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Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error |  | Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error: Encyclopedia II - Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error |  |
This image shows the difference between the Gregorian calendar and the seasons.
The Y axis is "days error" and the X axis is Gregorian calendar years.
Each point represents a single date on a given year. The error shifts by about 1/4 day per year. Years that are multiples of 100 but not 400 are NOT leap years. This causes a correction on years 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, 2200, and 2300.
For instance, these corrections cause 23 December 1903 to be the latest December solstice, and 20 December 2096 to be the earliest solst ...
See also:Gregorian calendar, Gregorian calendar - History, Gregorian calendar - Invention, Gregorian calendar - Beginning of the year, Gregorian calendar - Adoption outside of Roman Catholic nations, Gregorian calendar - Proleptic Gregorian calendar, Gregorian calendar - Confusion with British vs. American usage, Gregorian calendar - Difference between Gregorian and Julian calendar dates, Gregorian calendar - Months of the year, Gregorian calendar - Accuracy, Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error, Gregorian calendar - Numerical facts, Gregorian calendar - Number of leap years starting on a given day of the week, Gregorian calendar - Days of the week, Gregorian calendar - Reference |  | | Gregorian calendar, Gregorian calendar - Accuracy, Gregorian calendar - Adoption outside of Roman Catholic nations, Gregorian calendar - Beginning of the year, Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error, Gregorian calendar - Confusion with British vs. American usage, Gregorian calendar - Days of the week, Gregorian calendar - Difference between Gregorian and Julian calendar dates, Gregorian calendar - History, Gregorian calendar - Invention, Gregorian calendar - Months of the year, Gregorian calendar - Number of leap years starting on a given day of the week, Gregorian calendar - Numerical facts, Gregorian calendar - Proleptic Gregorian calendar, Gregorian calendar - Reference, Year zero, List of calendars, Calendar reform, Category:Unusual dates |  | |
|  |  | Gregorian calendar: Encyclopedia II - Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error
Gregorian calendar - Calendar seasonal error
This image shows the difference between the Gregorian calendar and the seasons.
The Y axis is "days error" and the X axis is Gregorian calendar years.
Each point represents a single date on a given year. The error shifts by about 1/4 day per year. Years that are multiples of 100 but not 400 are NOT leap years. This causes a correction on years 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, 2200, and 2300.
For instance, these corrections cause 23 December 1903 to be the latest December solstice, and 20 December 2096 to be the earliest solstice—2.25 days of variation compared with the seasonal event.
Other related archives"New Style", "Old Style", 1 January, 1 March, 1 September, 11 February, 14 February, 14 October, 14 September, 15 October, 1563, 1582, 1616, 17 February, 1700, 1752, 18 October, 1867, 1873, 19 year cycle, 1903, 1912, 1918, 1929, 2 September, 20 December, 2096, 21 March, 22 February, 22 March, 23 April, 23 December, 24 February, 24 January, 25 December, 25 March, 29 February, 3 May, 30 February, 31 December, 31 January, 325, 4 October, 5 April, 5 October, 6 April, 6 October, 7 January, 988, Alaska, Aloysius Lilius, Bede, Britain, British Empire, Byzantine Empire, Calculating the day of the week, Calendar reform, Category:Unusual dates, Catholic Church, Cervantes, Charles XII, Christopher Clavius, Common Era, Council of People's Commissars, Council of Trent, Days of the week, December, Denmark, Doomsday algorithm, Easter, England, Era System, Finnish Orthodox Church, First Council of Nicaea, France, Friday, Friday 13, George Washington, Germany, Greece, ISO 8601, Inter gravissimas, International Date Line, International Day of the Book, Italian, Italy, January, January 1, Japan, Jesus, Julian calendar, Julian day number, Kepler, Kuomintang, List of calendars, March 21, Middle Ages, Monday, Neapolitan, Netherlands, New Style, New Year's Day, New calendarists, Norway, October Revolution, Old Calendarists, Old Style, Ole Rømer, Orthodox Church, Parliament, People's Republic of China, Poland, Pope Gregory XIII, Portugal, Republic of China, Revised Julian calendar, Russia, Saturday, Scotland, Shakespeare, Spain, Sunday, Sweden, Taiwan, Thursday, Tuesday, UNESCO, United States, Wednesday, Western European, William and Mary, Year zero, astronomical year numbering, calendar, calendar year, common year starting on Sunday, computing the date of Easter, day, dominical letter, epact, everywhere, international standard, leap second, leap seconds, leap years, mean solar days, mean tropical year, mnemonic, papal bull, proleptic Gregorian Calendar, saint, sexagesimal, tidal acceleration, tropical year, vernal equinox, vernal equinox year, year, year 0, years
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Calendar seasonal error", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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