Sweden Feast Day Calendars: Difference between revisions
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Many times in the Swedish Church Records, a minister recorded the date of an event using a Fixed or Moveable Feast Date based on the liturgical year (the church year) rather than the Julian or Gregorian date that we would recognize. To convert a Moveable Feast Date that you see in a record to a Gregorian date choose the year that you are working in from the table below. To convert a Fixed Feast date, see the Fixed Feast Day Calendar for: Sweden.<br> | Many times in the Swedish Church Records, a minister recorded the date of an event using a Fixed or Moveable Feast Date based on the liturgical year (the church year) rather than the Julian or Gregorian date that we would recognize. To convert a Moveable Feast Date that you see in a record to a Gregorian date choose the year that you are working in from the table below. To convert a Fixed Feast date, see the Fixed Feast Day Calendar for: Sweden.<br> |
Revision as of 21:18, 24 January 2010
Back to Sweden Portal Page►
Many times in the Swedish Church Records, a minister recorded the date of an event using a Fixed or Moveable Feast Date based on the liturgical year (the church year) rather than the Julian or Gregorian date that we would recognize. To convert a Moveable Feast Date that you see in a record to a Gregorian date choose the year that you are working in from the table below. To convert a Fixed Feast date, see the Fixed Feast Day Calendar for: Sweden.
Tips:
- The Swedish government began using the Gregorian calendar on February 18, 1753. Prior to that, they used the Julian calendar. Do not use this conversion table for Danish or Nowegian research between 1700 and 1753.
- Between February 29, 1700 (Julian) and February 29, 1712 (Julian), the Swedish government used its own "Swedish Calendar". As part of the transition from the Swedish Calendar back to the Julian calendar in 1712, the month of February in 1712 has 30 days.