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CALENDAR

997

and the 10th is consequently the ninth day of the moon. Again, suppose it were required to find the moon’s age on the 2nd of December in the year 1916. In this case the golden number is (1916 +1/19)r = 17, and in Table III., opposite to 1900, the line of epacts is B. Under 17, in line B, the epact is 25′. In the calendar this epact first occurs before the 2nd of December at the 26th of November. The 26th of November is consequently the first day of the moon, and the 2nd of December is therefore the seventh day.

Easter.—The next, and indeed the principal use of the calendar, is to find Easter, which, according to the traditional regulation of the council of Nice, must be determined from the following conditions:—1st, Easter must be celebrated on a Sunday; 2nd, this Sunday must follow the 14th day of the paschal moon, so that if the 14th of the paschal moon falls on a Sunday then Easter must be celebrated on the Sunday following; 3rd, the paschal moon is that of which the 14th day falls on or next follows the day of the vernal equinox; 4th the equinox is fixed invariably in the calendar on the 21st of March. Sometimes a misunderstanding has arisen from not observing that this regulation is to be construed according to the tabular full moon as determined from the epact, and not by the true full moon, which, in general, occurs one or two days earlier.

From these conditions it follows that the paschal full moon, or the 14th of the paschal moon, cannot happen before the 21st of March, and that Easter in consequence cannot happen before the 22nd of March. If the 14th of the moon falls on the 21st, the new moon must fall on the 8th; for 21 – 13 = 8; and the paschal new moon cannot happen before the 8th; for suppose the new moon to fall on the 7th, then the full moon would arrive on the 20th, or the day before the equinox. The following moon would be the paschal moon. But the fourteenth of this moon falls at the latest on the 18th of April, or 29 days after the 20th of March; for by reason of the double epact that occurs at the 4th and 5th of April, this lunation has only 29 days. Now, if in this case the 18th of April is Sunday, then Easter must be celebrated on the following Sunday, or the 25th of April. Hence Easter Sunday cannot happen earlier than the 22nd of March, or later than the 25th of April.

Hence we derive the following rule for finding Easter Sunday from the tables:—1st, Find the golden number, and, from Table III., the epact of the proposed year. 2nd, Find in the calendar (Table IV.) the first day after the 7th of March which corresponds to the epact of the year; this will be the first day of the paschal moon, 3rd, Reckon thirteen days after that of the first of the moon, the following will be the 14th of the moon or the day of the full paschal moon. 4th, Find from Table I. the dominical letter of the year, and observe in the calendar the first day, after the fourteenth of the moon, which corresponds to the dominical letter; this will be Easter Sunday.

Table IV.—Gregorian Calendar.
Days.Jan.Feb.March.April.May.June. July.August.Sept.October.Nov.Dec.
EL EL EL EL EL EL EL EL EL EL EL EL 
 1 *A29D *D29G28B27E 26G25 24C23F22A21D20F
 229B28E29E28A27C25 26F 25′25A23D22G21B20E19G
 328C27F28F27B26D25 24G 24B22E21A20C19F18A
 427D25 26G27G25′26C25′25E23A 23C21F20B19D18G17B
 526E25 24A26A25 24D24F22B 22D20G19C18E17A16C
 625′25F23B25′25B23E23G21C 21E19A18D17F16B15D
 724G22C24C22F22A20D 20F18B17E16G15C14E
 823A21D23D21G21B19E 19G17C16F15A14D13F
 922B20E22E20A20C18F 18A16D15G14B13E12G
1021C19F21F19B19D17G 17B15E14A13C12F11A
1120D18G20G18C18E16A 16C14F13B12D11G10B
1219E17A19A17D17F15B 15D13G12C11E10A 9C
1318F16B18B16E16G14C 14E12A11D10F 9B 8D
1417G15C17C15F15A13D 13F11B10E 9G 8C 7E
1516A14D16D14G14B12E 12G10C 9F 8A 7D 6F
1615B13E15E13A13C11F 11A 9D 8G 7B 6E 5G
1714C12F14F12B12D10G 10B 8E 7A 6C 5F 4A
1813D11G13G11C11E 9A  9C 7F 6B 5D 4G 3B
1912E10A12A10D10F 8B  8D 6G 5C 4E 3A 2C
2011F 9B11B 9E 9G 7C  7E 5A 4D 3F 2B 1D
2110G 8C10C 8F 8A 6D  6F 4B 3E 2G 1C *E
22 9A 7D 9D 7G 7B 5E  5G 3C 2F 1A *D29F
23 8B 6E 8E 6A 6C 4F  4A 2D 1G *B29E28G
24 7C 5F 7F 5B 5D 3G  3B 1E *A29C28F27A
25 6D 4G 6G 4C 4E 2A  2C *F29B28D27G26B
26 5E 3A 5A 3D 3F 1B  1D29G28C27E25′26A25′25C
27 4F 2B 4B 2E 2G *C  *E28A27D26F25 24B24D
28 3G 1C 3C 1F 1A29D 29F27B25′26E25′25G23C23E
29 2A 2D *G *B28E 28G26C25 24F24A22D22F
30 1B 1E29A29C27F 27A25′25D23G23B21E21G
31 *C *F28D 25′26B24E22C19′20A


Example.—Required the day on which Easter Sunday falls in the year 1840? 1st, For this year the golden number is (1840 +1/19)r = 17, and the epact (Table III. line C) is 26. 2nd, After the 7th of March the epact 26 first occurs in Table III. at the 4th of April, which, therefore, is the day of the new moon. 3rd, Since the new moon falls on the 4th, the full moon is on the 17th (4 + 13 = 17). 4th, The dominical letters of 1840 are E, D (Table I.), of which D must be taken, as E belongs only to January and February. After the 17th of April D first occurs in the calendar (Table IV.) at the 19th. Therefore, in 1840, Easter Sunday falls on the 19th of April. The operation is in all cases much facilitated by means of the table on next page.

Such is the very complicated and artificial, though highly ingenious method, invented by Lilius, for the determination of Easter and the other movable feasts. Its principal, though perhaps least obvious advantage, consists in its being entirely independent of astronomical tables, or indeed of any celestial phenomena whatever; so that all chances of disagreement arising from the inevitable errors of tables, or the uncertainty of observation, are avoided, and Easter determined without the

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