answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Julius Caesar and Pope Gregory.

Someone had to do something in order to keep the seasons from drifting into different months. The exact length of a year - that is, how long it actually takes the earth to revolve around the sun - is 365.24219 days. That means if the calendar year were just 365 days, the seasons, which are determined by the position of the earth as it orbits the sun, would shift a quarter of a day every year. Not such a big deal, until 100 years go by and autumn is beginning in mid-August, 25 days earlier than it used to.

So, in 45 BC, Caesar decided to add a day at the end of February (back then, it was the last day of the year) every four years.

This was an improvement, because now the average calendar year was 365.25 days, which was closer to the actual year, but it still didn't fix the problem. At 365.25 days, now the calendar year was too long, and the seasons would eventually drift the other way, falling one day later every 128 years.

In 1582, Pope Gregory was apparently bothered enough by the shifting seasons that he decided to do something about it. In one fell swoop, he changed the end of the calendar year to December 31, he left 10 days out of October, and he added the "no leap year on a year divisible by 100 unless it's also divisible by 400" part of the rule.

Now the seasons were back in phase with the calendar, and the average calendar year was 365.2425 days, much closer to a true year.

The Gregorian calendar, with all of its leaping intricacies, is what we still use today in order to keep the seasons where they are supposed to be. But it has caused a problem for a unique segment of the world's population - those who don't get to celebrate quite as many birthdays as others do.

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Why was the day added to February?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is day and what is year?

A leap day/year is when on day is added on to February. It becomes February 29th.


What is a leap day and year?

A leap day/year is when on day is added on to February. It becomes February 29th.


How do you invert the sentence The month of February gains that day?

That day is added to the end of the month of February.


What month is a day added to for leap year?

February.


When a day is added in a leap year?

When a leap year happens, the new day is February 29.


Why did they add the extra day to February?

they added a extra day to february because in every 4 years there is 1/4 th of a day which is meant to be a extra day.


When is a extra day during a leap year?

It is added to the end of February, the second month of the year. In a regular year, the day after February 28 is March 1. In a leap year, the day after February 28 is February 29, and the day after February 29 is March 1.


Is there going to be an extra day in February 2012?

There will be 29 days in February this year instead of the usual 28. The 29th is called an intercalary day, a day added to the calendar.


Is one leap year is one day subtracted from the calendar?

In a Leap Year one day is added to the calendar - February 29.


Why is a day added to february every 4 years?

The reason is that it takes 365 and 1/4 days for the Earth to revolve once round the Sun - thus every 4 years we need to add an extra day to the year to make up for the 4 1/4 days. This day is added on to February as this is the shortest month.


When does the extra quarter day happen?

The quarter days are added together and every 4 years a day is added to a year, giving us the 29th of February, which is the leap day in the leap year. This keeps the calendars in synch with our orbit of the Sun.


What is special about February 28?

For 3 out of every 4 years, it is the last day of the month. In the 4th (Leap) year, an extra day, the 29th, is added.