for leap years depending on which day of the week the year starts The Dominical letter for the current year 2024 is GF Dominical letters are derived from the Roman practice of marking the repeating sequence of eight letters A H commencing with A on January 1 on stone calendars to indicate each day s position in the eight day market week nundinae The word is derived from the number nine due to their practice of inclusive counting After the introduction of Christianity a similar sequence of seven letters A G was added alongside again commencing with January 1 The dominical letter marks the Sundays Nowadays they are used primarily as part of the computus which is the method of calculating the date of Easter A common year is assigned a single dominical letter indicating which lettered days are Sundays in that particular year hence the name from Latin dominica for Sunday Thus 2023 is A indicating that all A days are Sunday and by inference January 1 2023 is a Sunday Leap years are given two letters the first valid for January 1 February 28 or February 24 see below the second for the remainder of the year In leap years the leap day may or may not have a letter In the Catholic version it does but in the 1662 and subsequent Anglican versions it does not The Catholic version causes February to have 29 days by doubling the sixth day before March 1 inclusive thus both halves of the doubled day have a dominical letter of F 1 2 3 The Anglican version adds a day to February that did not exist in common years February 29 thus it does not have a dominical letter of its own 4 5 After the 1662 reform there was correspondence between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the printer of the Book of Common Prayer in which it was explained that the feast day of St Matthias now fell on February 24 every year In either case all other dates have the same dominical letter every year but the days of the dominical letters change within a leap year before and after the intercalary day February 24 or February 29 Contents 1 History and arrangement 2 Dominical letter cycle 3 Dominical letters of the years 4 Calculation 4 1 The odd plus 11 method 4 2 De Morgan s rule 4 3 Dominical letter in relation to the Doomsday Rule 4 4 All in one table 4 5 Years with special dominical letters 4 5 1 Some examples 5 Calculating Easter Sunday 5 1 Week table Julian and Gregorian calendars for AD years since March 1 AD 4 5 2 Revised Julian calendar 5 3 Calculate the day of the week in the Revised Julian calendar 5 4 Dominical letter 6 Clerical utility 7 Use for computer calculation 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 9 3 Further readingHistory and arrangement editAccording to Thurston 1909 p 109 dominical letters are a device adopted from the Romans by the old chronologers to aid them in finding the day of the week corresponding to any given date and indirectly to facilitate the adjustment of the Proprium de Tempore to the Proprium Sanctorum when constructing the ecclesiastical calendar for any year The Church on account of her complicated system of movable and immovable feasts has from an early period taken upon herself as a special charge to regulate the measurement of time To secure uniformity in the observance of feasts and fasts she began even in the patristic age to supply a computus or system of reckoning by which the relation of the solar and lunar years might be accommodated and the celebration of Easter determined Naturally she adopted the astronomical methods then available and these methods and the terminology belonging to them having become traditional are perpetuated in a measure to this day even after the reform of the calendar in the prolegomena to the Breviary and Missal The Romans were accustomed to divide the year into nundinae periods of eight days and in their marble fasti or calendars of which numerous specimens remain they used the first eight letters of the alphabet A to H to mark the days of which each period was composed When the Oriental seven day period or week was introduced in the time of Augustus the first seven letters of the alphabet were employed in the same way to indicate the days of the new division of time In fact fragmentary calendars on marble still survive in which both a cycle of eight letters A to H indicating nundinae and a cycle of seven letters A to G indicating weeks are used side by side see Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum 2nd ed I 220 The same peculiarity occurs in the Philocalian Calendar of A D 356 ibid p 256 This device was imitated by the Christians and in their calendars the days of the year from 1 January to 31 December were marked with a continuous recurring cycle of seven letters A B C D E F G A was always set against 1 January B against 2 January C against 3 January and so on Thus F fell to 6 January G to 7 January A again recurred on 8 January and also consequently on 15 January 22 January and 29 January Continuing in this way 30 January was marked with a B 31 January with a C and 1 February with a D Supposing this to be carried on through all the days of an ordinary year i e not a leap year it will be found that a D corresponds to 1 March G to 1 April B to 1 May E to 1 June G to 1 July C to 1 August F to 1 September A to 1 October D to 1 November and F to 1 December a result which Durandus recalled by the following distich Alta Domat Dominus Gratis Beat Equa GerentesContemnit Fictos Augebit Dona Fideli Another one is Add G beg C fad F and yet another is At Dover dwell George Brown Esquire Good Christopher Finch and David Fryer Dominical letter cycle editMonths DL displaystyle mathcal DL nbsp January October AMay BAugust CFebruary March November DJune ESeptember December FApril July GJanuary April July AGOctober BAMay CBFebruary August DCMarch November EDJune FESeptember December GFIf the letter DL displaystyle mathcal DL nbsp of the first day of a month is the same as the dominical letter for the year the month will have a Friday the 13th That is to say if the first day is Sunday the 13th day will be Friday Thurston 1909 continues Now as a moment s reflection shows if 1 January is a Sunday all the days marked by A will also be Sundays if 1 January is a Saturday Sunday will fall on 2 January which is a B and all the other days marked B will be Sundays if 1 January is a Monday then Sunday will not come until 7 January a G and all the days marked G will be Sundays It is plain however that when leap year occurs a complication is introduced February has then twenty nine days According to the Anglican and civil calendars this extra day is added at the end of the month according to the Catholic ecclesiastical calendar 24 February is counted twice But in either case 1 March is then one day later in the week than 1 February or in other words for the rest of the year the Sundays come a day earlier than they would in a common year This is expressed by saying that a leap year has two Dominical Letters the second being the letter which precedes that with which the year started Of course 24 February is not counted twice The 23rd is ante diem vii kalendas Martias the next day in a leap year is a d bis sextum kal Mart the next day is the regular a d vi kal Mart and so to the end of the month For example this year 2024 GF all days preceding the leap day will correspond to a common year G calendar and all days afterward will correspond to a common year F calendar The relevant line of the Februarius page in the Kalendarium of a 1913 Breviarium Romanum reads 5 f vj 24 S MATHIAE APOSTOLI dupl 2 class The first column is the epact a replacement for the golden number from which the age of the moon was computed and announced in some English cathedrals prior to the Reformation The second column is the letter the third the Roman date and the fourth the modern date A note at the foot of the page reads In anno bissextili mensis Februarius est dierum 29 et Festum S Mathiae celebratur die 25 Februarii et bis dicitur sexto Kalendas id est die 24 et die 25 et littera Dominicalis quae assumpta fuit in mense Januario mutatur in praecedentem ut si in Januario littera Dominicalis fuerit A mutatur in praecedentem quae est g etc et littera f bis servit 24 et 25 In a bissextile year the month February is of 29 days and the Feast of St Matthias is celebrated on 25 February and twice is said on the sixth Kalends that is on the 24th and 25th and the Sunday letter which was assumed in the month of January is changed to the preceding so if in January the Sunday letter may have been A it is changed to the preceding which is G etc and letter F twice serves 24th and 25th Dominical letters of the years editThe dominical letter of a year provides the link between the date and the day of the week on which it falls The following are the correspondences between dominical letters and the day of the week on which their corresponding years is day and date A common year starting on Sunday has two Friday the 13ths in January and October B common year starting on Saturday has one Friday the 13th in May C common year starting on Friday has one Friday the 13th in August D common year starting on Thursday has three Friday the 13ths in February March and November E common year starting on Wednesday has one Friday the 13th in June F common year starting on Tuesday has two Friday the 13ths in September and December G common year starting on Monday has two Friday the 13ths in April and July AG leap year starting on Sunday has three Friday the 13ths in January April and July BA leap year starting on Saturday has one Friday the 13th in October CB leap year starting on Friday has one Friday the 13th in May DC leap year starting on Thursday has two Friday the 13ths in February and August ED leap year starting on Wednesday has two Friday the 13ths in March and November FE leap year starting on Tuesday has one Friday the 13th in June GF leap year starting on Monday has two Friday the 13ths in September and December The Gregorian calendar repeats every 400 years i e every four centuries Of the 400 years in one Gregorian cycle there are 44 common years for each single Dominical letter D and F 43 common years for each single Dominical letter A B C E and G 15 leap years for each double Dominical letter AG and CB 14 leap years for each double Dominical letter ED and FE 13 leap years for each double Dominical letter BA DC and GF Thus 58 out of 400 years begin as A C or F while 57 begin as D or E and 56 begin as B or G The end of a year preceding a given year has the next letter meaning A years are preceded by years ending as B so 58 of 400 years end as B D or G whereas 57 end as E or F and 56 end as C or A This means for example that Juneteenth and Christmas fall on a Saturday or Monday C and A years resp 56 times and Wednesday or Thursday F and E years resp 57 times whereas they fall on Friday Sunday or Tuesday D B and G years resp 58 times in the span of four centuries The Julian calendar repeats every 28 years Of the 28 years in one Julian cycle there are 3 common years for each single Dominical letter A B C D E F and G 1 leap year for each double Dominical letter BA CB DC ED FE GF and AG Calculation editThis article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The dominical letter of a year can be calculated based on any method for calculating the day of the week with letters in reverse order compared to numbers indicating the day of the week nbsp The solar cycle and dominical letter on the Jubilee clock of the Zimmer towerFor example ignore periods of 400 years considering the second letter in the case of a leap year for one century within two multiples of 400 go forward two letters from BA for 2000 hence C E G for remaining years go back one letter every year two for leap years this corresponds to writing two letters no letter is skipped to avoid up to 99 steps within a century the table below can be used Year mod 28 00 06 12 17 23 001 07 12 18 24 602 08 13 19 24 503 08 14 20 25 404 09 15 20 26 304 10 16 21 27 205 11 16 22 00 1Red for the first two months of leap years For example to find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913 1900 is G and 13 corresponds to 5 G 5 G 2 E 1913 is ESimilarly for 2007 2000 is BA and 7 corresponds to 6 A 6 A 1 G 2007 is GFor 2065 2000 is BA and 65 mod 28 9 corresponds to 3 A 3 A 4 D 2065 is DThe odd plus 11 method edit A simpler method suitable for finding the year s dominical letter was discovered in 2010 It is called the odd plus 11 method 6 The procedure accumulates a running total T as follows Let T be the year s last two digits If T is odd add 11 Let T T 2 If T is odd add 11 Let T T mod 7 Count forward T letters from the century s dominical letter A C E or G see above to get the year s dominical letter The formula is y 11 ymod2 2 11 y 11 ymod2 2mod2 mod7 displaystyle left frac y 11 y bmod 2 2 11 left frac y 11 y bmod 2 2 bmod 2 right right bmod 7 nbsp De Morgan s rule edit This rule was stated by Augustus De Morgan Add 1 to the given year Take the quotient found by dividing the given year by 4 neglecting the remainder Take 16 from the centurial figures of the given year if that can be done Take the quotient of III divided by 4 neglecting the remainder From the sum of I II and IV subtract III Find the remainder of V divided by 7 this is the number of the Dominical Letter supposing A B C D E F G to be equivalent respectively to 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 So the formulae using the floor function for the Gregorian calendar is 1 1 year year4 year 1600400 year 1600100 mod7 displaystyle 1 left 1 text year Big lfloor frac text year 4 Big rfloor Big lfloor frac text year 1600 400 Big rfloor Big lfloor frac text year 1600 100 Big rfloor right bmod 7 nbsp It is equivalent to 2 year year4 year400 year100 1 mod7 displaystyle 2 left text year Big lfloor frac text year 4 Big rfloor Big lfloor frac text year 400 Big rfloor Big lfloor frac text year 100 Big rfloor 1 right bmod 7 nbsp and 3 y y4 5 cmod4 1 mod7 displaystyle 3 left y Big lfloor frac y 4 Big rfloor 5 c bmod 4 1 right bmod 7 nbsp where y displaystyle text y nbsp last two digits of the year c displaystyle text c nbsp century part of the year For example to find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913 1 1 1913 478 0 3 mod 7 2 2 1913 478 4 19 1 mod 7 2 3 13 3 15 1 mod 7 2Hence the Dominical Letter is E in the Gregorian calendar De Morgan s rules no 1 and 2 for the Julian calendar 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp and 2 year year4 3 mod7 displaystyle 2 left text year Big lfloor frac text year 4 Big rfloor 3 right bmod 7 nbsp To find the Dominical Letter of the year 1913 in the Julian calendar 1913 478 3 mod 7 1Hence the Dominical Letter is F in the Julian calendar In leap years the formulae above give the Dominical Letter for the last ten months of the year To find the Dominical Letter for the first two months of the year to the leap day inclusive subtract 1 from the calculated number representing the original Dominical Letter if the new number is less than 0 it must be changed to 6 Dominical letter in relation to the Doomsday Rule edit The doomsday concept in the doomsday algorithm is mathematically related to the Dominical letter Because the letter of a date equals the dominical letter of a year DL plus the day of the week DW and the letter for the doomsday is C except for the portion of leap years before February 29 in which it is D we have C DL DW mod7DL C DW mod7DW C DL mod7 displaystyle begin aligned text C amp text DL text DW bmod 7 text DL amp text C text DW bmod 7 text DW amp text C text DL bmod 7 end aligned nbsp Note G 0 Sunday A 1 Monday B 2 Tuesday C 3 Wednesday D 4 Thursday E 5 Friday and F 6 Saturday i e in our context C is mathematically identical to 3 Hence for instance the doomsday of the year 2013 is Thursday so DL 3 4 mod 7 6 F The dominical letter of the year 1913 is E so DW 3 5 mod 7 5 Friday Doomsday Dominical letterCommon year Leap yearSunday C DCMonday B CBTuesday A BAWednesday G AGThursday F GFFriday E FESaturday D EDAll in one table edit If the year of interest is not within the table use a tabular year which gives the same remainder when divided by 400 Gregorian calendar or 700 Julian calendar In the case of the Revised Julian calendar find the date of Easter Sunday see the section Calculating Easter Sunday subsection Revised Julian calendar below and enter it into the Table of letters for the days of the year below If the year is a leap year the dominical letter for January and February is found by inputting the date of Easter Monday Note the different rules for leap years Gregorian calendar every year which divides exactly by 4 but of century years only those which divide exactly by 400 therefore ignore the left hand letter given for a century year which is not a leap year Julian calendar every year which divides exactly by 4 Revised Julian calendar every year which divides exactly by 4 but of century years only those which give the remainder 200 or 600 when divided by 900 8 Julian calendar 500 1200 1900 2600 600 1300 2000 2700 0 700 1400 2100 2800 100 800 1500 2200 2900 200 900 1600 2300 300 1000 1700 2400 400 1100 1800 2500 Proleptic Gregorian calendar 0 400 800 1200 1600 2000 2400 2800 100 500 900 1300 1700 2100 25002900 200 600 1000 1400 1800 2200 2600 300 700 1100 1500 1900 2300 2700 00Gregorian BA C E G00J 28 56 84 CB DC ED FE GF AG01 29 57 85 G A B C D E F02 30 58 86 F G A B C D E03 31 59 87 E F G A B C D04 32 60 88 DC ED FE GF AG BA CB05 33 61 89 B C D E F G A06 34 62 90 A B C D E F G07 35 63 91 G A B C D E F08 36 64 92 FE GF AG BA CB DC ED09 37 65 93 D E F G A B C10 38 66 94 C D E F G A B11 39 67 95 B C D E F G A12 40 68 96 AG BA CB DC ED FE GF13 41 69 97 F G A B C D E14 42 70 98 E F G A B C D15 43 71 99 D E F G A B C16 44 72 CB DC ED FE GF AG BA17 45 73 A B C D E F G18 46 74 G A B C D E F19 47 75 F G A B C D E20 48 76 ED FE GF AG BA CB DC21 49 77 C D E F G A B22 50 78 B C D E F G A23 51 79 A B C D E F G24 52 80 GF AG BA CB DC ED FE25 53 81 E F G A B C D26 54 82 D E F G A B C27 55 83 C D E F G A B Golden Number this is Year 1 mod 19 and if the remainder is 0 the Golden Number is 19 Paschal Full Moon Easter is the following Sunday Julian calendar Gregorian 1900 2199 1 Apr 5 Apr 142 Mar 25 Apr 33 Apr 13 Mar 234 Apr 2 Apr 115 Mar 22 Mar 316 Apr 10 Apr 187 Mar 30 Apr 88 Apr 18 Mar 289 Apr 7 Apr 1610 Mar 27 Apr 511 Apr 15 Mar 2512 Apr 4 Apr 1313 Mar 24 Apr 214 Apr 12 Mar 2215 Apr 1 Apr 1016 Mar 21 Mar 3017 Apr 9 Apr 1718 Mar 29 Apr 719 Apr 17 Mar 27Table of letters for the days of the year 2 Sunday letters in leap years the one for March to December preceding the one for January and February in the series 1 Sunday letter in common years Days of month1 2 3 4 5 6 78 9 10 11 12 13 1415 16 17 18 19 20 2122 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Months Jan Oct A B C D E F GFeb Mar Nov D E F G A B C Apr Jul G A B C D E F May B C D E F G A Jun E F G A B C D Aug C D E F G A B Sep Dec F G A B C D EYears with special dominical letters edit When a country switched to the Gregorian calendar there could be some unusual combinations of dominical letters Some examples edit 1582 Many Catholic countries switched to the Gregorian calendar Friday October 15 The table above indicates that year 1582 had the dominical letter G in the Julian calendar and C in the Gregorian one So the dominical letters for 1582 in these Catholic countries became GC for mixing the two calendars used in this legal year a special combination not seen before and after with a single calendar used in the same legal year 1752 The British Empire and its colonies switched to the Gregorian calendar Thursday September 14 1752 a leap year had in the Julian calendar dominical letters ED and in the Gregorian one dominical letters BA so the dominical letters for 1752 in Britain were EDA a very special combination which also only applies to this legal year Calculating Easter Sunday editEnter the all in one table to find the date of the paschal full moon then use the week table below to find the day of the week on which it falls Easter is the following Sunday Week table Julian and Gregorian calendars for AD years since March 1 AD 4 edit Note that this table does not work for AD years at the early stage of the real Julian calendar before March 1 AD 4 9 or for any BC year except when using the Julian calendar rules for proleptic dates which are different from effective historic dates whose effective calendar in use depended on the location of dated events or the location of the person using the calendar sometimes differently between political civil or religious purposes in places where both calendars still coexisted The duration of months and the number and placement of intercalated days also changed inconsistently before AD 42 in the early local Julian calendars which used native names for the months depending on places and years causing finally a lot of confusion in the population so dating events precisely in that period is often difficult unless they are correlated with observed lunar cycles or with days of the week or with another calendar In these early AD years and in all BC years with the effective Julian calendars used locally to align the counting of years but still with the tradition inherited from the earlier Roman calendar for noting days in each year a variable number of days at end of the months after the last day of its ides but before the last day of calends which started the next month were also still counted relatively from the start of the next named month on the last day of its calends and years were theoretically starting on March 1 but with the last days of the year in February also counted from the New Year s Day in March As well all these early years were effectively counted inclusively and positively from a different much earlier epoch in other eras such as the supposed foundation of Rome or the accession to power of a local ruler and still not relatively to the supposed date of birth of Christ which was fixed later arbitrarily by a Christian reform for the modern Julian calendar so that this epoch for the Christian era starts now on January 1 in proleptic year AD 1 of the modern Julian calendar but the real date of birth of Christ is still not known precisely but certainly falls before somewhere in the last few BC years InstructionsFor Julian dates before 1300 and after 1999 the year in the table which differs by an exact multiple of 700 years should be used For Gregorian dates after 2299 the year in the table which differs by an exact multiple of 400 years should be used The values r0 through r6 indicate the remainder when the Hundreds value is divided by 7 and 4 respectively indicating how the series extend in either direction Both Julian and Gregorian values are shown 1500 1999 for convenience The corresponding numbers in the far left hand column on the same line as each component of the date the hundreds remaining digits and month and the day of the month are added together This total is then divided by 7 and the remainder from this division located in the far left hand column The day of the week is beside it Bold figures e g 04 denote leap year If a year ends in 00 and its hundreds are in bold it is a leap year Thus 19 indicates that 1900 is not a Gregorian leap year but bold 19 in the Julian column indicates that it is a Julian leap year as are all Julian x00 years 20 indicates that 2000 is a leap year Use bold Jan and Feb only in leap years Century digits Remaining year digits Month Day ofweek NumberJulian r 7 Gregorian r 4 r5 19 16 20 r0 00 06 17 23 28 34 45 51 56 62 73 79 84 90 Jan Oct Sat 0r4 18 15 19 r3 01 07 12 18 29 35 40 46 57 63 68 74 85 91 96 May Sun 1r3 17 02 13 19 24 30 41 47 52 58 69 75 80 86 97 Feb Aug Mon 2r2 16 18 22 r2 03 08 14 25 31 36 42 53 59 64 70 81 87 92 98 Feb Mar Nov Tue 3r1 15 09 15 20 26 37 43 48 54 65 71 76 82 93 99 Jun Wed 4r0 14 17 21 r1 04 10 21 27 32 38 49 55 60 66 77 83 88 94 Sep Dec Thu 5r6 13 05 11 16 22 33 39 44 50 61 67 72 78 89 95 Jan Apr Jul Fri 6For determination of the day of the week January 1 2000 Saturday the day of the month 1 the month 6 the year 0 the century mod 4 for the Gregorian calendar and mod 7 for the Julian calendar 0 adding 1 6 0 0 7 Dividing by 7 leaves a remainder of 0 so the day of the week is Saturday Revised Julian calendar edit Use the Julian portion of the table of paschal full moons Use the week table remembering to use the Julian side to find the day of the week on which the paschal full moon falls Easter is the following Sunday and it is a Julian date Call this date JD Subtract 100 from the year Divide the result by 100 Call the number obtained omitting fractions N Evaluate 7N 9 Call the result omitting fractions S The Revised Julian calendar date of Easter is JD S 1 Example What is the date of Easter in 2017 2017 1 2018 2018 19 106 remainder 4 Golden number is 4 Date of paschal full moon is April 2 Julian From week table April 2 2017 Julian is Saturday JD April 3 2017 100 1917 1917 100 19 remainder 17 N 19 19 7 133 133 9 14 remainder 7 S 14 Easter Sunday in the Revised Julian calendar is April 3 14 1 April 16 Calculate the day of the week in the Revised Julian calendar edit Note that the date and hence the day of the week in the Revised Julian and Gregorian calendars is the same up until February 28 2800 and that for large years it may be possible to subtract 6300 or a multiple thereof before starting so as to reach a year within or closer to the table To look up the weekday of any date for any year using the table subtract 100 from the year divide the number obtained by 100 multiply the resulting quotient omitting fractions by seven and divide the product by nine Note the quotient omitting fractions Enter the table with the Julian year and just before the final division add 50 and subtract the quotient noted above Example What is the day of the week of 27 January 8315 8315 6300 2015 2015 100 1915 1915 100 19 remainder 15 19 7 133 133 9 14 remainder 7 2015 is 700 years ahead of 1315 so 1315 is used From the table for hundreds 13 6 For remaining digits 15 4 For month January 0 For date 27 27 6 4 0 27 50 14 73 73 7 10 remainder 3 Day of week Tuesday Dominical letter edit To find the dominical letter calculate the day of the week for either January 1 or October 1 If it is Sunday the Sunday Letter is A if Saturday B and similarly backwards through the week and forwards through the alphabet to Monday which is G Leap years have two letters so for January and February calculate the day of the week for January 1 and for March to December calculate the day of the week for October 1 Leap years are all years that divide exactly by four with the following exceptions Gregorian calendar all years divisible by 100 except those that divide exactly by 400 Revised Julian calendar all years divisible by 100 except those with a remainder of 200 or 600 when divided by 900 Clerical utility editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The dominical letter had another practical utility in the period prior to the annual printing of the Ordo divini officii recitandi in which period therefore Christian clergy were often required to determine the Ordo independently Easter Sunday may be as early as March 22 or as late as April 25 and consequently there are 35 possible days on which it may occur each dominical letter includes 5 potential dates of these 35 and thus there are 5 possible ecclesiastical calendars for each letter The Pye or Directorium which preceded the present Ordo took advantage of this principle by delineating all 35 possible calendars and denoting them by the formula primum A secundum A tertium A et cetera Hence based on the dominical letter of the year and the epact the Pye identified the correct calendar to use A similar table adapted to the reformed calendar and in more convenient form is included in the beginning of every breviary and missal under the heading Tabula Paschalis nova reformata Saint Bede does not seem to have been familiar with dominical letters given his De temporum ratione in its place he adopted a similar device of Greek origin consisting of seven numbers which he denominated concurrentes De Temp Rat Chapter LIII The concurrents are numbers that denote the days of the week on which March 24 occurs in the successive years of the solar cycle 1 denoting Sunday 2 feria secunda for Monday 3 for Tuesday et cetera these correspond to dominical letters F E D C B A and G respectively Use for computer calculation editComputers are able to calculate the Dominical letter for the first day of a given month in this way function in C where m month y year s style 0 for Julian otherwise Gregorian char dominical int m int y int s int leap y 4 0 amp amp s 0 y 100 0 y 400 0 a y 100 28 b s 0 y 700 100 a 4 2 4 a 4 1 leap m 9 12 leap 6 7 s 0 y 400 100 a 4 1 2 a 4 1 leap m 9 12 leap 6 7 b b 0 7 return char b 64 Years are also given a dominical letter or pair of dominical letters according to the first day in January and last day in December when they are equal only the first letter is given The dominical letter of the last day of December just precedes in the ordered cycle G F E D C B A the dominical letter of the first day in January for the next year See also editDetermination of the day of the week Lectionary Three year cycle Runic calendarReferences editCitations edit Archer 1941 p 5 Blackburn amp Holford Strevens 1999 p 829 Calendarium Archived February 15 2005 at the Wayback Machine Calendar attached to the papal bull Inter gravissimas Anno vicesimo quarto Georgii II c 23 1751 The Statutes at Large from Magna Charta to the end of the Eleventh Parliament of Great Britain Anno 1761 ed Danby Pickering p 194 Fotheringham 1929 pp 735 747 Fong amp Walters 2011 Thurston 1909 Shields Miriam Nancy 1924 The new calendar of the Eastern churches Practical Astronomy 32 407 411 Bibcode 1924PA 32 407S Bennett Christopher J 2004 The early Augustan calendars in Rome and Egypt Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 147 165 168 JSTOR 20191595 The later literary sources describe a period of 12 years without an intercalary day after the reform This number has always been slightly problematic Since the reform occurred in 8 B C it implies that intercalation resumed in A D 5 But A D 5 was not a Julian leap year so the next actual intercalation was in A D 8 not 12 but 15 years after the reform This discrepancy has traditionally been reconciled by interpreting resumption of intercalation to mean that accumulation of quarter days started in A D 5 Sources edit Archer Peter 1941 The Christian Calendar and the Gregorian Reform New York Fordham University Press ASIN B01K942KH2 Blackburn Bonnie J Holford Strevens Leofranc 1999 The Oxford Companion to the Year Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 214231 3 Fong Chamberlain Walters Michael K 2011 Methods for Accelerating Conway s Doomsday Algorithm part 2 7th International Congress of Industrial and Applied Mathematics arXiv 1010 0765 Fotheringham J K 1929 Explanation The Calendar The Nautical Almanac and Astronomical Ephemeris for the year 1931 London HMSO Thurston Herbert 1909 Dominical Letter In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Calendar s v Ecclesiastical Calendar Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 992 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dominical letter amp oldid 1197411572, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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