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201292122C Brief History of Calendar Calendar, system of measuring time for the needs of civil life, by dividing time into days, weeks, months, and years. Calendar divisions are based on the movements of the earth and the regular appearances of the sun and the moon. A day is the average time required for one rotation of the earth on its axis. The measurement of a year is based on one revolution of the earth around the sun and is called a seasonal, tropical, or solar year. A solar year contains 365 days, 5 hr, 48 min, and 45.5 sec. A month was originally calculated by ancient peoples as the time between two full moons (29.5 days). This measurement, called a synodic, or lunar month, resulted in a lunar year of 354 days, 11days shorter than a solar year. In modern calendars, however, the number of days in a month is not based on the phases of the moon. The length of the months is approximately one-twelfth of a year (28 to 31 days) and is adjusted to fit the 12 months into a solar year. The week was derived from the Judeo-Christian tradition requiring rest from labor every seventh day. It is not based on a natural phenomenon. c~R 1) Division: the ~ of a large unit into two or more distinct parts is the act of separating into these parts. ָ 2) Rotationa circular movement, D 3) Synodicrelating to or involving a conjunction or two successive conjunctions of the same star, planet, or satellite, w 4) Lunarrelating to the moon, ꎚv 5) Be derived fromԴ 6) Judeo-Christianbeing historically related to both Judaism and ChristianityͬǪq̫c̵ } Calendar divisions are based on the movements of the earth and the regular appearances of the sun and the moona day, a month, (lunar month), a solar year. The Egyptians created a calendar at a very early stage, based on their observations of the movements of the Sun and the stars. Perhaps representing one of the first attempts at making a calendar are the remnants of stone circles from around 8000 BC in the southwestern corner of modern Egypt. These stone circles may have been used to map the movement of the heavenly bodies. The Egyptians probably created a calendar because it was so important for their survival to know when the Niles flood would come. They divided each day into 24 hours, 12 for the daytime and 12 for the night. A period of ten days made up a week, and one month included three such weeks, or 30 days. A year comprised 12 months and was divided into three seasons of four months each. To the 360 days of the 12 months in a year, the Egyptians added 5 more days, which they referred to as the birthdays of several gods. Thus, an Egyptian year totaled 365 days, remarkably close to the 365¼ days it takes the Earth to go around the Sun. There was no concept of leap year, so the calendar fell behind by one day every four years. c~R 1) Remnant: a small part or portion that remains after the main part no longer exists, ಿ֣E 2) Heavenly bodya planet, star, moon, or other natural object in space, w 3) Leap yearc } The Egyptians created a calendar, based on their observations of the movements of the Sun and the stars, because it was so important for their survival to know when the Niles flood would come. In 45 BC, Julius Caesar decided to use a purely solar calendar upon the advice of the Greek astronomer Sosigenes. This calendar, known as the Julian calendar, fixed the normal year at 365 days, and the leap year, every fourth year, at 366 days. In this way the extra 1/4 day a year could be accounted for. The Julian year, however, was 11 min and 14 sec longer than the solar year (a solar year contains 365 days, 5 hr, 48 min, and 45.5 sec, while 1/4 day equals to 6hr). This discrepancy accumulated until by 1582 when the vernal equinox occurred 10 days early and church holidays did not occur in the appropriate seasons. To make the vernal equinox occur on March 21, as it had in AD 325, the year of the First Council of Nicaea, Pope Gregory XIII issued a decree dropping 10 days from the calendar. To prevent further displacement, he instituted a calendar, known as the Gregorian calendar, which provided that century years divisible evenly by 400 should be leap years and that all other century years should be common years. Thus, 1600 was a leap year, but 1700 and 1800 were common years. c~R 1) Solar calendar: ČW̫ꖚv(Gregorian calendar) 2) Astronomer: ČW 3) Julian calendar_RԚv 4) Be account forexplain sth or give the necessary information about sth. 5) Discrepancya difference between conflicting facts or claims or opinions, 6) Vernal equinox֣cs320գ 7) Decreean official order or decision, especially one made by the rule of a country, 8) Displacement: the removal of something from its usual place or position by something which then occupies that place or position, 9) Divisible evenly } In 45 BC, Julius CaesarJulian Calendar; In AD 325, Pope Gregory XIII-- Gregorian calendar
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