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View Full Version : The 'Straight Dope' on Leap Year Days




Geronimo
02-29-2008, 06:10 AM
http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mleapyr.html

Dear Straight Dope:

I was wondering why we have a leap year, and why it is only every four years. —Sting 3827

SDSTAFF CKDextHavn replies:

The leap year is a contrivance so that the calendar year (usually 365 days) doesn't get too far away from the solar (astronomical) year. You say: huh? Well, the astronomical year – the time it takes the earth to go exactly once around the sun – is not precisely 365 days. The ancients estimated it as 365Ό days. That wasn't bad as calculations go; it's actually 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds.

Now, you may think that crummy little fraction (almost 6 hours or 1/4 of a day) doesn't matter much. But every four years, the calendar would lose a full day against the seasonal year. Christmas (Dec. 25) would start to come a little earlier each year. After about 20 years it would come before the winter solstice; after 200 years or so, Christmas would come in the autumn (since the seasons are tied to the astronomical year, because they depend on the earth's slant relative to the sun) . . . and then in summer . . . and . . .

To prevent this drift between the calendar year and the astronomical (seasonal) year, we add one extra day every four years. Thus, over the four year period, we have 1461 days, not 1460, for an average of 365.25 days per year. That pretty much makes it come out right.

This innovation was imposed in the year 709 AUC (ab urbe condita, after the founding of the city), when Julius Caesar regulated the calendar. Nowadays, we refer to it as 45 BC. The Nicaean Council in 325 AD adopted that calendar for Christendom.

But it still wasn't precisely right. As noted above, the astronomical year isn't 365 days 6 hours (365.25 days), it's 365 days 5 hours 48 minutes and 46 seconds (365.2422 days). So as the calendar went along with its jolly add-a-day-every-four-years pattern, it gained about 11 minutes 14 seconds every year. After every 128 years, that was a full day. Note it's going the other direction – Christmas would fall LATER in the season each year.

This anomaly was corrected by Pope Gregory in March 1582. By that time, the calendar year was 10 days off the seasonal year. ( The real concern was not Christmas, but Easter, which had to occur near the vernal equinox and according to the lunar cycle, but that's another story.) They made two corrections. The first was that they just dropped ten days. The day after October 5, 1582 became October 15, 1582. (Some countries adopted this change later, in some cases centuries later.) This restored the equinox to its rightful place. The second change was to reform the calendar to prevent slippage in the future; and we use that same calendar system today, called the Gregorian.

(Footnote: The Russian Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar. Christmas comes out about January 7 in their calendar. About every century, the Orthodox Christmas slips one more day against the solar calendar. Currently there's a 13 day lag that by 2100 will become a 14 day lag.)

How does the Gregorian system work? We still have a leap year every four years, to accommodate the almost 6 hour difference that was known in Julius Caesar's time. The Gregorian correction is that every hundred years, we make it NOT a leap year. Thus, 1700, 1800, and 1900 were not leap years, even though they would have been in the normal four year cycle. Thus, every 100 years, there are 24 leap years, not 25. So that lets the calendar year average 365.24 days each year.

Does that do it? Sadly, no. There are still those extra seconds – the astronomical year is 365.2422 days. So every 400 years, we DON'T NOT add the extra day (double negative intended). So 1700, 1800, 1900 were NOT leap years, but 2000 was.

If you've followed the math, that gets us very close. Over a 400 year period the calendar will contain an average of 365.2425 days per year.

Every 4,000 years (the first will be the year 4000, then 8000, etc.) we make the century years NOT leap years again. And that gives us an average of 365.24225 days per year over a 4.000 year period. Still not exact, but the calendar year won't vary by more than a day from its current place in the seasonal (astronomical) year in two hundred centuries – close enough for practical purposes.

So the rule is:

Every year divisible by 4 is a leap year (adds an extra day to February),
EXCEPT the last year of each century, such as 1900, which is NOT a leap year . . .
EXCEPT when the number of the century is a multiple of 4, such as 2000, which IS a leap year . . .
EXCEPT the year 4000 and its later multiples (8000, 12000, etc) which are NOT leap years.

Clear? Wait till I drag in the Jewish and Muslim calendars, as is only fair considering our vast multicultural audience.

The Jewish calendar is based on a lunar cycle – that is, each month is based on the interval, about 29 or 30 days, from new moon to new moon – so it's short by about 11 days per solar year. Since the Jewish holidays are supposed to be season-related (they were originally harvest festivals), the calendar adjusts by adding a whole month about every three years – actually, 7 times every 19 years. The calculations are precise but VERY complicated, and if it took that much space to describe the fairly simple common calendar, I ain't gonna do anything more than what I just said for the Jewish calendar.

The Muslim calendar is also lunar, but it doesn't adjust. Thus, the holidays come about 11 days earlier in the season each year. Some years, Ramadan comes out in the spring, then in winter, then in fall, etc. Since Ramadan involves fasting from sunrise to sunset, it's a heckuva lot easier when Ramadan comes in deepest winter (shorter period from sunrise to sunset) than when it comes in the spring. It takes about 35 years for everything to cycle round again. About as long as it took you to read this article, probably. But at least now you've got the facts.

Geronimo
02-29-2008, 09:28 PM
Highlights in history on this date: February 29th

46 B.C. - An additional day of the year is first added every four years in February, with the introduction of the Julian calendar.

468 - St. Hilarius, the 46th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church, dies.

1528 - Patrick Hamilton is burnt at the state for heresy. It is said his death did more for the Scottish Reformation than the continuation of his life could have done.

1720 - Ulrica, Queen of Sweden, abdicates in favour of husband Frederick I, Prince of Hesse-Cassel.

1808 - French forces take Barcelona.

1832 - New Grenada, in South America, proclaims constitution providing for Republic form of government.

1872 - Young revolutionary attempts to assassinate Britain's Queen Victoria.

1892 - Britain and United States sign treaty on Bering Sea seal fishery.

1916 - German order for sinking armed merchantmen at sight goes into effect in World War I.

1920 - Czechoslovak Constitution is adopted.

1928 - US Colonel Harry L Stimson arrives in Manila to take over as Gov. General of Philippines.

1932 - Nazi revolt begins in Finland.

1944 - US troops invade the Admiralty Islands in Pacific in World War II.

1952 - Edgar Faure's ministry falls in France, and Antoine Pinay forms cabinet.

1956 - Pakistan becomes an Islamic republic.

1960 - Massive earthquake strikes Agadir, Morocco; Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy magazine, opens the first Playboy Club in Chicago.

1964 - US President Johnson dispels reports that the US was planning an extension of the war in South Vietnam.

1968 - The US President's National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders issues a report about the racial and social problems plaguing the nation.

1972 - South Korea completes the first phase of the withdrawal of part of its 48,000-man force from South Vietnam when the last contingent of a marine brigade landed at the port of Pusan.

1976 - Danish Parliament orders the razing of Christiania, a 'free city' in the centre of Copenhagen. The community, which owed its origins to the 1971 evacuation of army barracks in the area, was viewed as a refuge for militant groups, squatters and drug addicts.

1980 - Protestant gunmen kill Roman Catholic man and wound another in hit-and-run attack in Belfast, Ireland.

1984 - In gulf war, Iran says it shelled Basra and Iraq says it destroyed 50 Iranian boats.

1988 - New round of "war of the cities" starts in Iran-Iraq war.

1992 - An ethnic war in the central-eastern Nigerian state of Taraba continues, already killing 5,000 people since October 1991. Feuding between the Tivs, a fishing people, and the Jukuns, a farming community, has flared on and off over the issue of political power since 1959.

1996 - The US Senate confirms four-star Army general, Barry R. McCaffrey, to serve as the 'drug czar' of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

2000 - Israel releases the memoirs of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, in which the overseer of the Holocaust minimizes his own role, but describes in pedantic detail the workings of the Nazi death machine. Eichmann was executed in 1962 by Israel.

2004 - Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide resigns and flies into exile after an uprising sends the country into chaos.