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Leap year

A leap year (also known as an intercalary year or bissextile year) is a calendar year that contains an additional day (or, in the case of a lunisolar calendar, a month) compared to a common year. The 366th day (or 13th month) is added to keep the calendar year synchronized with the astronomical year or seasonal year.[1] Because astronomical events and seasons do not repeat in a whole number of days, calendars that have a constant number of days in each year will unavoidably drift over time with respect to the event that the year is supposed to track, such as seasons. By inserting ("intercalating") an additional day, a leap day, or month, a leap month, into some years, the drift between a civilization's dating system and the physical properties of the Solar System can be corrected.

An astronomical year lasts slightly less than 3651/4 days. The historic Julian calendar has three common years of 365 days followed by a leap year of 366 days, by extending February to 29 days rather than the common 28. The Gregorian calendar, the world's most widely used civil calendar, makes a further adjustment for the small error in the Julian algorithm. Each leap year has 366 days instead of 365. This extra leap day occurs in each year that is a multiple of 4 (except for years evenly divisible by 100, but not by 400).

In the lunisolar Hebrew calendar, Adar Aleph, a 13th lunar month, is added seven times every 19 years to the twelve lunar months in its common years to keep its calendar year from drifting through the seasons. In the Solar Hijri and Bahá'í calendars, a leap day is added when needed to ensure that the following year begins on the March equinox.

The term leap year probably comes from the fact that a fixed date in the Gregorian calendar normally advances one day of the week from one year to the next, but the day of the week in the 12 months following the leap day (from 1 March through 28 February of the following year) will advance two days due to the extra day, thus leaping over one day in the week.[2][3] For example, Christmas Day (25 December) fell on a Friday in 2020, Saturday in 2021, Sunday in 2022, and Monday in 2023, but then will "leap" over Tuesday to fall on a Wednesday in 2024.

The length of a day is also occasionally corrected by inserting a leap second into Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) because of variations in Earth's rotation period. Unlike leap days, leap seconds are not introduced on a regular schedule because variations in the length of the day are not entirely predictable.

Leap years can present a problem in computing, known as the leap year bug, when a year is not correctly identified as a leap year or when 29 February is not handled correctly in logic that accepts or manipulates dates.

Julian calendar edit

On 1 January 45 BC, by edict, Julius Caesar reformed the historic Roman calendar to make it a consistent solar calendar (rather than one which was neither strictly lunar nor strictly solar), thus removing the need for frequent intercalary months. His rule for leap years was a simple one: add a leap day every four years. This algorithm is close to reality: a Julian year lasts 365.25 days, a mean tropical year about 365.2422 days.[4] Consequently, even this Julian calendar drifts out of 'true' by about three days every 400 years. The Julian calendar continued in use unaltered for about 1600 years until the Catholic Church became concerned about the widening divergence between the March Equinox and 21 March, as explained at Gregorian calendar, below.

Prior to Caesar's creation of what would be the Julian calendar, February was already the shortest month of the year for Romans. In the Roman calendar (after the reform of Numa Pompilius that added January and February), all months except February had an odd number of days – 29 or 31. This was because of a Roman superstition that even numbers were unlucky.[5] When Caesar changed the calendar to follow the solar year closely, he made all months have 30 or 31 days, leaving February unchanged except in leap years.

Gregorian calendar edit

 
An image showing which century years are leap years in the Gregorian calendar

In the Gregorian calendar, the standard calendar in most of the world,[6] almost every fourth year is a leap year. Each leap year, the month of February has 29 days instead of 28. Adding one extra day in the calendar every four years compensates for the fact that a period of 365 days is shorter than a tropical year by almost 6 hours.[7] However, this correction is excessive and the Gregorian reform modified the Julian calendar's scheme of leap years as follows:

Every year that is exactly divisible by four is a leap year, except for years that are exactly divisible by 100, but these centurial years are leap years if they are exactly divisible by 400. For example, the years 1700, 1800, and 1900 are not leap years, but the years 1600 and 2000 are.[8]

Whereas the Julian calendar year incorrectly summarized Earth's tropical year as 365.25 days, the Gregorian calendar makes these exceptions to follow a calendar year of 365.2425 days. This more closely resembles a mean tropical year of 365.2422 days. Over a period of four centuries, the accumulated error of adding a leap day every four years amounts to about three extra days. The Gregorian calendar therefore omits three leap days every 400 years, which is the length of its leap cycle. This is done by omitting 29 February in the three century years (multiples of 100) that are not multiples of 400.[9][10] The years 2000 and 2400 are leap years, but not 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, 2200 and 2300. By this rule, an entire leap cycle is 400 years which total 146,097 days, and the average number of days per year is 365 + 14 − 1100 + 1400 = 365 + 97400  = 365.2425.[11] (This rule could be applied to years before the Gregorian reform to create a proleptic Gregorian calendar,[12] though the result would not match any historical records.)

 
This graph shows the variations in date and time of the June Solstice.

The Gregorian calendar was designed to keep the vernal equinox on or close to 21 March, so that the date of Easter (celebrated on the Sunday after the ecclesiastical full moon that falls on or after 21 March) remains close to the vernal equinox.[13] The "Accuracy" section of the "Gregorian calendar" article discusses how well the Gregorian calendar achieves this design goal, and how well it approximates the tropical year.

Leap day in the Julian and Gregorian calendars edit

 
A Swedish pocket calendar from 2008 showing 29 February
 
February 1900 calendar showing that 1900 was not a leap year

The intercalary day that usually occurs every four years is called the leap day and is created by adding an extra day to February. This day is added to the calendar in leap years as a corrective measure because the Earth does not orbit the Sun in precisely 365 days. Since about the fifteenth century, this extra day is 29 February, but when the Julian calendar was introduced, leap day was handled differently in two respects. First, leap day fell within February and not at the end: 24 February was doubled to create the (strange to modern eyes) two days both dated 24 February.[14] Second, the leap day was simply not counted so that a leap year still had 365 days.[15]

Early Roman practice edit

The early Roman calendar was a lunisolar one that consisted of 12 months, for a total of 355 days. In addition, a 27- or 28-day intercalary month, the Mensis Intercalaris, was sometimes inserted into February, at the first or second day after the Terminalia a. d. VII Kal. Mar., (23 February), to resynchronise the lunar and solar cycles. The remaining days of Februarius were discarded. This intercalary month, named Intercalaris or Mercedonius, contained 27 days. The religious festivals that were normally celebrated in the last five days of February were moved to the last five days of Intercalaris. The lunisolar calendar was abandoned about 450 BC by the decemviri,[16] who implemented the Roman Republican calendar, used until 46 BC. The days of these calendars were counted down (inclusively) to the next named day, so 24 February was ante diem sextum Kalendas Martias ["the sixth day before the calends of March"] often abbreviated a. d. VI Kal. Mart. The Romans counted days inclusively in their calendars, so this was actually the fifth day before 1 March when counted in the modern exclusive manner (i.e., not including both the starting and ending day).[17] Because only 22 or 23 days were effectively added, not a full lunation, the calends and ides of the Roman Republican calendar were no longer associated with the new moon and full moon.

Julian reform edit

In Caesar's revised calendar, there was just one intercalary day – nowadays called the leap day – to be inserted every fourth year, and this too was done after 23 February. To create the intercalary day, the existing ante diem sextum Kalendas Martias (sixth day (inclusive: i.e. what we would call the fifth day before) before the Kalends (first day) of March, i.e. what we would call 24 February) was doubled,[18] producing ante diem bis sextum Kalendas Martias [a second sixth day before the Kalends . This bis sextum ("twice sixth") was rendered in later languages as "bissextile": the "bissextile day" is the leap day, and a "bissextile year" is a year which includes a leap day.[19] This second instance of the sixth day before the Kalends of March was inserted in calendars between the "normal" fifth and sixth days. By a legal fiction, the Romans treated both the first "sixth day" and the additional "sixth day" before the Kalends of March as one day. Thus a child born on either of those days in a leap year would have its first birthday on the following sixth day before the Kalends of March. In a leap year in the original Julian calendar, there were indeed two days both numbered 24 February. This practice continued for another fifteen to seventeen centuries, even after most countries had adopted the Gregorian calendar.

For legal purposes, the two days of the bis sextum were considered to be a single day, with the second sixth being intercalated; but in common practice by the year 238, when Censorinus wrote, the intercalary day was followed by the last five days of February, a. d. VI, V, IV, III and pridie Kal. Mart. (the days numbered 24, 25, 26, 27, and 28 from the beginning of February in a common year), so that the intercalated day was the first of the doubled pair. Thus the intercalated day was effectively inserted between the 23rd and 24th days of February. All later writers, including Macrobius about 430, Bede in 725, and other medieval computists (calculators of Easter), continued to state that the bissextum (bissextile day) occurred before the last five days of February.[citation needed]

In England, the Church and civil society continued the Roman practice whereby the leap day was simply not counted, so that a leap year was only reckoned as 365 days. Henry III's 1236 Statute De Anno et Die Bissextili[a] instructed magistrates to treat the leap day and the day before as one day.[20][19] The practical application of the rule is obscure. It was regarded as in force in the time of the famous lawyer Sir Edward Coke (1552–1634) because he cites it in his Institutes of the Lawes of England. However, Coke merely quotes the Act with a short translation, and does not give practical examples.[21]

' ... and by (b) the statute de anno bissextili, it is provided, quod computentur dies ille excrescens et dies proxime præcedens pro unico dii, so as in computation that day excrescent is not accounted.'

29 February edit

Replacement (by 29 February) of the awkward practice of having two days with the same date appears to have evolved by custom and practice, the etymological origin of the term "bissextile" seeming to have been lost.[14] In England in the course of the fifteenth century, "29 February" appears increasingly often in legal documents – although the records of the proceedings of the House of Commons of England continued to use the old system until the middle of the sixteenth century.[14] It was not until passage of the Calendar (New Style) Act 1750 that 29 February was formally recognised in British law.[22][b]

Liturgical practices edit

 
In the older Roman Missal, feast days falling on or after 24 February are celebrated one day later in a leap year.

In the liturgical calendar of the Christian churches, the placement of the leap day is significant because of the date of the feast of Saint Matthias, which is defined as the sixth day before 1 March (counting inclusively). The Church of England's Book of Common Prayer was still using the "two days with the same date" system in its 1542 edition;[24] it first included a calendar which used entirely consecutive day counting from 1662 and showed leap day as falling on February 29.[25] In the 1680s, the Church of England declared 25 February to be the feast of St Matthias.[26] Until 1970, the Roman Catholic Church always celebrated the feast of Saint Matthias on a. d. VI Kal. Mart., so if the days were numbered from the beginning of the month, it was named 24 February in common years, but the presence of the bissextum in a bissextile year immediately before a. d. VI Kal. Mart. shifted the latter day to 25 February in leap years, with the Vigil of St. Matthias shifting from 23 February to the leap day of 24 February. This shift did not take place in pre-Reformation Norway and Iceland; Pope Alexander III ruled that either practice was lawful.[27] Other feasts normally falling on 25–28 February in common years are also shifted to the following day in a leap year (although they would be on the same day according to the Roman notation). The practice is still observed by those who use the older calendars.

Folk traditions edit

 
A spinster eagerly awaits the upcoming leap day, in this 1903 cartoon by Bob Satterfield.

In Ireland and Britain, it is a tradition that women may propose marriage only in leap years. While it has been claimed that the tradition was initiated by Saint Patrick or Brigid of Kildare in 5th century Ireland, this is dubious, as the tradition has not been attested before the 19th century.[28] Supposedly, a 1288 law by Queen Margaret of Scotland (then age five and living in Norway), required that fines be levied if a marriage proposal was refused by the man; compensation was deemed to be a pair of leather gloves, a single rose, £1, and a kiss.[citation needed][c] In some places the tradition was tightened to restricting female proposals to the modern leap day, 29 February, or to the medieval (bissextile) leap day, 24 February.[citation needed]

According to Felten: "A play from the turn of the 17th century, 'The Maydes Metamorphosis,' has it that 'this is leape year/women wear breeches.' A few hundred years later, breeches wouldn't do at all: Women looking to take advantage of their opportunity to pitch woo were expected to wear a scarlet petticoat – fair warning, if you will."[29]

In Finland, the tradition is that if a man refuses a woman's proposal on leap day, he should buy her the fabrics for a skirt.[30]

In France, since 1980, a satirical newspaper titled La Bougie du Sapeur is published only on leap year, on 29 February.

In Greece, marriage in a leap year is considered unlucky.[31] One in five engaged couples in Greece will plan to avoid getting married in a leap year.[32]

In February 1988 the town of Anthony in Texas, declared itself "leap year capital of the world", and an international leapling birthday club was started.[33]

Birthdays edit

A person born on February 29 may be called a "leapling" or a "leaper".[34] In common years, they usually celebrate their birthdays on 28 February. In some situations, 1 March is used as the birthday in a non-leap year, since it is the day following 28 February.

Technically, a leapling will have fewer birthday anniversaries than their age in years. This phenomenon may be exploited for dramatic effect when a person is declared to be only a quarter of their actual age, by counting their leap-year birthday anniversaries only. For example, in Gilbert and Sullivan's 1879 comic opera The Pirates of Penzance, Frederic (the pirate apprentice) discovers that he is bound to serve the pirates until his 21st birthday (that is, when he turns 88 years old, since 1900 was not a leap year) rather than until his 21st year.

For legal purposes, legal birthdays depend on how local laws count time intervals.

Taiwan edit

The Civil Code of Taiwan since 10 October 1929,[35] implies that the legal birthday of a leapling is 28 February in common years:

If a period fixed by weeks, months, and years does not commence from the beginning of a week, month, or year, it ends with the ending of the day which precedes the day of the last week, month, or year which corresponds to that on which it began to commence. But if there is no corresponding day in the last month, the period ends with the ending of the last day of the last month.[36]

Hong Kong edit

Since 1990 non-retroactively, Hong Kong considers the legal birthday of a leapling 1 March in common years:[37]

  1. The time at which a person attains a particular age expressed in years shall be the commencement of the anniversary corresponding to the date of [their] birth.
  2. Where a person has been born on February 29 in a leap year, the relevant anniversary in any year other than a leap year shall be taken to be March 1.
  3. This section shall apply only where the relevant anniversary falls on a date after the date of commencement of this Ordinance.

Revised Julian calendar edit

The Revised Julian calendar adds an extra day to February in years that are multiples of four, except for years that are multiples of 100 that do not leave a remainder of 200 or 600 when divided by 900. This rule agrees with the rule for the Gregorian calendar until 2799. The first year that dates in the Revised Julian calendar will not agree with those in the Gregorian calendar will be 2800, because it will be a leap year in the Gregorian calendar but not in the Revised Julian calendar.

This rule gives an average year length of 365.242222 days. This is a very good approximation to the mean tropical year, but because the vernal equinox year is slightly longer, the Revised Julian calendar, for the time being, does not do as good a job as the Gregorian calendar at keeping the vernal equinox on or close to 21 March.

Baháʼí calendar edit

The Baháʼí calendar is a solar calendar composed of 19 months of 19 days each (361 days). Years begin at Naw-Rúz, on the vernal equinox, on or about 21 March. A period of "Intercalary Days", called Ayyam-i-Ha, is inserted before the 19th month. This period normally has 4 days, but an extra day is added when needed to ensure that the following year starts on the vernal equinox. This is calculated and known years in advance.

Bengali, Indian and Thai calendars edit

The Revised Bengali Calendar of Bangladesh and the Indian National Calendar organise their leap years so that every leap day is close to 29 February in the Gregorian calendar and vice versa. This makes it easy to convert dates to or from Gregorian.

The Thai solar calendar uses the Buddhist Era (BE) but has been synchronized with the Gregorian since AD 1941.

Chinese calendar edit

The Chinese calendar is lunisolar, so a leap year has an extra month, often called an embolismic month after the Greek word for it. In the Chinese calendar, the leap month is added according to a rule which ensures that month 11 is always the month that contains the northern winter solstice. The intercalary month takes the same number as the preceding month; for example, if it follows the second month (二月) then it is simply called "leap second month" i.e. simplified Chinese: 闰二月; traditional Chinese: 閏二月; pinyin: rùn'èryuè.

Hebrew calendar edit

The Hebrew calendar is lunisolar with an embolismic month. This extra month is called Adar Rishon (first Adar) and is added before Adar, which then becomes Adar Sheini (second Adar). According to the Metonic cycle, this is done seven times every nineteen years (specifically, in years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17, and 19). This is to ensure that Passover (Pesah) is always in the spring as required by the Torah (Pentateuch) in many verses[38] relating to Passover.

In addition, the Hebrew calendar has postponement rules that postpone the start of the year by one or two days. These postponement rules reduce the number of different combinations of year length and starting days of the week from 28 to 14, and regulate the location of certain religious holidays in relation to the Sabbath. In particular, the first day of the Hebrew year can never be Sunday, Wednesday or Friday. This rule is known in Hebrew as "lo adu rosh" (לא אד״ו ראש), i.e., "Rosh [ha-Shanah, first day of the year] is not Sunday, Wednesday or Friday" (as the Hebrew word adu is written by three Hebrew letters signifying Sunday, Wednesday and Friday). Accordingly, the first day of Passover is never Monday, Wednesday or Friday. This rule is known in Hebrew as "lo badu Pesah" (לא בד״ו פסח), which has a double meaning — "Passover is not a legend", but also "Passover is not Monday, Wednesday or Friday" (as the Hebrew word badu is written by three Hebrew letters signifying Monday, Wednesday and Friday).

One reason for this rule is that Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Hebrew calendar and the tenth day of the Hebrew year, now must never be adjacent to the weekly Sabbath (which is Saturday), i.e., it must never fall on Friday or Sunday, in order not to have two adjacent Sabbath days. However, Yom Kippur can still be on Saturday. A second reason is that Hoshana Rabbah, the 21st day of the Hebrew year, will never be on Saturday. These rules for the Feasts do not apply to the years from the Creation to the deliverance of the Hebrews from Egypt under Moses. It was at that time (cf. Exodus 13) that the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob gave the Hebrews their "Law" including the days to be kept holy and the feast days and Sabbaths.

Years consisting of 12 months have between 353 and 355 days. In a k'sidra ("in order") 354-day year, months have alternating 30 and 29 day lengths. In a chaser ("lacking") year, the month of Kislev is reduced to 29 days. In a malei ("filled") year, the month of Marcheshvan is increased to 30 days. 13-month years follow the same pattern, with the addition of the 30-day Adar Alef, giving them between 383 and 385 days.

Islamic calendars edit

The observed and calculated versions of the lunar Islamic calendar do not have regular leap days, even though both have lunar months containing 29 or 30 days, generally in alternating order. However, the tabular Islamic calendar used by Islamic astronomers during the Middle Ages and still used by some Muslims does have a regular leap day added to the last month of the lunar year in 11 years of a 30-year cycle.[39] This additional day is found at the end of the last month, Dhu al-Hijjah, which is also the month of the Hajj.[40]

 

The Solar Hijri calendar is the modern Iranian calendar. It is an observational calendar that starts on the spring equinox (Northern Hemisphere) and adds a single intercalated day to the last month (Esfand) once every four or five years; the first leap year occurs as the fifth year of the typical 33-year cycle and the remaining leap years occur every four years through the remainder of the 33-year cycle. This system has less periodic deviation or jitter from its mean year than the Gregorian calendar and operates on the simple rule that its New Year's Day must fall in the 24-hour period of vernal equinox .[41] The 33-year period is not completely regular; every so often the 33-year cycle will be broken by a cycle of 29 years.[42]

The Hijri-Shamsi calendar, also adopted by the Ahmadiyya Community, is based on solar calculations and is similar to the Gregorian calendar in its structure with the exception that its epoch is the Hijra.[43]

Coptic and Ethiopian calendars edit

The Coptic calendar has 13 months, 12 of 30 days each and one at the end of the year of 5 days, or 6 days in leap years. The Coptic Leap Year follows the same rules as the Julian Calendar so that the extra month always has six days in the year before a Julian Leap Year.[44] The Ethiopian calendar has twelve months of thirty days plus five or six epagomenal days, which comprise a thirteenth month.[45]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 'Statute concerning [the] leap year and leap day'[20]
  2. ^ Though it appears in earlier Government proclamations, such as one of 1619.[23]
  3. ^ Virtually no laws of Margaret survive. Indeed, none concerning her subjects are recorded in the twelve-volume Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland (1814–75) covering the period 1124–1707 (two laws concerning young Margaret herself are recorded on pages 424 & 441–2 of volume I).

Sources edit

  • Cheney, Christopher Robert, ed. (2000) [1945]. A Handbook of Dates for students of British History. Revised by Michael Jones. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521778459.
  • Pollard, A F (1940). "New Year's Day and Leap Year in English History". The English Historical Review. 55 (218 (April 1940)): 177–193. doi:10.1093/ehr/LV.CCXVIII.177. JSTOR 553864.

References edit

  1. ^ Meeus, Jean (1998), Astronomical Algorithms, Willmann-Bell, p. 62
  2. ^ Harper, Douglas (2012), "leap year", Online Etymology Dictionary, from the original on 21 August 2012, retrieved 15 August 2012
  3. ^ , Oxford US Dictionary, archived from the original on 13 September 2015, retrieved 6 January 2020
  4. ^ , US Naval Observatory, 2020, archived from the original on 23 February 2022, retrieved 28 January 2022
  5. ^ Hogeback, Jonathon, "Why Are There Only 28 Days in February?", Encyclopedia Britannica, retrieved 31 May 2023
  6. ^ Dershowitz, Nachum; Reingold, Edward M. (2008), Calendrical calculations (3rd ed.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 45, ISBN 978-0-521-88540-9, OCLC 144768713, The calendar in use today in most of the world is the Gregorian or 'new-style' calendar designed by a commission assembled by Pope Gregory XIII in the sixteenth century.
  7. ^ Lerner, Ed. K. Lee; Lerner, Brenda W. (2004), "Calendar", The Gale Encyclopedia of Science, Detroit, MI: Gale
  8. ^ Introduction to Calendars 2019-06-13 at the Wayback Machine. (10 August 2017). United States Naval Observatory.
  9. ^ United States Naval Observatory (14 June 2011), , archived from the original on 15 October 2007, retrieved 9 April 2014
  10. ^ Lerner & Lerner 2004, p. 681.
  11. ^ Richards, E. G. (2013), "Calendars", in Urban, S. E.; Seidelmann, P. K. (eds.), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac (3rd ed.), Mill Valley CA: University Science Books, p. 598, ISBN 9781891389856
  12. ^ Doggett, L.E. (1992), "Calendars", in Seidelmann, P. K. (ed.), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac (2nd ed.), Sausalito, CA: University Science Books, pp. 580–1
  13. ^ Richards, E. G. (1998), Mapping time: The Calendar and its History, Oxford University Press, pp. 250–1, ISBN 0-19-286205-7
  14. ^ a b c Pollard (1940), p. 188.
  15. ^ Cheney (2000), p 145, footnote 1.
  16. ^ According to Christian Ludwig Ideler (1825)
  17. ^ Key, Thomas Hewitt (2013) [1875], Calendarium, University of Chicago, the intermediate days are in all cases reckoned backwards upon the Roman principle already explained of counting both extremes.
  18. ^ Pollard (1940), p. 186.
  19. ^ a b Cheney (2000), Page 145, Footnote 1.
  20. ^ a b Ruffhead, Owen (1763), The Statutes at Large, from Magna Charta to the End of the Last Parliament, Mark Basket, p. 20, retrieved 21 October 2021 (21 Hen, III)
  21. ^ Edward Coke (1628), "Cap. 1, Of Fee Simple.", First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England, p. 8 left [30]
  22. ^ Pickering, Danby, ed. (1765), The Statutes at Large: from the 23rd to the 26th Year of King George II, vol. 20, Cambridge: Charles Bathurst, p. 194, retrieved 28 January 2020 (calendar at the end of the Act)
  23. ^ Bond, John James (1875), "Preface", Handy Book of Rules and Tables for Verifying Dates With the Christian Era Giving an Account of the Chief Eras and Systems Used by Various Nations...' (4th ed.), London: George Bell & Sons, p. xix
  24. ^ Campion, Rev W M; Beamont, Rev W J (1870), The Prayer Book interleaved, London: Rivingtons, p. 31 – via Archive.org
  25. ^ Church of England (1762) [1662], Book of Common Prayer, Cambridge: John Baskerville – via Archive.org
  26. ^ Cheney (2000), p. 8.
  27. ^ Liber Extra, 5. 40. 14. 1
  28. ^ Mikkelson, B.; Mikkelson, D.P. (2010), "The Privilege of Ladies", The Urban Legends Reference Pages, snopes.com
  29. ^ Felten, E. (23 February 2008), "The Bissextile Beverage", Wall Street Journal, from the original on 12 August 2017, retrieved 12 August 2017
  30. ^ Hallett, S. (29 February 2012), "Leap Year Proposal: What's The Story Behind It?", Huffington Post, from the original on 21 October 2014, retrieved 21 December 2015
  31. ^ "A Greek Wedding", Anagnosis Books, from the original on 10 February 2012, retrieved 12 January 2012
  32. ^ , Developing Teachers, archived from the original on 2 March 2012, retrieved 12 January 2012
  33. ^ Anthony – Leap Year Capital of the World, Time and Date, 2008, from the original on 9 November 2011, retrieved 6 November 2011
  34. ^ "29 February: 29 things you need to know about leap years and their extra day", Mirror, 28 February 2012, from the original on 2 January 2016, retrieved 7 December 2015
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  38. ^ Exodus 23:15, Exodus 34:18, Deuteronomy 15:1, Deuteronomy 15:13
  39. ^ The Islamic leap year, Time and Date AS, n.d., from the original on 3 March 2020, retrieved 29 February 2012
  40. ^ Leap year trivia you might want to know, GMA News, n.d., from the original on 15 May 2013, retrieved 29 February 2012
  41. ^ Bromberg, Irv, Fixed Arithmetic Calendar Cycle Jitter, University of Toronto, from the original on 24 October 2019, retrieved 24 October 2019
  42. ^ Heydari-Malayeri, M. (2004), A Concise Review of the Iranian Calendar, Paris Observatory, arXiv:astro-ph/0409620, Bibcode:2004astro.ph..9620H, from the original on 16 July 2011, retrieved 19 December 2010
  43. ^ Hijri-Shamsi Calendar, Al Islam, 2015, from the original on 26 January 2017, retrieved 18 April 2015, The time frame in these months is the same as [...] the months of a Christian calendar.
  44. ^ Fr Tadros Y Malaty (1988), The Coptic Calendar and Church of Alexandria., The Monastery of St. Macarius Press, The Desert of Scete, from the original on 13 September 2022, retrieved 13 September 2022
  45. ^ "Ethiopia: The country where a year lasts 13 months", BBC News, 10 September 2021, from the original on 18 September 2022, retrieved 17 September 2022

External links edit

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For other uses see Leap year disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leap year news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A leap year also known as an intercalary year or bissextile year is a calendar year that contains an additional day or in the case of a lunisolar calendar a month compared to a common year The 366th day or 13th month is added to keep the calendar year synchronized with the astronomical year or seasonal year 1 Because astronomical events and seasons do not repeat in a whole number of days calendars that have a constant number of days in each year will unavoidably drift over time with respect to the event that the year is supposed to track such as seasons By inserting intercalating an additional day a leap day or month a leap month into some years the drift between a civilization s dating system and the physical properties of the Solar System can be corrected An astronomical year lasts slightly less than 3651 4 days The historic Julian calendar has three common years of 365 days followed by a leap year of 366 days by extending February to 29 days rather than the common 28 The Gregorian calendar the world s most widely used civil calendar makes a further adjustment for the small error in the Julian algorithm Each leap year has 366 days instead of 365 This extra leap day occurs in each year that is a multiple of 4 except for years evenly divisible by 100 but not by 400 In the lunisolar Hebrew calendar Adar Aleph a 13th lunar month is added seven times every 19 years to the twelve lunar months in its common years to keep its calendar year from drifting through the seasons In the Solar Hijri and Baha i calendars a leap day is added when needed to ensure that the following year begins on the March equinox The term leap year probably comes from the fact that a fixed date in the Gregorian calendar normally advances one day of the week from one year to the next but the day of the week in the 12 months following the leap day from 1 March through 28 February of the following year will advance two days due to the extra day thus leaping over one day in the week 2 3 For example Christmas Day 25 December fell on a Friday in 2020 Saturday in 2021 Sunday in 2022 and Monday in 2023 but then will leap over Tuesday to fall on a Wednesday in 2024 The length of a day is also occasionally corrected by inserting a leap second into Coordinated Universal Time UTC because of variations in Earth s rotation period Unlike leap days leap seconds are not introduced on a regular schedule because variations in the length of the day are not entirely predictable Leap years can present a problem in computing known as the leap year bug when a year is not correctly identified as a leap year or when 29 February is not handled correctly in logic that accepts or manipulates dates Contents 1 Julian calendar 2 Gregorian calendar 3 Leap day in the Julian and Gregorian calendars 3 1 Early Roman practice 3 2 Julian reform 3 3 29 February 3 4 Liturgical practices 3 5 Folk traditions 3 6 Birthdays 3 6 1 Taiwan 3 6 2 Hong Kong 3 7 Revised Julian calendar 4 Bahaʼi calendar 5 Bengali Indian and Thai calendars 6 Chinese calendar 7 Hebrew calendar 8 Islamic calendars 9 Coptic and Ethiopian calendars 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Sources 13 References 14 External linksJulian calendar editMain article Julian calendar On 1 January 45 BC by edict Julius Caesar reformed the historic Roman calendar to make it a consistent solar calendar rather than one which was neither strictly lunar nor strictly solar thus removing the need for frequent intercalary months His rule for leap years was a simple one add a leap day every four years This algorithm is close to reality a Julian year lasts 365 25 days a mean tropical year about 365 2422 days 4 Consequently even this Julian calendar drifts out of true by about three days every 400 years The Julian calendar continued in use unaltered for about 1600 years until the Catholic Church became concerned about the widening divergence between the March Equinox and 21 March as explained at Gregorian calendar below Prior to Caesar s creation of what would be the Julian calendar February was already the shortest month of the year for Romans In the Roman calendar after the reform of Numa Pompilius that added January and February all months except February had an odd number of days 29 or 31 This was because of a Roman superstition that even numbers were unlucky 5 When Caesar changed the calendar to follow the solar year closely he made all months have 30 or 31 days leaving February unchanged except in leap years Gregorian calendar editSee also Gregorian calendar nbsp An image showing which century years are leap years in the Gregorian calendarIn the Gregorian calendar the standard calendar in most of the world 6 almost every fourth year is a leap year Each leap year the month of February has 29 days instead of 28 Adding one extra day in the calendar every four years compensates for the fact that a period of 365 days is shorter than a tropical year by almost 6 hours 7 However this correction is excessive and the Gregorian reform modified the Julian calendar s scheme of leap years as follows Every year that is exactly divisible by four is a leap year except for years that are exactly divisible by 100 but these centurial years are leap years if they are exactly divisible by 400 For example the years 1700 1800 and 1900 are not leap years but the years 1600 and 2000 are 8 Whereas the Julian calendar year incorrectly summarized Earth s tropical year as 365 25 days the Gregorian calendar makes these exceptions to follow a calendar year of 365 2425 days This more closely resembles a mean tropical year of 365 2422 days Over a period of four centuries the accumulated error of adding a leap day every four years amounts to about three extra days The Gregorian calendar therefore omits three leap days every 400 years which is the length of its leap cycle This is done by omitting 29 February in the three century years multiples of 100 that are not multiples of 400 9 10 The years 2000 and 2400 are leap years but not 1700 1800 1900 2100 2200 and 2300 By this rule an entire leap cycle is 400 years which total 146 097 days and the average number of days per year is 365 1 4 1 100 1 400 365 97 400 365 2425 11 This rule could be applied to years before the Gregorian reform to create a proleptic Gregorian calendar 12 though the result would not match any historical records nbsp This graph shows the variations in date and time of the June Solstice The Gregorian calendar was designed to keep the vernal equinox on or close to 21 March so that the date of Easter celebrated on the Sunday after the ecclesiastical full moon that falls on or after 21 March remains close to the vernal equinox 13 The Accuracy section of the Gregorian calendar article discusses how well the Gregorian calendar achieves this design goal and how well it approximates the tropical year Leap day in the Julian and Gregorian calendars editMain articles February 29 and Bissextus Leap day redirects here For other uses see Leap Day nbsp A Swedish pocket calendar from 2008 showing 29 February nbsp February 1900 calendar showing that 1900 was not a leap yearThe intercalary day that usually occurs every four years is called the leap day and is created by adding an extra day to February This day is added to the calendar in leap years as a corrective measure because the Earth does not orbit the Sun in precisely 365 days Since about the fifteenth century this extra day is 29 February but when the Julian calendar was introduced leap day was handled differently in two respects First leap day fell within February and not at the end 24 February was doubled to create the strange to modern eyes two days both dated 24 February 14 Second the leap day was simply not counted so that a leap year still had 365 days 15 Early Roman practice edit Further information Julian calendar Motivation The early Roman calendar was a lunisolar one that consisted of 12 months for a total of 355 days In addition a 27 or 28 day intercalary month the Mensis Intercalaris was sometimes inserted into February at the first or second day after the Terminalia a d VII Kal Mar 23 February to resynchronise the lunar and solar cycles The remaining days of Februarius were discarded This intercalary month named Intercalaris or Mercedonius contained 27 days The religious festivals that were normally celebrated in the last five days of February were moved to the last five days of Intercalaris The lunisolar calendar was abandoned about 450 BC by the decemviri 16 who implemented the Roman Republican calendar used until 46 BC The days of these calendars were counted down inclusively to the next named day so 24 February was ante diem sextum Kalendas Martias the sixth day before the calends of March often abbreviated a d VI Kal Mart The Romans counted days inclusively in their calendars so this was actually the fifth day before 1 March when counted in the modern exclusive manner i e not including both the starting and ending day 17 Because only 22 or 23 days were effectively added not a full lunation the calends and ides of the Roman Republican calendar were no longer associated with the new moon and full moon Julian reform edit In Caesar s revised calendar there was just one intercalary day nowadays called the leap day to be inserted every fourth year and this too was done after 23 February To create the intercalary day the existing ante diem sextum Kalendas Martias sixth day inclusive i e what we would call the fifth day before before the Kalends first day of March i e what we would call 24 February was doubled 18 producing ante diem bis sextum Kalendas Martias a second sixth day before the Kalends This bis sextum twice sixth was rendered in later languages as bissextile the bissextile day is the leap day and a bissextile year is a year which includes a leap day 19 This second instance of the sixth day before the Kalends of March was inserted in calendars between the normal fifth and sixth days By a legal fiction the Romans treated both the first sixth day and the additional sixth day before the Kalends of March as one day Thus a child born on either of those days in a leap year would have its first birthday on the following sixth day before the Kalends of March In a leap year in the original Julian calendar there were indeed two days both numbered 24 February This practice continued for another fifteen to seventeen centuries even after most countries had adopted the Gregorian calendar For legal purposes the two days of the bis sextum were considered to be a single day with the second sixth being intercalated but in common practice by the year 238 when Censorinus wrote the intercalary day was followed by the last five days of February a d VI V IV III and pridie Kal Mart the days numbered 24 25 26 27 and 28 from the beginning of February in a common year so that the intercalated day was the first of the doubled pair Thus the intercalated day was effectively inserted between the 23rd and 24th days of February All later writers including Macrobius about 430 Bede in 725 and other medieval computists calculators of Easter continued to state that the bissextum bissextile day occurred before the last five days of February citation needed In England the Church and civil society continued the Roman practice whereby the leap day was simply not counted so that a leap year was only reckoned as 365 days Henry III s 1236 Statute De Anno et Die Bissextili a instructed magistrates to treat the leap day and the day before as one day 20 19 The practical application of the rule is obscure It was regarded as in force in the time of the famous lawyer Sir Edward Coke 1552 1634 because he cites it in his Institutes of the Lawes of England However Coke merely quotes the Act with a short translation and does not give practical examples 21 and by b the statute de anno bissextili it is provided quod computentur dies ille excrescens et dies proxime praecedens pro unico dii so as in computation that day excrescent is not accounted 29 February edit Replacement by 29 February of the awkward practice of having two days with the same date appears to have evolved by custom and practice the etymological origin of the term bissextile seeming to have been lost 14 In England in the course of the fifteenth century 29 February appears increasingly often in legal documents although the records of the proceedings of the House of Commons of England continued to use the old system until the middle of the sixteenth century 14 It was not until passage of the Calendar New Style Act 1750 that 29 February was formally recognised in British law 22 b Liturgical practices edit nbsp In the older Roman Missal feast days falling on or after 24 February are celebrated one day later in a leap year In the liturgical calendar of the Christian churches the placement of the leap day is significant because of the date of the feast of Saint Matthias which is defined as the sixth day before 1 March counting inclusively The Church of England s Book of Common Prayer was still using the two days with the same date system in its 1542 edition 24 it first included a calendar which used entirely consecutive day counting from 1662 and showed leap day as falling on February 29 25 In the 1680s the Church of England declared 25 February to be the feast of St Matthias 26 Until 1970 the Roman Catholic Church always celebrated the feast of Saint Matthias on a d VI Kal Mart so if the days were numbered from the beginning of the month it was named 24 February in common years but the presence of the bissextum in a bissextile year immediately before a d VI Kal Mart shifted the latter day to 25 February in leap years with the Vigil of St Matthias shifting from 23 February to the leap day of 24 February This shift did not take place in pre Reformation Norway and Iceland Pope Alexander III ruled that either practice was lawful 27 Other feasts normally falling on 25 28 February in common years are also shifted to the following day in a leap year although they would be on the same day according to the Roman notation The practice is still observed by those who use the older calendars Folk traditions edit nbsp A spinster eagerly awaits the upcoming leap day in this 1903 cartoon by Bob Satterfield In Ireland and Britain it is a tradition that women may propose marriage only in leap years While it has been claimed that the tradition was initiated by Saint Patrick or Brigid of Kildare in 5th century Ireland this is dubious as the tradition has not been attested before the 19th century 28 Supposedly a 1288 law by Queen Margaret of Scotland then age five and living in Norway required that fines be levied if a marriage proposal was refused by the man compensation was deemed to be a pair of leather gloves a single rose 1 and a kiss citation needed c In some places the tradition was tightened to restricting female proposals to the modern leap day 29 February or to the medieval bissextile leap day 24 February citation needed According to Felten A play from the turn of the 17th century The Maydes Metamorphosis has it that this is leape year women wear breeches A few hundred years later breeches wouldn t do at all Women looking to take advantage of their opportunity to pitch woo were expected to wear a scarlet petticoat fair warning if you will 29 In Finland the tradition is that if a man refuses a woman s proposal on leap day he should buy her the fabrics for a skirt 30 In France since 1980 a satirical newspaper titled La Bougie du Sapeur is published only on leap year on 29 February In Greece marriage in a leap year is considered unlucky 31 One in five engaged couples in Greece will plan to avoid getting married in a leap year 32 In February 1988 the town of Anthony in Texas declared itself leap year capital of the world and an international leapling birthday club was started 33 1908 postcards nbsp Woman capturing man with butterfly net nbsp Women anxiously awaiting January 1 nbsp Histrionically preparingBirthdays edit A person born on February 29 may be called a leapling or a leaper 34 In common years they usually celebrate their birthdays on 28 February In some situations 1 March is used as the birthday in a non leap year since it is the day following 28 February Technically a leapling will have fewer birthday anniversaries than their age in years This phenomenon may be exploited for dramatic effect when a person is declared to be only a quarter of their actual age by counting their leap year birthday anniversaries only For example in Gilbert and Sullivan s 1879 comic opera The Pirates of Penzance Frederic the pirate apprentice discovers that he is bound to serve the pirates until his 21st birthday that is when he turns 88 years old since 1900 was not a leap year rather than until his 21st year For legal purposes legal birthdays depend on how local laws count time intervals Taiwan edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Civil Code Part I General Principles The Civil Code of Taiwan since 10 October 1929 35 implies that the legal birthday of a leapling is 28 February in common years If a period fixed by weeks months and years does not commence from the beginning of a week month or year it ends with the ending of the day which precedes the day of the last week month or year which corresponds to that on which it began to commence But if there is no corresponding day in the last month the period ends with the ending of the last day of the last month 36 Hong Kong edit Since 1990 non retroactively Hong Kong considers the legal birthday of a leapling 1 March in common years 37 The time at which a person attains a particular age expressed in years shall be the commencement of the anniversary corresponding to the date of their birth Where a person has been born on February 29 in a leap year the relevant anniversary in any year other than a leap year shall be taken to be March 1 This section shall apply only where the relevant anniversary falls on a date after the date of commencement of this Ordinance Revised Julian calendar edit The Revised Julian calendar adds an extra day to February in years that are multiples of four except for years that are multiples of 100 that do not leave a remainder of 200 or 600 when divided by 900 This rule agrees with the rule for the Gregorian calendar until 2799 The first year that dates in the Revised Julian calendar will not agree with those in the Gregorian calendar will be 2800 because it will be a leap year in the Gregorian calendar but not in the Revised Julian calendar This rule gives an average year length of 365 242222 days This is a very good approximation to the mean tropical year but because the vernal equinox year is slightly longer the Revised Julian calendar for the time being does not do as good a job as the Gregorian calendar at keeping the vernal equinox on or close to 21 March Bahaʼi calendar editMain article Bahaʼi calendar The Bahaʼi calendar is a solar calendar composed of 19 months of 19 days each 361 days Years begin at Naw Ruz on the vernal equinox on or about 21 March A period of Intercalary Days called Ayyam i Ha is inserted before the 19th month This period normally has 4 days but an extra day is added when needed to ensure that the following year starts on the vernal equinox This is calculated and known years in advance Bengali Indian and Thai calendars editThe Revised Bengali Calendar of Bangladesh and the Indian National Calendar organise their leap years so that every leap day is close to 29 February in the Gregorian calendar and vice versa This makes it easy to convert dates to or from Gregorian The Thai solar calendar uses the Buddhist Era BE but has been synchronized with the Gregorian since AD 1941 Chinese calendar editThe Chinese calendar is lunisolar so a leap year has an extra month often called an embolismic month after the Greek word for it In the Chinese calendar the leap month is added according to a rule which ensures that month 11 is always the month that contains the northern winter solstice The intercalary month takes the same number as the preceding month for example if it follows the second month 二月 then it is simply called leap second month i e simplified Chinese 闰二月 traditional Chinese 閏二月 pinyin run eryue Hebrew calendar editThe Hebrew calendar is lunisolar with an embolismic month This extra month is called Adar Rishon first Adar and is added before Adar which then becomes Adar Sheini second Adar According to the Metonic cycle this is done seven times every nineteen years specifically in years 3 6 8 11 14 17 and 19 This is to ensure that Passover Pesah is always in the spring as required by the Torah Pentateuch in many verses 38 relating to Passover In addition the Hebrew calendar has postponement rules that postpone the start of the year by one or two days These postponement rules reduce the number of different combinations of year length and starting days of the week from 28 to 14 and regulate the location of certain religious holidays in relation to the Sabbath In particular the first day of the Hebrew year can never be Sunday Wednesday or Friday This rule is known in Hebrew as lo adu rosh לא אד ו ראש i e Rosh ha Shanah first day of the year is not Sunday Wednesday or Friday as the Hebrew word adu is written by three Hebrew letters signifying Sunday Wednesday and Friday Accordingly the first day of Passover is never Monday Wednesday or Friday This rule is known in Hebrew as lo badu Pesah לא בד ו פסח which has a double meaning Passover is not a legend but also Passover is not Monday Wednesday or Friday as the Hebrew word badu is written by three Hebrew letters signifying Monday Wednesday and Friday One reason for this rule is that Yom Kippur the holiest day in the Hebrew calendar and the tenth day of the Hebrew year now must never be adjacent to the weekly Sabbath which is Saturday i e it must never fall on Friday or Sunday in order not to have two adjacent Sabbath days However Yom Kippur can still be on Saturday A second reason is that Hoshana Rabbah the 21st day of the Hebrew year will never be on Saturday These rules for the Feasts do not apply to the years from the Creation to the deliverance of the Hebrews from Egypt under Moses It was at that time cf Exodus 13 that the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob gave the Hebrews their Law including the days to be kept holy and the feast days and Sabbaths Years consisting of 12 months have between 353 and 355 days In a k sidra in order 354 day year months have alternating 30 and 29 day lengths In a chaser lacking year the month of Kislev is reduced to 29 days In a malei filled year the month of Marcheshvan is increased to 30 days 13 month years follow the same pattern with the addition of the 30 day Adar Alef giving them between 383 and 385 days Islamic calendars editThe observed and calculated versions of the lunar Islamic calendar do not have regular leap days even though both have lunar months containing 29 or 30 days generally in alternating order However the tabular Islamic calendar used by Islamic astronomers during the Middle Ages and still used by some Muslims does have a regular leap day added to the last month of the lunar year in 11 years of a 30 year cycle 39 This additional day is found at the end of the last month Dhu al Hijjah which is also the month of the Hajj 40 nbsp See also Jalali calendar The Solar Hijri calendar is the modern Iranian calendar It is an observational calendar that starts on the spring equinox Northern Hemisphere and adds a single intercalated day to the last month Esfand once every four or five years the first leap year occurs as the fifth year of the typical 33 year cycle and the remaining leap years occur every four years through the remainder of the 33 year cycle This system has less periodic deviation or jitter from its mean year than the Gregorian calendar and operates on the simple rule that its New Year s Day must fall in the 24 hour period of vernal equinox 41 The 33 year period is not completely regular every so often the 33 year cycle will be broken by a cycle of 29 years 42 The Hijri Shamsi calendar also adopted by the Ahmadiyya Community is based on solar calculations and is similar to the Gregorian calendar in its structure with the exception that its epoch is the Hijra 43 Coptic and Ethiopian calendars editThe Coptic calendar has 13 months 12 of 30 days each and one at the end of the year of 5 days or 6 days in leap years The Coptic Leap Year follows the same rules as the Julian Calendar so that the extra month always has six days in the year before a Julian Leap Year 44 The Ethiopian calendar has twelve months of thirty days plus five or six epagomenal days which comprise a thirteenth month 45 See also editCentury leap year Calendar reform includes proposals that have not yet been adopted Leap second Leap week calendar Leap year bug Sansculottides Zeller s congruence February 30Leap year starting on Monday Leap year starting on Tuesday Leap year starting on Wednesday Leap year starting on Thursday Leap year starting on Friday Leap year starting on Saturday Leap year starting on SundayNotes edit Statute concerning the leap year and leap day 20 Though it appears in earlier Government proclamations such as one of 1619 23 Virtually no laws of Margaret survive Indeed none concerning her subjects are recorded in the twelve volume Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland 1814 75 covering the period 1124 1707 two laws concerning young Margaret herself are recorded on pages 424 amp 441 2 of volume I Sources editCheney Christopher Robert ed 2000 1945 A Handbook of Dates for students of British History Revised by Michael Jones Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521778459 Pollard A F 1940 New Year s Day and Leap Year in English History The English Historical Review 55 218 April 1940 177 193 doi 10 1093 ehr LV CCXVIII 177 JSTOR 553864 References edit Meeus Jean 1998 Astronomical Algorithms Willmann Bell p 62 Harper Douglas 2012 leap year Online Etymology Dictionary archived from the original on 21 August 2012 retrieved 15 August 2012 leap year Oxford US Dictionary archived from the original on 13 September 2015 retrieved 6 January 2020 Astronomical almanac online glossary US Naval Observatory 2020 archived from the original on 23 February 2022 retrieved 28 January 2022 Hogeback Jonathon Why Are There Only 28 Days in February Encyclopedia Britannica retrieved 31 May 2023 Dershowitz Nachum Reingold Edward M 2008 Calendrical calculations 3rd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 521 88540 9 OCLC 144768713 The calendar in use today in most of the world is the Gregorian or new style calendar designed by a commission assembled by Pope Gregory XIII in the sixteenth century Lerner Ed K Lee Lerner Brenda W 2004 Calendar The Gale Encyclopedia of Science Detroit MI Gale Introduction to Calendars Archived 2019 06 13 at the Wayback Machine 10 August 2017 United States Naval Observatory United States Naval Observatory 14 June 2011 Leap Years archived from the original on 15 October 2007 retrieved 9 April 2014 Lerner amp Lerner 2004 p 681 Richards E G 2013 Calendars in Urban S E Seidelmann P K eds Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac 3rd ed Mill Valley CA University Science Books p 598 ISBN 9781891389856 Doggett L E 1992 Calendars in Seidelmann P K ed Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac 2nd ed Sausalito CA University Science Books pp 580 1 Richards E G 1998 Mapping time The Calendar and its History Oxford University Press pp 250 1 ISBN 0 19 286205 7 a b c Pollard 1940 p 188 Cheney 2000 p 145 footnote 1 According to Christian Ludwig Ideler 1825 Key Thomas Hewitt 2013 1875 Calendarium University of Chicago the intermediate days are in all cases reckoned backwards upon the Roman principle already explained of counting both extremes Pollard 1940 p 186 a b Cheney 2000 Page 145 Footnote 1 a b Ruffhead Owen 1763 The Statutes at Large from Magna Charta to the End of the Last Parliament Mark Basket p 20 retrieved 21 October 2021 21 Hen III Edward Coke 1628 Cap 1 Of Fee Simple First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England p 8 left 30 Pickering Danby ed 1765 The Statutes at Large from the 23rd to the 26th Year of King George II vol 20 Cambridge Charles Bathurst p 194 retrieved 28 January 2020 calendar at the end of the Act Bond John James 1875 Preface Handy Book of Rules and Tables for Verifying Dates With the Christian Era Giving an Account of the Chief Eras and Systems Used by Various Nations 4th ed London George Bell amp Sons p xix Campion Rev W M Beamont Rev W J 1870 The Prayer Book interleaved London Rivingtons p 31 via Archive org Church of England 1762 1662 Book of Common Prayer Cambridge John Baskerville via Archive org Cheney 2000 p 8 Liber Extra 5 40 14 1 Mikkelson B Mikkelson D P 2010 The Privilege of Ladies The Urban Legends Reference Pages snopes com Felten E 23 February 2008 The Bissextile Beverage Wall Street Journal archived from the original on 12 August 2017 retrieved 12 August 2017 Hallett S 29 February 2012 Leap Year Proposal What s The Story Behind It Huffington Post archived from the original on 21 October 2014 retrieved 21 December 2015 A Greek Wedding Anagnosis Books archived from the original on 10 February 2012 retrieved 12 January 2012 Teaching Tips 63 Developing Teachers archived from the original on 2 March 2012 retrieved 12 January 2012 Anthony Leap Year Capital of the World Time and Date 2008 archived from the original on 9 November 2011 retrieved 6 November 2011 29 February 29 things you need to know about leap years and their extra day Mirror 28 February 2012 archived from the original on 2 January 2016 retrieved 7 December 2015 Legislative History of the Civil Code of the Republic of China archived from the original on 28 December 2016 retrieved 19 July 2011 Article 121 Civil Code Part I General Principles of the Republic of China archived from the original on 4 March 2021 retrieved 19 July 2011 Age of Majority Related Provisions Ordinance Ch 410 Sec 5 Hong Kong Department of Justice 30 June 1997 archived from the original on 18 May 2013 retrieved 19 July 2011 Enacted in 1990 Exodus 23 15 Exodus 34 18 Deuteronomy 15 1 Deuteronomy 15 13 The Islamic leap year Time and Date AS n d archived from the original on 3 March 2020 retrieved 29 February 2012 Leap year trivia you might want to know GMA News n d archived from the original on 15 May 2013 retrieved 29 February 2012 Bromberg Irv Fixed Arithmetic Calendar Cycle Jitter University of Toronto archived from the original on 24 October 2019 retrieved 24 October 2019 Heydari Malayeri M 2004 A Concise Review of the Iranian Calendar Paris Observatory arXiv astro ph 0409620 Bibcode 2004astro ph 9620H archived from the original on 16 July 2011 retrieved 19 December 2010 Hijri Shamsi Calendar Al Islam 2015 archived from the original on 26 January 2017 retrieved 18 April 2015 The time frame in these months is the same as the months of a Christian calendar Fr Tadros Y Malaty 1988 The Coptic Calendar and Church of Alexandria The Monastery of St Macarius Press The Desert of Scete archived from the original on 13 September 2022 retrieved 13 September 2022 Ethiopia The country where a year lasts 13 months BBC News 10 September 2021 archived from the original on 18 September 2022 retrieved 17 September 2022External links editGray Meghan 29 Leap Year Numberphile Brady Haran Archived from the original on 22 May 2017 Retrieved 6 April 2013 Famous Leapers Leap Day Campaign Galileo Day History Behind Leap Year National Geographic Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leap year amp oldid 1206958377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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