This was first
published on the WWW 1995 June 25 by Marcos J. Montes.
This version was
created 2001 July 31 by Marcos J. Montes.
Reviewed in Rettig on
Reference Newsletter for October, 1995.
One of the 500 sites
listed in Catholicism
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Resources and
Acknowledgements | Links to this page | Related Links | DISCLAIMER
Here
is a list of Orthodox Easter dates listed in the Julian Calendar
or the Gregorian
Calendar, 1875-2124.
Here is a list of Western Easter
dates AD 1875-2124.
Here is a list of years with the same Julian date or Gregorian date of
Orthodox Easter, AD 1875-2124.
Here is a list of years with the
same date of Western Easter, AD 1875-2124.
Here is a Table of the frequency of
the difference between the dates of Orthodox and Western Easter, AD 1583 to AD
3000.
Introduction
This program calculates:
- Easter Sunday in both the Western (Catholic, Anglican, and
Protestant) Christian, and in the Eastern (Orthodox) Christian
traditions;
- The movable Feasts associated with Easter in the Western and Eastern
traditions;
- Many Feasts in the Catholic calendar, usually celebrations of events in
the lives of Jesus or Mary. (These Feasts may or may not be celebrated by
other Christian denominations.)
- For years before 1583, only the dates of Christmas and Easter are
calculated. (They are the same for both traditions pre-1583.) My
recent research (email and bookwork) has shown that the above
method for calculating Easter prior to AD1583 was not in wide usage until the
mid-eighth century, although it had been adopted by the Church in the
mid-sixth century.
- An important note for historians and people using these dates for
research: Even though the Gregorian calendar was adopted into use by
the Catholic Church and many Catholic areas of Europe in AD 1582 October, many
areas did not adopt the Gregorian Calendar, the new method of determining
Easter, or both, until later. A good review is given in reference (1). For
example, England and its dominions did not accept the Gregorian Calendar or
the new method of determining Easter until 1752; thus, Easter in England prior
to 1753 was determined using the same algorithm as that of the Orthodox
Church.
I have summarized some information on the Orthodox Ecclesiastical
Calendar and an algorithm by Gauss to calculate the date of the Orthodox
Easter.
Easter Calculations
History
Prior to AD325, churches in different regions celebrated Easter
on different dates, not always on Sundays. The Council of Nicea (AD 325)
clarified this a bit by stating that Easter would be celebrated on Sundays.
Still a number of methods were used until a method defined by Dionyisius
Exiguus was adopted in about AD 532. This was not widely accepted until
it was described and defended by the Venerable Bede in his
De temporum ratione (AD 725). [Thanks to Jim Morrison
(70451.2106@compuserve.com) for the previous four sentences.]
Aloisius Lilius (d. 1576) devised the system that would
become the basis of the Gregorian Calendar, as well as the tables that would be
used to determine the date of Easter. Christoph Clavius
modified the tables slightly, and was one of the prime defenders of the
Gregorian calendar. The tables used to determine the date of Easter (in the
West) since AD 1583 are these modified tables of Clavius. All algorithms for
calculating the date of Easter since then are based on these tables.
Easter is the Sunday after the Paschal Full Moon. The
Paschal Full Moon may occur from March 21 through April 18, inclusive. Thus the
date of Easter is from March 22 through April 25, inclusive. The date of the
Paschal full moon is determined from tables, and it may differ from the date of
the the actual full moon by up to two days. This definition, along with tables,
etc. may be found in "The Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical
Ephemeris and American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac". This definition that
uses tables instead of actual observations of the full moon is useful and
necessary since the the full moon may occur on different (local, not UT) dates
depending where you are in the world. If the date of Easter was based on local
observations, then it would be possible for different parts of the world to
celebrate Easter on different dates in the same year.
To further confuse the issue, many countries did not start using the
Gregorian calendar in October 1582, so Easter in those countries was celebrated
at times different than is listed here UNTIL they began using the Gregorian
calendar. And some countries that switched to the Gregorian calendar used a
different definition of Easter for some time (parts of Germany and Sweden used
tables based on the observations of Tycho Brahe to determine Easter for many
years after the Gregorian calendar was adopted in those locations). A reasonably
comprehensive list of when nations started to use the Gregorian Calendar may be
found in reference
(1) and in the Calendar FAQ.
An interesting upshot of the algorithm is that the cycle of Easter dates (in
the Gregorian Calendar) repeats every 5,700,000 years - and no sooner! (See the
Calendar FAQ for
why the period has this particular length.) Using the algorithms, I have
calculated the distribution of the Gregorian Easter dates over various periods
of time. You may view the frequency of the date of Easter over one complete 5,700,000 year
cycle, or over the first
complete 400 year Gregorian Calendar cycle, or over a more contemporary
timespan of 1875 to 2124.
Algorithms
The algorithm used to
calculate the date of Easter in the Western tradition (after 1582) is from
Practical Astronomy with your Calculator by Peter Duffett-Smith and he
got it from "Butcher's Ecclesiastical Calendar" (1876); apparently the
algorithm was first published anonomously in Nature in 1876. This
particular algorithm
uses just integer math. The algorithm is valid for all years in the Gregorian
calendar, that is October 1582 and onwards. Carter's algorithm is a
more simple method for calculating the date of Easter and it is valid only from
1900 until 2099. Doggett's modification of Oudin's algorithm is easy to
use and is valid after AD 1583. Mallen's method is another general,
easy to use method. Some published methods do not for work for all years, and
the method at this
link from the 11th Edition Encyclopedia Brittanica
unfortunately fails in some cases. There is a useful collection of articles
gleaned from the soc.religion.christian
newsgroup discussions that contains some history, as well as explanation of
the algorithms used by both the Orthodox and Western churches that has been
collected as an Easter-Date
FAQ; it has both some C code and an amazing Bourne shell script for
calculating the date of Easter. Finally, there is a simple algorithm due to
Gauss for calculating the date of the Orthodox Easter.
A few other useful algorithms are also listed on my American Secular Holidays
Page. This includes algorithms for determining dates such as "The Second
Sunday in May".
Future Validity of All Algorithms of Determining the Date of
Easter
There are many reasons to expect that all methods of determining the
date of Easter will not be valid in the far future. The prime physical reason is
that the length of the day is increasing, thus the number of days in a year is
slowly decreasing. The current rate of increase in the length of the day implies
that the Gregorian calendar will need to neglect a leap year sometime in the 4th
or 5th millenium.
A greater likelihood is that some time in the near future the date of Easter
may be fixed to a particular Sunday. At Vatican II, Pope John XXIII stated that
there was nothing wrong with fixing the date of Easter. And there seems to be
broad support in the World Council of Churches for a fixed celebration of
Easter. According to the Encyclopaedeia Brittanica, the second
Sunday in April is the most favored date. Fixing the date of Easter to a
particular Sunday would still mean that Easter and the Feasts related to it
would be movable, but the movement would be restricted to a span of seven dates
(for example, the second Sunday in April must fall between April 8th-14th). Most
of the discussion on this issue appears to have happened in the 1960's-1970's,
but there is a press release from
the Aleppo meeting of the World Council of
Churches that discusses new proposals for fixing the date of Easter for all
of Chrisitianity. The press release is dated 1997 March 24, and the basic
suggestion is to use astronomical measurements of the vernal equinox and
the full moon at the meridian of Jerusalem in order to determine the date of
Easter. The authors of the proposal wanted this method to be adopted in the year
2001. Currently no Church has adopted this proposal. Please visit William
Morris' New Easter Dates
website for a comparison of Easter dates in the Gregorian and Orthodox
Calendars, along withdates calculated using the Aleppo proposal, and dates
calculated as the Sunday after Passover.
Feasts Related to Easter
Of interest from the reference (1) (which
is a pre-Vatican II source!) are the following dates, and their relation to
Easter.
Days Before Easter Days after Easter
Septuagesima 63 Rogation Sunday 35
Quinquagesima 49 Ascension 39
Ash Wednesday 46 Pentecost 49
Palm Sunday 7 Trinity Sunday 56
Good Friday 2 Corpus Christi 60
Matthew Bear (mtbear@mit.edu) was the first to inform me that
Septuagesima, and Quinquagesima were in a pre-Lent season prior to Vatican II
(in the Catholic church) or the 1970's (various Protestant denominations);
Rogation Sunday was the Sunday before the Rogation (prayer, supplication) days
before Ascension. Alex Kochergin writes that in the Eastern Orthodox
perspective, Septuagesima and Quinquagesima are still celebrated- in fact, the
three Sundays of Pre-Lent before Lent starts have as their Gospel Readings: the
Parable of the Publican and the Pharisee, the Parable of the Prodigal Son, and
Christ's reminder of the Last Judgement.
Celebrations in the Ecclesiastical Calendar Not Related to Easter
Once
we have determined a date of the year and a day of the week, we can fix each
date of the year to a day of the week. While my algorithm uses Easter to do
this, general algorithms exist that allow the determination of the day of the
week for a particular year (see the Calendar FAQ).
Sundays in Advent are determined in the following
straightforward method. First, the feast of Christ the King is the Sunday on or
after 20 November; the First Sunday of Advent is the Sunday on or after 27 Nov.;
the Second Sunday of Advent is on or after 4 Dec.; the 3rd Sunday of Advent is
on or after 11 Dec.; finally, the 4th Sunday of Advent is on or after 18 Dec.
The day of the week that Christmas falls on can then be easily
determined.
Other Feasts that are listed by the Ecclesiastical Calendar are:
The Solemnity of Mary on 1 January; Epiphany
on 6 January (traditional) or the 2nd Sunday after Christmas; The
Presentation of the Lord on 2 February; The
Annunciation usually on 25 March; The Transfiguration of the
Lord on 6 August; The Assumption of Mary on 15 August;
The Birth of Virgin Mary on 8 September; The
Celebration of the Holy Cross on 14 September; The Mass of the
Archangels on 29 September; and All Saints' and
All Souls' on 1 November and 2 November, respectively.
I still have limited the determination of these feasts to dates in the
Gregorian Calendar. It is not impossible to calculate feasts for dates before
then - I just have not done it. In addition, until recently some of the
celebrations I list may not have been standard, defined, or celebrated on the
dates currently listed. (In particular, some of the celebrations may have been
celebrated on different dates before Vatican II).
- "The Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Ephemeris
and American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac" (1961, Her Majesty's
Stationery Office [QB8.G82.1962]) has tables for calculating Easter, as well
as the dates various countries/regions adopted the Gregorian calendar, and
other very useful information on calendars and ephemerides. Many of the
relevant sections may be found at Calendars and their
History.
- The Calendar FAQ by Claus
Tondering answers many questions concerning calendars, leap years, the
Christian, Hebrew, and Islamic calendars. Check this out if you want to find
the algorithm for making a Hebrew calendar.
- The Easter-Date
FAQ has useful historical and algorithmic information on how the date of
Easter is determined.
- "Practical Astronomy with your Calculator" (2nd Edition, 1981,
Cambridge University Press) by Peter Duffett-Smith has many useful algorithms,
including the calculation of the date of Easter in the Gregorian Calendar that
I use.
- "Butcher's Ecclesiastical Calendar" (1867) is the original source
of the algorithm that I use.
- "The Gregorian Calendar" (1982 May, Scientific American,
Vol. 246, No.5, p 144) by Gordon Moyer is a very good review about the
adoption of the Gregorian Calendar.
- Special thanks to Matthew Bear (mtbear@mit.edu) who provided many
useful comments within a week after the page was publicly advertised. I have
made some changes based on information he has provided, but I have not had the
time to make all the changes.
- Special thanks also to Alex Kochergin who provided me with pretty
much ALL the information here regarding the dates and celebrations in the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
- A note about different calendars: dates in the Hebrew, Islamic, Julian,
ISO, Mayan, French Revolutionary and Julian (astronomical) date calendar, as
well as their correspondence to dates in the Gregorian calendar may be found
using the "calendar" mode in the Free Software Foundation's GNU Emacs
(at least since version 19.28.1 - it may have been available in earlier
versions, too). To get to calendar mode in these versions of Emacs, use the
sequence "Meta-x calendar". This will keep you occupied if you enjoy
calendars.
- Calendrical
Calculations, a very useful book by Dershowitz & Reingold.
- An almanac that has a list of Easter dates through 2100 is the World
Almanac (Mahwah, NJ: Funk and Wagnalls, 1994). I suspect other almanacs
also have tables like this - I have not read all of them.
- This form was made using routines from the cgi-lib.pl package by
Steven E. Brenner.
Folks providing links to this page (incomplete)
This
list is extremely incomplete and seriously out of date. Many people
have links to my pages now, and it would take up an inordinate amount of space
to list all of them. I keep this section since it lists the first folks that I
know about that provided links to this hierarchy of pages. Thanks to
everyone who provides links to this page.
- William Morris' New
Easter Dates, with dates calculated using the propsed Aleppo formula.
- Dave Goode's Orthodox
Ecclesiastical Calculator using Javascript
- The Royal Greenwich
Observatory's Leaflets on the Date
of Easter, the
Calendar, and Leap
Years
- How Easter Date is
determined, an excellent, clear and colorful presentation on determining
the date of Easter, along with Mallen's algorithm.
- Henk
Reints' Collection of Easter Algorithms
- A Simplified Easter Dating
Method by R.W. Mallen, Adelaide, Australia
- A Calendar of Jewish Feasts
by B'nai B'rith
- Andrew McNab's Perpetual Calendar
Form
- Festivals and
Holidays
- Today's Calendar
and Clock Page has links to information and calendars from many different
types, including (but not limited to) Jewish, Islamic, and Chinese.
- Kalendar for Today
gives information about readings and what feast or celebration might be today.
- The
Catholic Calendar Page has beautiful and informative calendars for the
current year.
- The Calendar
FAQ, by Claus Tondering is an
excellent resource.
- The World Wide Holiday and
Festival Page by Brian Prescott-Decie contains links to pages with both
religioious and secular holidays.
- Easter,
Rosh Hashanah, and Passover by William H. Jefferys
- The Date of
Easter from the Anglican Diocese of Ely
- Dates of Ash
Wednesday and Easter Sunday and The Date of Easter
from the Astronomical Application Dept.
of the U.S. Naval Observatory
- The Liturgy of the Hours
- General Roman
Calendar of Feasts, Solemnities, and Memorials
- Kenneth Bath's ROMCAL Version 3,
C source code for a program to generate a Roman Catholic Calendar, including
support for generating color PostScript and HTML calendars.
- If you liked this page, please visit my American Secular Holidays
Page.
The views and writings presented here are my
own, and are NOT the responsibility of Smart Net.
I have consulted many sources, and I believe that the work I have presented
is correct. However, since sometimes hardware and/or software misbehave in
subtle ways, and since I may, on occassion, mistype, or even accidentally use
wrong or mistaken sources, the following disclaimer applies to all the pages in
this hierarchy:
IF YOU ARE USING THESE DATES TO PLAN TRAVEL,
MEETINGS, OR FOR ANY USE REQUIRING THE EXPENDITURE OF MONEY, TIME, OR OTHER
RESOURCES, PLEASE CONSULT OTHER SOURCES TO VERIFY THE DATES OF THE VARIOUS
HOLIDAYS. Neither Marcos Montes nor anyone who owns the hardware or manages the
host machines of this home page, nor anyone who has contributed any information
that I have used on these pages, may be held financially responsible, or
responsible in any way, if these dates are wrong. The user assumes full
responsibilty for the consequences of using this information.
Top | Resources and
Acknowledgements | Some links to this page
| Related Links | DISCLAIMER
Last updated 2001 July 31.
Copyright © 1996-2001 by Marcos J. Montes.
Marcos J.
Montes
My American
Calendar Page.
http://www.smart.net/cgi-bin/mailto/mmontes