Nordic Feast Day Calendar: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 22:44, 29 August 2023
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Calendar By Country[edit | edit source]
Click on the link below that matches the country of your research.
Julian Calendar Changed to Gregorian Calendar[edit | edit source]
- In the Western world time began to be reckoned or dated before and after the birth of Jesus Christ.
- B.C. (before Christ)
- A.D. (Anno Domini — the year of our Lord)
- In the late 1600s, scientists and astronomers told about the incorrectness of the Julian calendar system they were using. The calendar date was off by eleven days, a leap year was needed to make time line up correctly, and so forth.
- The reigning pope of the time, Pope Gregory, ordered the scientists and astronomers to make the necessary changes to bring the calendars in line with their measurements.
- In 1700, most of the Christian/Western world switched to using the Gregorian calendar system. Denmark, Iceland, and Norway all changed at that time.
- 19 February 1700 became 1 March 1700
- Sweden and Finland waited until 1753 to bring about their calendar change.
- 18 Feb 1753 became 1 March 1753
Fixed and Movable Feast Days[edit | edit source]
- Pagan dates began to be mixed with religious dates
- "Feast days" celebrating lives of those who were designated "saints" and life events of those who were important in religious history all began to be mixed together.
- All Sundays were considered feast (fest) days. They are generally prefaced or referred to as "Dominica" (the day of the Lord), "Dom.,""Dna.," or "D." in the records.
Fixed Feast Days
- The first day of each new year is always 1 January (in Latin, Novi Anni; in the Nordic languages, Nyt Aarsdag), no matter which day of the week it falls on.
- January First is also supposed to be the day on which the Christ child was circumcised, so instead of the day date being written, it is sometimes recorded as Circumcisio.
- January 6, also known as "Holy Three Kings Day" (Trium Rex, Tre Konger Dager, H3Kdag), and so forth. This is the date the three wise men were supposed to have visited the Christ child.
- March 25, the day Mary or Maria was supposed to have conceived Jesus is nine months prior to Christmas Day, December 25.
- St. John the Baptist (St. Hans, St. Johannes) was supposed to have been born six months before the birth of Christ, or June 24.
- Christmas (Juul or Juledag) is an a "fixed" feast day that is always celebrated on December 25, no matter which day of the week it falls on.
Moveable Feast Days
- Easter is celebrated on a different date each year, though it is always on the first Sunday following the full moon after the Spring Equinox.
- Sundays before and after Easter are moveable because they are calculated relative to Easter.
- Trinity Sunday could fall anytime from late May to the early part of June. There could be between 24 and 27 Sundays in Trinity.
- Advent begins on the fourth Sunday before Christmas
For information on the order of the Lutheran church year see Lutheran Liturgical Calendar.