Roman calendar explained

The Roman calendar was the calendar used by the Roman Kingdom and Roman Republic. Although the term is primarily used for Rome's pre-Julian calendars, it is often used inclusively of the Julian calendar established by the reforms of the Dictator Julius Caesar and Emperor Augustus in the late 1st century BC.

According to most Roman accounts, their original calendar was established by their legendary first king Romulus. It consisted of ten months, beginning in spring with March and leaving winter as an unassigned span of days before the next year. These months each had 30 or 31 days and ran for 38 nundinal cycles, each forming a kind of eight-day weeknine days counted inclusively in the Roman mannerand ending with religious rituals and a public market. This fixed calendar bore traces of its origin as an observational lunar one. In particular, the most important days of each monthits kalends, nones, and idesseem to have derived from the new moon, the first-quarter moon, and the full moon respectively. To a late date, the College of Pontiffs formally proclaimed each of these days on the Capitoline Hill and Roman dating counted down inclusively towards the next such day in any month. (For example, the year-end festival of Terminalia on 23February was called Latin: VII. {{linktext|Kal., the 6th day before the March kalends.)

Romulus's successor Numa Pompilius was then usually credited with a revised calendar that divided winter between the two months of January and February, shortened most other months accordingly, and brought everything into rough alignment with the solar year by some system of intercalation. This is a typical element of lunisolar calendars and was necessary to keep the Roman religious festivals and other activities in their proper seasons.

Modern historians dispute various points of this account. It is possible the original calendar was agriculturally based, observational of the seasons and stars rather the moon, with ten months of varying length filling the entire year. If this ever existed, it would have changed to the lunisolar system later credited to Numa during the kingdom or early Republic under the influence of the Etruscans and of Pythagorean Southern Italian Greeks. After the establishment of the Republic, years began to be dated by consulships but the calendar and its rituals were otherwise very conservatively maintained until the Late Republic. Even when the nundinal cycles had completely departed from correlation with the moon's phases, a pontiff was obliged to meet the sacred king, to claim that he had observed the new moon, and to offer a sacrifice to Juno to solemnize each kalends.

It is clear that, for a variety of reasons, the intercalation necessary for the system's accuracy was not always observed. Astronomical events recorded in Livy show the civil calendar had varied from the solar year by an entire season in and was still two months off in . By the Latin: [[Lex Acilia de Intercalando|Lex Acilia]] or before, control of intercalation was given to the pontifex maximus butas these were often active political leaders like Caesarpolitical considerations continued to interfere with its regular application. Notably, intercalation had to be personally announced by the chief pontiff in Rome so, when his war in Gaul and civil war against Pompey kept Caesar out of the city for years at a time, the calendar was repeatedly left unadjusted.

Victorious in civil war, Caesar reformed the calendar in 46 BC, coincidentally making the year of his third consulship last for 446days. This new Julian calendar was an entirely solar one, influenced by Egypt's. In order to avoid interfering with Rome's religious ceremonies, the reform distributed the unassigned days among the months (towards their ends) and did not adjust any nones or ides, even in months which came to have 31days. The Julian calendar was designed to have a single leap day every fourth year by repeating February 24 (a doubled Latin: VI. Kal. Mart. or Latin: ante diem bis sextum Kalendas Martias) but, following Caesar's assassination, the priests mistakenly added the bissextile (Latin: bis sextum) leap day every three years due to their inclusive counting. In order to bring the calendar back to its proper place, Augustus was obliged to suspend intercalation for one or two decades.

At 365.25 days, the Julian calendar remained slightly longer than the solar year (365.24 days). By the 16th century, the date of Easter had shifted so far away from the vernal equinox that Pope Gregory XIII ordered a further correction to the calendar method, resulting in the establishment of the modern Gregorian calendar.

History

Prehistoric calendar

The original Roman calendar is usually believed to have been an observational lunar calendar whose months ended and began from the new moon. Because a lunar cycle is about 29.5 days long, such months would have varied between . Twelve such months would have fallen short of the solar year and, without adjustment, such a year would have quickly rotated out of alignment with the seasons in the manner of the Islamic calendar. Given the seasonal aspects of the calendar and its associated religious festivals, this was presumably avoided through some form of arbitrary curtailment or intercalation or through the suspension of the calendar during winter.Against this, Michels has argued that the early calendars used by Rome and its neighbors were more probably observational of seasonal markers in nature (the leafing of trees), animal behavior (the migration of birds), and the agricultural cycle (the ripening of grain) combined with observation of stars in the night sky. She considers that this more sensibly accounts for later legends of Romulus's decimal year and the great irregularity in Italian month lengths recorded in Censorinus.[1] Roman works on agriculture including those of Cato,[2] Varro,[3] Vergil,[4] Columella,[5] and Pliny[6] invariably date their practices based on suitable conditions or upon the rising of stars, with only occasional supplementary mention of the civil calendar of their times until the 4th or 5th century author Palladius.[7] Augury, formal Roman ornithomancy, continued to be the focus of a prestigious dedicated priesthood until at least the end of the 4th century. Although most Roman festivals in the historical record were closely tied to the nundinal cycle of the later calendar, there remained several moveable feasts (Latin: [[feriae conceptivae]], "proclaimed festivals") like the Sementivae that were dependent on local conditions. Michels suggests this was the original state of all ancient festivals, marking divisions between the seasons and occasions within them.

Legendary 10-month calendar

The Romans themselves usually described their first organized year as one with ten fixed months, a decimal division fitting general Roman practice. There were four months of "31" daysMarch, May, Quintilis, and Octobercalled "full months" (Latin: [[wikt:pleni menses#Latin|pleni menses]]) and six months of "30" daysApril, June, Sextilis, September, November, and Decembercalled "hollow months" (Latin: [[wikt:cavi menses#Latin|cavi menses]]).[8] [9] These "304" days made up exactly 38 nundinal cycles. The months were kept in alignment with the moon, however, by counting the new moon as the last day of the first month and simultaneously the first day of the next month. The system is usually said to have left the remaining two to three months of the year as an unorganized "winter", since they were irrelevant to the farming cycle. Macrobius claims the 10-month calendar was fixed and allowed to shift until the summer months were completely misplaced, at which time additional days belonging to no month were simply inserted into the calendar until it seemed things were restored to their proper place. Licinius Macer's lost history apparently similarly stated that even the earliest Roman calendar employed intercalation.[10]

Later Roman writers usually credited this calendar to Romulus, their legendary first king and culture hero, although this was common with other practices and traditions whose origin had been lost to them. Censorinus considered him to have borrowed the system from Alba Longa,[10] his supposed birthplace. Some scholars doubt the existence of this calendar at all, as it is only attested in late Republican and Imperial sources and supported only by the misplaced names of the months from September to December.[11] Rüpke also finds the coincidence of the length of the supposed "Romulan" year with the length of the first ten months of the Julian calendar to indicate that it is an Latin: [[a priori]] interpretation by late Republican writers.[11]

Calendar of Romulus
EnglishLatinMeaningLength in days
Month of Mars31
Month of Apru (Aphrodite)[12] 30
Month of Maia[13] 31
Month of Juno30
Mensis Quintilis
Mensis Quinctilis
Fifth Month31
Sixth Month30
Seventh Month30
Eighth Month31
Ninth Month30
Tenth Month30
Length of the year:304

Other traditions existed alongside this one, however. Plutarch's Parallel Lives recounts that Romulus's calendar had been solar but adhered to the general principle that the year should last for 360 days. Months were employed secondarily and haphazardly, with some counted as 20 days and others as 35 or more. Plutarch records that while one tradition is that Numa added two new months to a ten-month calendar, another version is that January and February were originally the last two months of the year and Numa just moved them to the start of the year, so that January (named after a peaceful ruler called Janus) would come before March (which was named for Mars, the god of war).

Rome's 8-day week, the nundinal cycle, was shared with the Etruscans, who used it as the schedule of royal audiences. It was presumably a part of the early calendar and was credited in Roman legend variously to Romulus and Servius Tullius.

Republican calendar

The attested calendar of the Roman Republic was quite different. It had twelve months, already including January and February during the winter. It also followed Greek calendars in assuming a lunar cycle of 29.5 days and a solar year of 12.5 synodic months (368.75 days), which align every fourth year after two additions of an intercalary month (Latin: mensis intercalaris), sometimes known as Mercedonius.[9]

According to Livy, it was Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome who divided the year into twelve lunar months (History of Rome, I.19). Fifty days, says Censorinus, were added to the calendar and a day taken from each month of thirty days to provide for the two winter months: Januarius (January) and Februarius (February), both of which had 28 days (The Natal Day, XX). This was a lunar year of 354 days but, because of the Roman superstition about even numbers, an additional day was added to January to make the calendar 355 days long. Auspiciously, each month now had an odd number of days: Martius (March), Maius (May), Quinctilis (July), and October continued to have 31; the other months, 29, except for February, which had 28 days. Considered unlucky, it was devoted to rites of purification (februa) and expiation appropriate to the last month of the year. (Although these legendary beginnings attest to the venerability of the lunar calendar of the Roman Republic, its historical origin probably was the publication of a revised calendar by the Decemviri in as part of the Twelve Tables, Rome's first code of law.)

The inequality between the lunar year of 355 days and the tropical year of 365.25 days led to a shortfall over four years of (10.25 × 4) = 41 days.[9] Theoretically, 22 days were interpolated into the calendar in the second year of the four-year cycle and 23 days in the fourth.[9] This produced an excess of four days over the four years in line with the normal one day excess over one year. The method of correction was to truncate February by five days and follow it with the intercalary month which thus commenced (normally) on the day after February 23 and had either 27 or 28 days. February 23 was the Terminalia and in a normal year it was Latin: a.d. VII Kal. Mart. Thus the dates of the festivals of the last five days of February were preserved on account of them being actually named and counted inclusively in days before the calends of March; they were traditionally part of the celebration for the new year. There was occasionally a delay of one day (a Latin: dies intercalaris being inserted between February 23 and the start of the Latin: mensis intercalaris) for the purpose of avoiding a clash between a particular festival and a particular day of the week (see for another example). The Roman superstitions concerning the numbering and order of the months seem to have arisen from Pythagorean superstitions concerning the luckiness of odd numbers.[14]

These Pythagorean-based changes to the Roman calendar were generally credited by the Romans to Numa Pompilius, Romulus's successor and the second of Rome's seven kings, as were the two new months of the calendar. Most sources thought he had established intercalation with the rest of his calendar. Although Livy's Numa instituted a lunar calendar, the author claimed the king had instituted a 19-year system of intercalation equivalent to the Metonic cycle centuries before its development by Babylonian and Greek astronomers. Plutarch's account claims he ended the former chaos of the calendar by employing 12months totalling 354days—the length of the lunar and Greek years—and a biennial intercalary month of 22days called Mercedonius.

According to Livy's Periochae, the beginning of the consular year changed from March to 1January in 153BC to respond to a rebellion in Hispania.[15] Plutarch believed Numa was responsible for placing January and February first in the calendar; Ovid states January began as the first month and February the last, with its present order owing to the Decemvirs. W. Warde Fowler believed the Roman priests continued to treat January and February as the last months of the calendar throughout the Republican period.

Roman Republican calendar (or – 46 BC)
EnglishLatinMeaningLength in days[16] [17]
1st
year
(cmn.)
2nd
year
(leap)
3rd
year
(cmn.)
4th
year
(leap)
1. JanuaryI. Mensis IanuariusMonth of Janus29292929
2. FebruaryII. Mensis FebruariusMonth of the Februa28232823
  Intercalary Month  Intercalaris Mensis (Mercedonius)  Month of Wages 27 28
3. MarchIII. Mensis MartiusMonth of Mars31313131
4. AprilIV. Mensis AprilisMonth of Aphrodite – from which the Etruscan Apru might have been derived29292929
5. MayV. Mensis MaiusMonth of Maia31313131
6. JuneVI. Mensis IuniusMonth of Juno29292929
7. JulyVII. Mensis QuintilisFifth Month (from the earlier calendar starting in March)31313131
8. AugustVIII. Mensis SextilisSixth Month29292929
9. SeptemberIX. Mensis SeptemberSeventh Month29292929
10. OctoberX. Mensis OctoberEighth Month31313131
11. NovemberXI. Mensis NovemberNinth Month29292929
12. DecemberXII. Mensis DecemberTenth Month29292929
Whole year:355377355378

According to the later writers Censorinus and Macrobius, to correct the mismatch of the correspondence between months and seasons due to the excess of one day of the Roman average year over the tropical year, the insertion of the intercalary month was modified according to the scheme: common year (355 days), leap year with 23-day February followed by 27-day Mercedonius (377 days), common year, leap year with 23-day February followed by 28-day Mercedonius (378 days), and so on for the first 16 years of a 24-year cycle. In the last 8 years, the intercalation took place with the month of Mercedonius only 27 days, except the last intercalation which did not happen. Hence, there would be a typical common year followed by a leap year of 377 days for the next 6 years and the remaining 2 years would sequentially be common years. The result of this twenty-four-year pattern was of great precision for the time: 365.25 days, as shown by the following calculation:

355 ⋅ 13+377 ⋅ 7+378 ⋅ 4=
24
8766
24

=365.25

The consuls' terms of office were not always a modern calendar year, but ordinary consuls were elected or appointed annually. The traditional list of Roman consuls used by the Romans to date their years began in 509 BC.[18]

Flavian reform

Gnaeus Flavius, a secretary (scriba) to censor App. Claudius Caecus, introduced a series of reforms in 304 BC. Their exact nature is uncertain, although he is thought to have begun the custom of publishing the calendar in advance of the month, depriving the priests of some of their power but allowing for a more consistent calendar for official business.

Julian reform

See main article: Julian calendar. Julius Caesar, following his victory in his civil war and in his role as pontifex maximus, ordered a reformation of the calendar in 46 BC. This was undertaken by a group of scholars apparently including the Alexandrian Sosigenes and the Roman M. Flavius. Its main lines involved the insertion of ten additional days throughout the calendar and regular intercalation of a single leap day every fourth year to bring the Roman calendar into close agreement with the solar year. The year 46 BC was the last of the old system and included three intercalary months, the first inserted in February and two more—Latin: Intercalaris Prior and Latin: Posterior—before the kalends of December.

Later reforms

See main article: Byzantine calendar. After Caesar's assassination, Mark Antony had Caesar's birth month Quintilis renamed July (Latin: Iulius) in his honor. After Antony's defeat at Actium, Augustus assumed control of Rome and, finding the priests had (owing to their inclusive counting) been intercalating every third year instead of every fourth, suspended the addition of leap days to the calendar for one or two decades until its proper position had been restored. See Julian calendar: Leap year error. In 8 BC, the plebiscite Lex Pacuvia de Mense Augusto renamed Sextilis August (Latin: Augustus) in his honor.

In large part, this calendar continued unchanged under the Roman Empire. (Egyptians used the related Alexandrian calendar, which Augustus had adapted from their wandering ancient calendar to maintain its alignment with Rome's.) A few emperors altered the names of the months after themselves or their family, but such changes were abandoned by their successors. Diocletian began the 15-year indiction cycles beginning from the AD 297 census;[18] these became the required format for official dating under Justinian. Constantine formally established the 7-day week by making Sunday an official holiday in 321. Consular dating became obsolete following the abandonment of appointing nonimperial consuls in AD 541.[18] The Roman method of numbering the days of the month never became widespread in the Hellenized eastern provinces and was eventually abandoned by the Byzantine Empire in its calendar.

Days

See main article: Kalends. Roman dates were counted inclusively forward to the next one of three principal days within each month:

These are thought to reflect a prehistoric lunar calendar, with the kalends proclaimed after the sighting of the first sliver of the new crescent moon a day or two after the new moon, the nones occurring on the day of the first-quarter moon, and the ides on the day of the full moon. The kalends of each month were sacred to Juno and the ides to Jupiter. The day before each was known as its eve (Latin: pridie); the day after each (Latin: postridie) was considered particularly unlucky.

The days of the month were expressed in early Latin using the ablative of time, denoting points in time, in the contracted form "the 6thDecember Kalends" (Latin: VI Kalendis Decembribus). In classical Latin, this use continued for the three principal days of the month[20] but other days were idiomatically expressed in the accusative case, which usually expressed a duration of time, and took the form "6th day before the December Kalends" (Latin: ante diem VI Kalendas Decembres). This anomaly may have followed the treatment of days in Greek, reflecting the increasing use of such date phrases as an absolute phrase able to function as the object of another preposition,[21] or simply originated in a mistaken agreement of Latin: dies with the preposition Latin: ante once it moved to the beginning of the expression.[21] In late Latin, this idiom was sometimes abandoned in favor of again using the ablative of time.

The kalends were the day for payment of debts and the account books (Latin: kalendaria) kept for them gave English its word calendar. The public Roman calendars were the fasti, which designated the religious and legal character of each month's days. The Romans marked each day of such calendars with the letters:

Each day was also marked by a letter from A to H to indicate its place within the nundinal cycle of market days.

Weeks

See main article: Nundinae, Planetary hours and Week. The nundinae were the market days which formed a kind of weekend in Rome, Italy, and some other parts of Roman territory. By Roman inclusive counting, they were reckoned as "ninth days" although they actually occurred every eighth day. Because the republican and Julian years were not evenly divisible into eight-day periods, Roman calendars included a column giving every day of the year a nundinal letter from A to H marking its place in the cycle of market days. Each year, the letter used for the markets would shift along the cycle. As a day when the city swelled with rural plebeians, they were overseen by the aediles and took on an important role in Roman legislation, which was supposed to be announced for three nundinal weeks (between) in advance of its coming to a vote. The patricians and their clients sometimes exploited this fact as a kind of filibuster, since the tribunes of the plebs were required to wait another three-week period if their proposals could not receive a vote before dusk on the day they were introduced. Superstitions arose concerning the bad luck that followed a nundinae on the nones of a month or, later, on the first day of January. Intercalation was supposedly used to avoid such coincidences, even after the Julian reform of the calendar.

The 7-day week began to be observed in Italy in the early imperial period, as practitioners and converts to eastern religions introduced Hellenistic and Babylonian astrology, the Jewish Saturday sabbath, and the Christian Lord's Day. The system was originally used for private worship and astrology but had replaced the nundinal week by the time Constantine made Sunday (Latin: dies Solis) an official day of rest in AD 321. The hebdomadal week was also reckoned as a cycle of letters from A to G; these were adapted for Christian use as the dominical letters.

Months

The names of Roman months originally functioned as adjectives (e.g., the January kalends occur in the January month) before being treated as substantive nouns in their own right (e.g., the kalends of January occur in January). Some of their etymologies are well-established: January and March honor the gods Janus[22] and Mars;[23] July and August honor Julius Caesar[24] and his successor, the emperor Augustus;[25] and the months Quintilis,[26] Sextilis,[27] September,[28] October,[29] November,[30] and December[31] are archaic adjectives formed from the ordinal numbers from, their position in the calendar when it began around the spring equinox in March.[28] Others are uncertain. February may derive from the Februa festival or its eponymous Latin: februa ("purifications, expiatory offerings"), whose name may be either Sabine or preserve an archaic word for sulphuric.[32] April may relate to the Etruscan goddess Apru or the verb Latin: aperire ("to open"). May and June may honor Maia[33] and Juno[34] or derive from archaic terms for "senior" and "junior". A few emperors attempted to add themselves to the calendar after Augustus, but without enduring success.

In classical Latin, the days of each month were usually reckoned as:[20]

Days in month !! 31d !! 31d !! 30d !! 29d !! 28d

Months before Julian reform

Months after Julian reform
Day name in English Day name in Latin Abbr
On the Kalends Kalendis Kal. 1 1 1 1 1
The day after the Kalends postridie Kalendas22222
The 6th day before the Nones ante diem sextum Nonas a.d. VI Non. 2        
The 5th day before the Nones ante diem quintum Nonas a.d. V Non. 3        
The 4th day before the Nones ante diem quartum Nonas a.d. IV Non. 4 bgcolor=lavender 2 bgcolor=lavender 2 bgcolor=lavender 2 bgcolor=lavender 2
The 3rd day before the Nones ante diem tertium Nonas a.d. III Non. 5 3 3 3 3
On the day before the Nones Pridie Nonas Prid. Non. 6 4 4 4 4
On the Nones Nonis Non. 7 5 5 5 5
The day after the Nones postridie Nonas86666
The 8th day before the Ides ante diem octavum Idus a.d. VIII Eid. bgcolor=lavender 8 bgcolor=lavender 6 bgcolor=lavender 6 bgcolor=lavender 6 bgcolor=lavender 6
The 7th day before the Ides ante diem septimum Idus a.d. VII Eid. 9 7 7 7 7
The 6th day before the Ides ante diem sextum Idus a.d. VI Eid. 10 8 8 8 8
The 5th day before the Ides ante diem quintum Idus a.d. V Eid. 11 9 9 9 9
The 4th day before the Ides ante diem quartum Idus a.d. IV Eid. 12 10 10 10 10
The 3rd day before the Ides ante diem tertium Idus a.d. III Eid. 13 11 11 11 11
On the day before the Ides Pridie Idus Prid. Eid. 14 12 12 12 12
On the Ides Idibus Eid. 15 13 13 13 13
The day after the Ides postridie Idus1614141414
The 19th day before the Kalends ante diem undevicesimum Kalendas   bgcolor=lavender 14      
The 18th day before the Kalends ante diem duodevicesimum Kalendas   15 bgcolor=lavender 14    
The 17th day before the Kalends ante diem septimum decimum Kalendas bgcolor=lavender 16 16 15 bgcolor=lavender 14  
The 16th day before the Kalends ante diem sextum decimum Kalendas a.d. XVI Kal. 17 17 16 15 bgcolor=lavender 14
The 15th day before the Kalends ante diem quintum decimum Kalendas a.d. XV Kal. 18 18 17 16 15
The 14th day before the Kalends ante diem quartum decimum Kalendas a.d. XIV Kal. 19 19 18 17 16
The 13th day before the Kalends ante diem tertium decimum Kalendas a.d. XIII Kal. 20 20 19 18 17
The 12th day before the Kalends ante diem duodecimum Kalendas a.d. XII Kal. 21 21 20 19 18
The 11th day before the Kalends ante diem undecimum Kalendas a.d. XI Kal. 22 22 21 20 19
The 10th day before the Kalends ante diem decimum Kalendas a.d. X Kal. 23 23 22 21 20
The 9th day before the Kalends ante diem nonum Kalendas a.d. IX Kal. 24 24 23 22 21
The 8th day before the Kalends ante diem octavum Kalendas a.d. VIII Kal. 25 25 24 23 22
The 7th day before the Kalends ante diem septimum Kalendas a.d. VII Kal. 26 26 25 24 23
The 6th day before the Kalends ante diem sextum Kalendas a.d. VI Kal. 27 27 26 25 24
The 5th day before the Kalends ante diem quintum Kalendas a.d. V Kal. 28 28 27 26 25
The 4th day before the Kalends ante diem quartum Kalendas a.d. IV Kal. 29 29 28 27 26
The 3rd day before the Kalends ante diem tertium Kalendas a.d. III Kal. 30 30 29 28 27
On the day before the Kalends Pridie Kalendas Prid. Kal. 31 31 30 29 28
Dates after the ides count forward to the kalends of the next month and are expressed as such. For example, March 19 was expressed as "the 14th day before the April Kalends" (Latin: a.d. XIV Kal. Apr.), without a mention of March itself. The day after a kalends, nones, or ides was also often expressed as the "day after" (Latin: postridie) owing to their special status as particularly unlucky "black days".

The anomalous status of the new 31-day months under the Julian calendar was an effect of Caesar's desire to avoid affecting the festivals tied to the nones and ides of various months. However, because the dates at the ends of the month all counted forward to the next kalends, they were all shifted by one or two days by the change. This created confusion with regard to certain anniversaries. For instance, Augustus's birthday on the 23rdday of September was Latin: a.d. VIII Kal. Oct. in the old calendar but Latin: a.d. IX Kal. Oct. under the new system. The ambiguity caused honorary festivals to be held on either or both dates.

Intercalation

See main article: Mercedonius. The Republican calendar only had 355days, which meant that it would quickly unsynchronize from the solar year, causing, for example, agricultural festivals to occur out of season. The Roman solution to this problem was to periodically lengthen the calendar by adding extra days within February. February was broken into two parts, each with an odd number of days. The first part ended with the Terminalia on the 23rd (Latin: a.d. VII Kal. Mart.), which was considered the end of the religious year; the five remaining days beginning with the Regifugium on the 24th (Latin: a.d. VI Kal. Mart.) formed the second part; and the intercalary month Mercedonius was inserted between them. In such years, the days between the ides and the Regifugium were counted down to either the Intercalary Kalends or to the Terminalia. The intercalary month counted down to nones and ides on its 5th and 13th day in the manner of the other short months. The remaining days of the month counted down towards the March Kalends, so that the end of Mercedonius and the second part of February were indistinguishable to the Romans, one ending on Latin: a.d. VII Kal. Mart. and the other picking up at Latin: a.d. VI Kal. Mart. and bearing the normal festivals of such dates.

Apparently because of the confusion of these changes or uncertainty as to whether an intercalary month would be ordered, dates after the February ides are attested as sometimes counting down towards the Quirinalia (February 17), the Feralia (February 21), or the Terminalia (February 23)[35] rather than the intercalary or March kalends.

The third-century writer Censorinus says:

When it was thought necessary to add (every two years) an intercalary month of, so that the civil year should correspond to the natural (solar) year, this intercalation was in preference made in February, between the Terminalia [23rd] and Regifugium [24th].[36]

The fifth-century writer Macrobius says that the Romans intercalated in alternate years; the intercalation was placed after February 23 and the remaining five days of February followed. To avoid the nones falling on a nundine, where necessary an intercalary day was inserted "in the middle of the Terminalia, where they placed the intercalary month". This appears to have been generally correct. In 170BC, Intercalaris began on the second day after February 23 and, in 167BC, it began on the day after February 23.

Varro, writing in the first centuryBC, says "the twelfth month was February, and when intercalations take place the five last days of this month are removed."[37] Since all the days after the Ides of Intercalaris were counted down to the beginning of March, the month had either 27days (making 377 for the year) or 28 (making 378 for the year).

There is another theory which says that in intercalary years February had and Intercalaris had 27. No date is offered for the Regifugium in 378-day years. Macrobius describes a further refinement whereby, in one 8-year period within a 24-year cycle, there were only three intercalary years, each of 377days. This refinement brings the calendar back in line with the seasons and averages the length of the year to 365.25days over 24years.

The Pontifex Maximus determined when an intercalary month was to be inserted. On average, this happened in alternate years. The system of aligning the year through intercalary months broke down at least twice: the first time was during and after the Second Punic War. It led to the reform of the 191 BC Acilian Law on Intercalation, the details of which are unclear, but it appears to have successfully regulated intercalation for over a century. The second breakdown was in the middle of the first century BC and may have been related to the increasingly chaotic and adversarial nature of Roman politics at the time. The position of Pontifex Maximus was not a full-time job; it was held by a member of the Roman elite, who would almost invariably be involved in the machinations of Roman politics. Because the term of office of elected Roman magistrates was defined in terms of a Roman calendar year, a Pontifex Maximus had an incentive to lengthen a year in which he or his allies were in power or shorten a year in which his political opponents held office.

Although there are many stories to interpret the intercalation, a period of is always synodic month short. Obviously, the month beginning shifts forward (from the new moon, to the third quarter, to the full moon, to the first quarter, back the new moon) after intercalation.

Years

See main article: List of Roman consuls. As mentioned above, Rome's legendary 10-month calendar notionally lasted for 304days but was usually thought to make up the rest of the solar year during an unorganized winter period. The unattested but almost certain lunar year and the pre-Julian civil year were long, with the difference from the solar year more or less corrected by an irregular intercalary month. The Julian year was 365days long, with a leap day doubled in length every fourth year, almost equivalent to the present Gregorian system.

The calendar era before and under the Roman kings is uncertain but dating by regnal years was common in antiquity. Under the Roman Republic, from 509 BC, years were most commonly described in terms of their reigning ordinary consuls.[18] (Temporary and honorary consuls were sometimes elected or appointed but were not used in dating.)[18] Consular lists were displayed on the public calendars. After the institution of the Roman Empire, regnal dates based on the emperors' terms in office became more common. Some historians of the later republic and early imperial eras dated from the legendary founding of the city of Rome (Latin: [[ab urbe condita]] or).[18] Varro's date for this was 753 BC but other writers used different dates, varying by several decades. Such dating was, however, never widespread. After the consuls waned in importance, most Roman dating was regnal[38] or followed Diocletian's 15-year Indiction tax cycle.[18] These cycles were not distinguished, however, so that "year 2 of the indiction" may refer to any of 298, 313, 328, &c.<ref name=matlock/> The Orthodox subjects of the Byzantine Empire used various Christian eras, including those based on Diocletian's persecutions, Christ's incarnation, and the supposed age of the world.

The Romans did not have records of their early calendars but, like modern historians, assumed the year originally began in March on the basis of the names of the months following June. The consul M. Fulvius Nobilior (r. 189 BC) wrote a commentary on the calendar at his Temple of Hercules Musarum that claimed January had been named for Janus because the god faced both ways, suggesting it had been instituted as a first month. It was, however, usually said to have been instituted along with February, whose nature and festivals suggest it had originally been considered the last month of the year. The consuls' term of office—and thus the order of the years under the republic—seems to have changed several times. Their inaugurations were finally moved to January 1(Latin: Kal. Ian.) in 153BC to allow Q. Fulvius Nobilior to attack Segeda in Spain during the Celtiberian Wars, before which they had occurred on March 15 (Latin: [[Ides of March|Eid. Mart]].). There is reason to believe the inauguration date had been May 1during the until 222BC and Livy mentions earlier inaugurations on May 15 (Latin: Eid. Mai.), July 1 (Latin: Kal. Qui.), August 1 (Latin: Kal. Sex.), October 1(Latin: Kal. Oct.), and December 15 (Latin: Eid. Dec.). Under the Julian calendar, the year began on January 1 but years of the Indiction cycle began on September 1.

In addition to Egypt's separate calendar, some provinces maintained their records using a local era.[18] Africa dated its records sequentially from 39BC;[38] Spain from AD38. This dating system continued as the Spanish era used in medieval Spain.

Conversion to Julian or Gregorian dates

The continuity of names from the Roman to the Gregorian calendar can lead to the mistaken belief that Roman dates correspond to Julian or Gregorian ones. In fact, the essentially complete list of Roman consuls allows general certainty of years back to the establishment of the republic but the uncertainty as to the end of lunar dating and the irregularity of Roman intercalation means that dates which can be independently verified are invariably weeks to months outside of their "proper" place. Two astronomical events dated by Livy show the calendar four months out of alignment with the Julian date in 190BC and two months out of alignment in 168BC. Thus, "the year of the consulship of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus and Publius Licinius Crassus" (usually given as "205BC") actually began on March 15, 205BC, and ended on March 14, 204 BC, according to the Roman calendar but may have begun as early as November or December 206BC owing to its misalignment. Even following the establishment of the Julian calendar, the leap years were not applied correctly by the Roman priests, meaning dates are a few days out of their "proper" place until a few decades into Augustus's reign.

Given the paucity of records regarding the state of the calendar and its intercalation, historians have reconstructed the correspondence of Roman dates to their Julian and Gregorian equivalents from disparate sources. There are detailed accounts of the decades leading up to the Julian reform, particularly the speeches and letters of Cicero, which permit an established chronology back to about 58BC. The nundinal cycle and a few known synchronisms—e.g., a Roman date in terms of the Attic calendar and Olympiad—are used to generate contested chronologies back to the start of the First Punic War in 264BC. Beyond that, dates are roughly known based on clues such as the dates of harvests and seasonal religious festivals.

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Censorinus]
  2. [Cato the Elder|Cato]
  3. [Varro]
  4. [Vergil]
  5. [Columella]
  6. [Pliny the Elder|Pliny]
  7. [Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus Palladius|Palladius]
  8. [Censorinus]
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  10. [Censorinus]
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  12. Web site: April . Dictionary.com Unabridged . Randomhouse Inc. . January 9, 2018.
  13. Web site: May . Dictionary.com Unabridged . Randomhouse Inc. . January 9, 2018.
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  15. https://www.livius.org/sources/content/livy/livy-periochae-46-50/#47.1|Livy 47.13 and 47.14
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  35. A 94 inscription.
  36. Censorinus, The Natal Day, 20.28, tr. William Maude, New York 1900, available at http://elfinspell.com/ClassicalTexts/Maude/Censorinus/DeDieNatale-Part2.html.
  37. Varro, On the Latin language, 6.13, tr. Roland Kent, London 1938, available at https://ryanfb.github.io/loebolus-data/L333.pdf.
  38. .