Years The complicated
Roman calendar was replaced by the
Julian calendar in 45 BC. In the Julian calendar, an ordinary year is 365 days long, and a
leap year is 366 days long. Between 45 BC and AD 1, leap years occurred at irregular intervals. Starting in AD 4, leap years occurred regularly every four years. Year numbers were rarely used; rather, the year was specified by naming the
Roman consuls for that year. (As consuls' terms latterly ran from January to December, this eventually caused January, rather than March, to be considered the start of the year.) When a year number was required, the Greek
Olympiads were used, or the count of years since the founding of Rome, "
ab urbe condita" in 753 BC. In the
Middle Ages, the year numbering was changed to the
Anno Domini count, based on the supposed birth year of
Jesus. The calendar used in most of the modern world, the
Gregorian calendar, differs from the Julian calendar in that it skips three leap years every four centuries (i.e. 97 leap years in every 400) to more closely approximate the length of the
tropical year.
Weeks The Romans grouped days into an eight-day cycle called the , with every eighth day being a market day. Independent of the ,
astrologers kept a seven-day cycle called a
hebdomas where each day corresponded to one of the seven
classical planets, with the first day of the week being
Saturn-day, followed by
Sun-day,
Moon-day,
Mars-day,
Mercury-day,
Jupiter-day, and lastly
Venus-day. Each astrological day was reckoned to begin at sunrise. The
Jews also used a seven-day week, which began Saturday evening. The seventh day of the week they called
Sabbath; the other days they numbered rather than named, except for Friday, which could be called either the Parasceve or the sixth day. Each Jewish day begins at sunset.
Christians followed the Jewish seven-day week, except that they commonly called the first day of the week the , or the
Lord's day. In 321,
Constantine the Great gave his subjects every Sunday off, thus cementing the seven-day week into Roman civil society.
Hours The Romans divided the daytime into twelve
horae or
hours starting at sunrise and ending at sunset. The night was divided into four watches. The duration of these hours varied with seasons; in the winter, when the daylight period was shorter, its 12 hours were correspondingly shorter and its four watches were correspondingly longer. Astrologers divided the
solar day into 24 equal hours, and these astrological hours became the basis for medieval
clocks and our modern 24-hour
mean solar day. Although the division of hours into
minutes and
seconds did not occur until the Middle Ages,
Classical astrologers had a
minuta equal to of a day (24 modern minutes), a
secunda equal to of a day (24 modern seconds), and a
tertia equal to of a day (0.4 modern seconds). ==Unicode==