Among different ancient nations different methods of computing the year were in use. Some reckoned it by the revolution of the moon, some by that of the sun; but none, so far as we know, made proper allowances for deficiencies and excesses. Twelve moons fell short of the true year, thirteen exceeded it; 365 days were not enough, 366 were too many. To prevent the confusion resulting from these errors, Julius Cæsar reformed the calendar by making the year consist of 365 days, 6 hours (which is hence called a Julian year), and made every fourth year consist of 366 days. This method of reckoning is called Old Style.
But as this made the year somewhat too long, and the error in 1582 amounted to ten days, Pope Gregory XIII., in order to bring the vernal equinox back to the 21st of March again, ordered ten days to be struck out of that year, calling the next day after the 4th of October the 15th; and, to prevent similar confusion in the future, he decreed that three leap-years should be omitted in the course of every four hundred years. This way of reckoning time is called New Style. It was immediately adopted by most of the European nations, but was not accepted by the English until the year 1752. The error then amounted to eleven days, which were taken from the month of September by calling the 3d of that month the 14th. The Old Style is still retained by Russia.
According to the Gregorian calendar, every year whose number is divisible by four is a leap-year, except, that, in the case of the years whose numbers are exact hundreds, those only are leap-years which are divisible by four after cutting off the last two figures. Thus the years 1600, 2000, 2400, etc., are leap-years; 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, 2200, etc., are not. The error will not amount to a day in over three thousand years.
84. The Dominical Letter.—The dominical letter for any year is that which we often see placed against Sunday in the almanacs, and is always one of the first seven in the alphabet. Since a common year consists of 365 days, if this number is divided by seven (the number of days in a week), there will be a remainder of one: hence a year commonly begins one day later in the week than the preceding one did. If a year of 365 days begins on Sunday, the next will begin on Monday; if it begins on Thursday, the next will begin on Friday; and so on. If Sunday falls on the 1st of January, the first letter of the alphabet, or A, is the dominical letter. If Sunday falls on the 7th of January (as it will the next year, unless the first is leap-year), the seventh letter, G, is the dominical letter. If Sunday falls on the 6th of January (as it will the third year, unless the first or second is leap-year), the sixth letter, F, will be the dominical letter. Thus, if there were no leap-years, the dominical letters would regularly follow a retrograde order, G, F, E, D, C, B, A.
But leap-years have 366 days, which, divided by seven, leaves two remainder: hence the years following leap-years will begin two days later in the week than the leap-years did. To prevent the interruption which would hence occur in the order of the dominical letters, leap-years have two dominical letters, one indicating Sunday till the 29th of February, and the other for the rest of the year.
By Table I. below, the dominical letter for any year (New Style) for four thousand years from the beginning of the Christian Era may be found; and it will be readily seen how the Table could be extended indefinitely by continuing the centuries at the top in the same order.
To find the dominical letter by this table, look for the hundreds of years at the top, and for the years below a hundred, at the left hand.
Thus the letter for 1882 will be opposite the number 82, and in the column having 1800 at the top; that is, it will be A. In the same way, the letters for 1884, which is a leap-year, will be found to be FE.
Having the dominical letter of any year, Table II. shows what days of every month of the year will be Sundays.
To find the Sundays of any month in the year by this table, look in the column, under the dominical letter, opposite the name of the month given at the left.