February 24: On This Day in World History … briefly

In the Julian calendar, a leap year occurred every four years and the leap day was inserted by doubling February 24. The Gregorian reform omitted a leap day in three of every 400 years and left the leap day unchanged.

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For superstitious reasons, when the Romans began to intercalate to bring their calendar into line with the solar year, they chose not to place their extra month of Mercedonius after February but within it. February 24—known in the Roman calendar as ‘the sixth day before the Kalends of March’ – was replaced by the first day of this month since it followed Terminalia, the festival of the Roman god of boundaries. After the end of Mercedonius, the rest of the days of February were observed and the new year began with the first day of March.

Lunario Novo, Secondo la Nuova Riforma della Correttione del l’Anno Riformato da NS Gregorio XIII, printed in Rome by Vincenzo Accolti in 1582, one of the first printed editions of the new calendar – Wikipedia

The overlaid religious festivals of February were so complicated that Julius Caesar opted not to change it at all during his 46 BC calendar reform. The extra day of his system’s leap years were located in the same place as the old intercalary month but he opted to ignore it as a date. Instead, the sixth day before the Kalends of March was simply said to last for 48 hours and all the other days continued to bear their original names. (The Roman practice of inclusive counting initially caused the priests in charge of the calendar to add the extra hours every three years instead of every four and Augustus was obliged to omit them for a span of decades until the system was back to where it should have been.)

The knuckle mnemonic for the days of the months of the year – Wikipedia

When the extra hours finally began to be reckoned as two separate days instead of a doubled sixth (‘bissextile’) one, the leap day was still taken to be the one following hard on the February 23 Terminalia. Although February 29 has been popularly understood as the leap day of leap years since the beginning of sequential reckoning of the days of months in the late Middle Ages, in Britain and most other countries, no formal replacement of February 24 as the leap day of the Julian and Gregorian calendars has occurred. The exceptions include Sweden and Finland, who enacted legislation to move the day to February 29. This custom still has some effect around the world, for example with respect to name days in Hungary.

 

Most notable historic snippets or facts extracted from the book ‘On This Day’ first published in 1992 by Octopus Publishing Group Ltd, London, as well as additional supplementary information extracted from Wikipedia.

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