Download App
Reading History
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4

Author: Various
img img img

Chapter 1 4 , 7

Word Count: 3349    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

,

,

,

,

,

n of one day in four years, and is considerably too gr

n twenty-nine years, and errs in defect, as it s

ve intercalations at the end of four years respectively, and the eighth at the end

ds of thirty-three years with one of twenty-nine, and would consequently be very convenient in applic

e true within much narrower limits. It has been stated by Scaliger, Weidler, Montucla, and others, that the modern Persians actually follow this method, and intercalate eight days in thirty-three [v.04 p.0991]years. The statement has, however, been contested on good authority; and it seems proved (see Delambre, Astronomie Moderne, tom. i. p.81) that the Persian intercalation combines the two peri

of the year was fixed at midnight preceding the day in which the true autumnal equinox falls. But supposing the instant of the sun's entering into the sign Libra to be very near midnight, the small errors of the solar tables might render it doubtful to which day the equinox really belonged; and it would be in vain to have recourse to observation to obviate the difficulty. It is therefore infinitely more commodious to determine the commencement of the year by a fixed rule of intercalation; and of the various methods which might be

asses through the whole circle of the seasons in about thirty-four lunar years. It is therefore so obviously ill-adapted to the computation of time, that, excepting the modern Jews and Mahommedans, almos

enedos, who flourished shortly after the time of Thales, to omit the biennary intercalation every eighth year. In fact, the 7? days by which two lunar years exceeded two solar years, amounted to thirty days, or a full month, in eight years. By inserting, therefore, three additional months instead of four in every period of eight years, the coincidence between the solar and lunar year would have been exactly restored if the latter had contained only 354 days, inasmuch as the period contains 354 × 8 + 3 × 30 = 2922 days, corresponding with eight solar years of 365? days each. But the true time of 99 lunations is 2923.528 days, which exceeds the above period by 1.528 days, or thirty-six hours and a few minutes. At the end of two periods, or six

sent date, 13 × 360° + 477644″.409; that of the sun being 360° + 27″.685. Thus the corresponding relative mean geocentric motion of the moon from the sun is 12 × 360° + 477616″.724; and

last formed the third, fifth, eighth, eleventh, thirteenth, sixteenth, and nineteenth years of the cycle. As it had now been discovered that the exact length of the lunation is a little more than twenty-nine and a half days, it became necessary to abandon the alternate succession of full and deficient months; and, in order to preserve a more accurate correspondence between the civil month and the lunation, Meton divided the cycle into 125 full months of thirty days, and 110 deficient months of twenty-nine days each. The number of days in

6939 days 14 hours 26.592 minutes; hence the period, which is exactly 6940 days, exceeds nineteen revolutions of the sun by nine and a half hours nearly. On the other hand, the exact time of a synodic revolut

uple the period of Meton, and deduct one day at the end of that time by changing one of the full months into a deficient month. The period of Calippus, therefore, consisted of three Metonic cycles of 6940 days each, and a period of 6939 days; and its error in respect of the moon, consequently, amounted only to six hours, or to one day

ample of the Jews, and adhered to the 14th of the moon; but these, as usually happened to the minority, were accounted heretics, and received the appellation of Quartodecimans. In order to terminate dissensions, which produced both scandal and schism in the church, the council of Nicaea, which was held in the year 325, ordained that the celebration of Easter should thenceforth always take place on the Sunday which immediately follows the full moon that happens upon, or next after, the day of the vernal equinox. Should the 14th of the moon, which is regarded as the day of full moon, happen on a Sunday, the celebration Of Easter was deferred to the Sunday following, in order to avoid concurrence with the Jews and the above-mentioned heretics. The observance of this rule renders it necessary t

day, the year following will begin with Tuesday. For the sake of greater generality, the days of the week are denoted by the first seven letters of the alphabet, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, which are placed in the calendar beside the days of the year, so that A stands opposite the first day of January, B opposite the second, and so on to G, which stands opposite the seventh; after which A returns to the eighth, and so on through the 365 days of the year. Now if one of the days of

or last of the cycle. This rule is conveniently expressed by the formula ((x + 9) / 28)r, in which x denotes the date, and the symbol r denotes that the remainder, which arises from the division of x + 9 by 28, is the number required. Thus, for 1840, we have (1840 + 9) / 28 = 66-1/28; therefore ((1840 + 9) / 28)r = 1, and the year 1840 is the first of the solar cycle. In order to make use of the solar cycle in finding the dominical letter, it is necessary to know that the first year of the Christian era began with Saturday. The dominical letter of that year, which was the tenth of the cycle, was consequently B. The following year, or the 11th of the cycle, the letter was A; then G. The fourth year was bissextile, and the dominical letters were F, E; the following year D, and so on. In this manner it is easy to find the dominical letter belonging to each of the twenty-eight years of the cycle. But at the end of a century the order is interrupted in the Gregorian calendar by the secular suppression of the leap year; hence the cycle can only be employed during a century. In the reformed calendar the intercalary period is four hundred years, which number being multiplied by seven, gives two thousand eight hundred years as the interval in which the coincidence is restored between the days of the year and the days of

mencement of the era to the Reformation. For this purpose divide the date by 28, and the letter opposite the remainder, in the first column of figures, is the dominical letter of the year. F

ar year of 354 days; and in order to make up nineteen solar years, six embolismic or intercalary months, of thirty days each, are introduced in the course of the cycle, and one of twenty-nine days is added at the [v.04 p.0993]end. This gives 19 × 354 + 6 × 30 + 29 = 6935 days, to be distributed among 235 lunar months. But every leap year one day must be added to the lunar month in which the 2

Dominical

s of

nt

img

Contents

Chapter 1 4 , 7 Chapter 2 No.2 Chapter 3 No.3 Chapter 4 No.4 Chapter 5 No.5 Chapter 6 E Chapter 7 E No.7 Chapter 8 E No.8 Chapter 9 D Chapter 10 11 39 67 95 Chapter 11 E No.11
Chapter 12 D No.12
Chapter 13 E No.13
Chapter 14 E No.14
Chapter 15 22 50 78
Chapter 16 E No.16
Chapter 17 D No.17
Chapter 18 28 56 84
Chapter 19 D No.19
Chapter 20 No.20
Chapter 21 D No.21
Chapter 22 D No.22
Chapter 23 D No.23
Chapter 24 D No.24
Chapter 25 D No.25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27 E No.27
Chapter 28 E No.28
Chapter 29 E No.29
Chapter 30 E No.30
Chapter 31 E No.31
Chapter 32 1
Chapter 33 25 26
Chapter 34 27
Chapter 35 25′25
Chapter 36 7
Chapter 37 24
Chapter 38 22
Chapter 39 18
Chapter 40 19
Chapter 41 18 No.41
Chapter 42 14
Chapter 43 17
Chapter 44 15
Chapter 45 11
Chapter 46 12
Chapter 47 11 No.47
Chapter 48 21
Chapter 49 10
Chapter 50 8
Chapter 51 4
Chapter 52 5
Chapter 53 4 No.53
Chapter 54 28
Chapter 55 3
Chapter 56 1 No.56
Chapter 57 27 No.57
Chapter 58 No.58
Chapter 59 E No.59
Chapter 60 E No.60
Chapter 61 E No.61
Chapter 62 E No.62
Chapter 63 E No.63
Chapter 64 1 No.64
Chapter 65 23
Chapter 66 19 No.66
Chapter 67 21 No.67
Chapter 68 18 No.68
Chapter 69 6
Chapter 70 14 No.70
Chapter 71 16
Chapter 72 12 No.72
Chapter 73 14 No.73
Chapter 74 11 No.74
Chapter 75 13
Chapter 76 7 No.76
Chapter 77 9
Chapter 78 5 No.78
Chapter 79 7 No.79
Chapter 80 4 No.80
Chapter 81 20
Chapter 82 No.82
Chapter 83 2
Chapter 84 28 No.84
Chapter 85 No.85
Chapter 86 27 No.86
Chapter 87 27 No.87
Chapter 88 23 No.88
Chapter 89 25 24
Chapter 90 19′20
Chapter 91 D No.91
img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY