Aurelius to Today I LearnedEnglish • edit-210 months agoThe ancient Romans made many attempts to fix the calendar year before landing on 12 months and leap yearswww.bbc.comexternal-linkmessage-square49arrow-up1176arrow-down13file-textcross-posted to: neat
arrow-up1173arrow-down1external-linkThe ancient Romans made many attempts to fix the calendar year before landing on 12 months and leap yearswww.bbc.comAurelius to Today I LearnedEnglish • edit-210 months agomessage-square49file-textcross-posted to: neat
minus-squareAdalinkfedilinkEnglish35•10 months ago So every year every day lands on the same day of the week and an extra da Can you imagine never getting your birthday off?
minus-squareGoldELoxlinkfedilinkEnglish9•10 months agowow, until becoming attached to the current calander in my youth i had always believed this would be more efficient, you really gave me a great reason for the Gregorian
minus-squareladlinkfedilinkEnglish6•10 months agoChildren may have the closest weekend assigned as birth date Like in East Asia where people technically change their age all at the same date: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_age_reckoning
Can you imagine never getting your birthday off?
wow, until becoming attached to the current calander in my youth i had always believed this would be more efficient, you really gave me a great reason for the Gregorian
Children may have the closest weekend assigned as birth date
Like in East Asia where people technically change their age all at the same date: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_age_reckoning
That’s a great point. Imagine being a Monday birthday