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Pope Gregory XIII was patron of Rome’s renaissance, and a legal luminary whose influence transcends the ages.
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2024 is a leap year, when the shortest month mops up a bit of leftover time. But the extra day also tells us about space – and our place in it.
Leap Day is coming.
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Humans have synced their calendars to the sun and moon for centuries, but every so often, these systems need a little correction.
The children of Cwm Gwaun go door to door singing and collecting calennig in 1961.
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Britain may have ditched the Roman calendar in 1752 but Cwm Gwaun continues to cling on to its old traditions.
A fragment of mosaic showing February from the Sousse mosaic calendar.
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The answer comes from how the Romans measured the year.
Amid the pandemic, confetti fell on an almost-empty Times Square last New Year’s Eve.
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Today most societies take the A.D. time system for granted. That wasn’t always the case.
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Leap years were devised in Julius Caesar’s time, to fix the pesky problem that Earth’s year isn’t exactly 365 days. But 15 centuries later, our calendars were still slightly askew.
A woman holds the flags of the African Union and Ethiopia during celebrations to mark the Ethiopian New Year
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Amid New Year celebrations in Ethiopia, questions still linger around the possibility for sustained peace and stability.
An unusual date that comes to us from the heavens.
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We will get an ‘extra’ day this year, February 29. Where do these quadrennial liberties with our calendar originate?