Japan,
Korea, and
China started using the Gregorian calendar on 1January 1873, 1896, and 1912, respectively. They had used
lunisolar calendars previously. None of them used the Julian calendar; the Old Style and New Style dates in these countries usually mean the older lunisolar dates and the newer Gregorian calendar dates respectively. In these countries, the old style calendars were similar, but not all the same. The
Arabic numerals may be used for both calendar dates in modern Japanese and Korean languages, but not in
Chinese language.
Japan Japan started using the Gregorian calendar on 1January 1873, locally known as . The preceding day, 31December 1872, was . Japan currently employs two calendar systems: Gregorian and the
Japanese era name calendar. Specifically, the months and days now correspond to those of the Gregorian calendar, but the year is expressed as an offset of the
era. For example, the Gregorian year 2007 corresponds to
Heisei19. An era does not necessarily begin on 1January. For example, 7January
Shōwa 64—the day of the death of
Emperor Shōwa—was followed by 8January Heisei1, which lasted until 31December.
Korea Korea started using the Gregorian calendar on 1January 1896, which was the 17th day of the 11th lunar month in not only Korea, but also in
China that still used the lunisolar calendar. The lunisolar
Korean calendar is now used in very limited unofficial purposes only.
China The
Republic of China (ROC) started using the Gregorian calendar on 1January 1912, but the lunisolar
Chinese calendar is still used along with the Gregorian calendar, especially when determining certain traditional holidays. The reference has been a longitude of 120°E since 1929, which is also used for
Chinese Standard Time (
UTC+8). Mainland China,
Hong Kong,
Macau,
Malaysia,
Indonesia,
Singapore and
Taiwan all have legal holidays based on the lunisolar Chinese calendar, with the most important one being the
Chinese New Year. From 1995, to visually distinguish old and new style dates, writing new style dates with Arabic numerals but old style dates with
Chinese characters (never Arabic numerals) was the standard in the People's Republic of China (PRC). Since 1November 2011, writing old style dates with Chinese characters, never Arabic numerals, remains the standard in the PRC, but new style dates may be written with either Arabic or Chinese numerals. In Taiwan, even though new style dates are written in Chinese characters in very formal texts, it is now common to see Arabic numerals in new style dates in less formal texts. When writing old style dates, Chinese characters are usually used, but Arabic numerals may still be seen. The
calendar year in Taiwan is usually expressed as the "Year of the Republic" — counting Year1 as the foundation of the Republic of China in 1912CE, so the current Gregorian year corresponds to the ROC year . == Use of dates from historical documents in modern documents ==