bn:00048545n
Noun Concept
Categories: Eastern Orthodox liturgy, All articles needing additional references, Julian calendar, Articles with short description, Liturgical calendars
EN
Julian calendar  Old Style calendar  Imperial civil calendar  Christian calendar  Julian calendar is this July
EN
The solar calendar introduced in Rome in 46 b.c. by Julius Caesar and slightly modified by Augustus, establishing the 12-month year of 365 days with each 4th year having 366 days and the months having 31 or 30 days except for February WordNet 3.0
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EN
The solar calendar introduced in Rome in 46 b.c. by Julius Caesar and slightly modified by Augustus, establishing the 12-month year of 365 days with each 4th year having 366 days and the months having 31 or 30 days except for February WordNet 3.0 & Open English WordNet
The Julian calendar is a solar calendar of 365 days in every year with an additional leap day every fourth year. Wikipedia
Introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BC, a reform of the Roman calendar Wikipedia Disambiguation
Arithmetic solar calendar system, with a 365-day year, plus one day intercalated into one of the 12 months during some years; preceded the Gregorian calendar for civil use Wikidata
The calendar which was used in the western world before the present-day Gregorian calendar. The Julian calendar differed in having all multiple-of-4 years as leap years. Wiktionary