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Marking time : the epic quest to invent the perfect calendar

Author: Duncan Steel
Publisher: New York : Wiley, ©2000.
Edition/Format: Book : eBook : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
This book takes you across the full span of recorded history to examine the ways in which people and events forged the calendar that we have today. Starting with Stonehenge and the first written records of the year and the day by the Sumerians around 3500 B.C., astronomer Steel charts the calendar's ever-changing, erratic trajectory--from the Egyptians' reliance on the star Sirius to the numbering of the years linked  Read more...
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Details

Material Type: Internet resource
Document Type: Book, Internet Resource
All Authors / Contributors: Duncan Steel
ISBN: 0471298271 9780471298274
OCLC Number: 42643501
Description: ix, 422 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Contents: George Washington's birthday -- The Country Parson's Formula -- The cycles of the sky -- Stonehenge and Sothis (third millennium B.C.) -- Meton (432 B.C.), Callippus (330 B.C.), and Hipparchus (130 B.C.) -- Julius Caesar (46 B.C.) -- Constantine the Great (A.D. 321) -- Dionysius Exiguus (A.D. 525) -- The Synod of Whitby (A.D. 664) -- The Venerable Bede (A.D. 725) -- Lady Day -- Retrospective dating -- Pope Gregory XIII (A.D. 1582) -- The perfect Christian calendar and God's longitude -- Archbishop Ussher and the age of the earth (A.D. 1650) -- Lord Chesterfield's Act (A.D. 1751) -- Poor Richard's Almanack -- President Arthur requests (A.D. 1884) -- Marching to the same drummer? -- Calendar reform -- The Comet of Bethlehem -- How many days in a dinosaur year? -- Should 2100 be a double leap year? -- Appendix A: How long is a day? -- Appendix B: How long is a year? -- Appendix C: How long is a second? -- Appendix D: How long is a month?
Responsibility: Duncan Steel.
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Abstract:

This book takes you across the full span of recorded history to examine the ways in which people and events forged the calendar that we have today. Starting with Stonehenge and the first written records of the year and the day by the Sumerians around 3500 B.C., astronomer Steel charts the calendar's ever-changing, erratic trajectory--from the Egyptians' reliance on the star Sirius to the numbering of the years linked to the celebration of Easter in Christian churches. A provocative history lesson and a unique, entertaining read rolled into one, Marking Time will leave you with a sense of awe at the random, hit-or-miss nature of our calendar's development--a quality that parallels the growth of civilization itself. What results is a truthful, and, above all, very human view of the calendar as we know it. You will never look at the calendar the same way again.--From publisher description.

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