Proleptic Julian calendar |
The proleptic Julian calendar is produced by extending the Julian calendar to dates preceding its official introduction in 45
BC.
Historians since Bede have traditionally represented the years preceding AD 1 as "1 BC",
"2 BC", etc. In this system the year 1 BC would be a leap year (although the leap years actually observed between 46 BC and AD 4
were erratic: see the Julian calendar article for details). (Bede and
later Latin writers chose not to place the Latin zero, nulla, between BC and AD years.)
To determine an interval in years across the BC/AD boundary, it is more convenient to include a year zero and represent
earlier years as negative. This is the convention used in the "astronomical Julian calendar". In this system the year 0 (equivalent to 1 BC) is a leap
year.
Likewise, the Proleptic Gregorian
Calendar is used to specify dates before its official introduction in 1582. Because the
Julian Calendar was actually used before that time, one must explicitly state that a given date is in the Proleptic Gregorian
Calendar when that is used.
See also:
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