French Revolutionary CalendarThe French Revolutionary Calendar or French Republican Calendar is a calendar proposed during the French Revolution, and in use by the French government for 13 years from 1793. It was abolished by Napoléon partly to appease the Catholic Church, which opposed the calendar because it abolished the Sabbath, but mainly because he had crowned himself Emperor of the French in December 1804 and had created the new Empire's Nobility during the year 1805. These were both concepts that were incompatible with the fundamental tenets of the calendar. It was designed by mathematician Gilbert Romme, although is usually attributed to Fabre d'Églantine, who invented the names of the months and the days. The calendar was adopted by the Jacobin-controlled National Convention on October 24, 1793. Years appear in writing as Roman numerals, counted from the beginning of the 'Republican Era', beginning on September 22 1792 (the day of the proclamation of the French First Republic, one day after the Convention abolished the monarchy). As a result the calendar is based on a date one year before it was actually adopted. Napoléon finally abolished official use of the calendar on January 1, 1806 (in fact at midnight, the 10 nivôse year XIV aka December 31, 1805), thirteen years after its introduction. However, it was to be used again during the brief 1871 Paris Commune. Revolutionary Calendar year began in autumn equinox and had twelve months of 30 days each, which were given new names based on nature: Autumn:\n*Vendémiaire (from Latin vindemia "vintage") Starting Sept 22, 23 or 24\n*Brumaire (from French brume "mist") Starting Oct 22, 23 or 24\n*Frimaire (From French frimas "frost") Starting Nov 21, 22 or 23\nWinter:\n*Nivôse (from Latin Nivosus "snowy") Starting Dec 21, 22 or 23\n*Pluviôse (from Latin pluviosus "rainy") Starting Jan 20, 21 or 22 \n*Ventôse (from Latin ventosus "windy") Starting Feb 19, 20 or 21\nSpring:\n*Germinal (from Latin germen "seed") Starting Mar 20 or 21\n*Floréal (from Latin flor "flower") Starting Apr 20 or 21\n*Prairial (from French prairie "meadow") Starting May 20 or 21\nSummer:\n*Messidor (from Latin messis "harvest") Starting Jun 19 or 20\n*Thermidor (from Greek thermos "hot") Starting Jul 19 or 20\n*Fructidor (from Latin fructus "fruits") Starting Aug 18 or 19 Note that the English names are approximate, as most of the month names were new words coined from similar French, Latin or Greek words. The endings of the names are grouped by season. \nThe month divides into 3 "weeks" each of ten days, named simply: \n*primidi\n*duodi\n*tridi\n*quartidi\n*quintidi\n*sextidi\n*septidi\n*octidi\n*nonidi\n*décadi. Instead of each day having a Saint as in the Catholic Church's calendar, each day has a plant, a tool or an animal associated with it. Five left-over days (six in leap years) were used as national holidays at the end of every year. These were known at first as Les Sans-Culottides (after the sans-culottes), and after the year III (1795) as les jours complémentaires:
External link\n*http://prairial.free.fr/calendrier/sommaire.html (fr es en eo pt de nl)\n*Date converter for numerous calendars, including this one (which they call the "French Republican Calendar") Category:Specific calendars\nCategory:French Revolution \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n |
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