46 BC, The Longest Year (2024)

46 BC, The Longest Year (1)

I took this photograph of the clock in the old town square in Prague a few years ago. The clock dates from 1410 and was made by Mikuláš of Kadaň, clockmaker and Jan Šindel, astronomer and mathematician. It is an amazing work of art and science. In addition to the time, the clock shows the relative positions of the sun, moon, and constellations of the zodiac. It is the oldest working astronomical clock.

It takes about 365.2422 days for the Earth to revolve around the sun, not something that has always been well reflected in the calendar. The calendar of the Roman Republic fell short more than 10 days each year which meant that the seasons drifted against the calendar. The years were periodically reconciled with the addition of a “mensis intercalaris” – a.k.a. Mercedonius from merces for wages - although it was not systematically applied, and even used by the pontifex maximus for political reasons.

For not only in very ancient times was the relation of the lunar to the solar year in great confusion among the Romans, so that the sacrificial feasts and festivals, diverging gradually, at last fell in opposite seasons of the year, but also at this time people generally had no way of computing the actual solar year;-Plutarch, (late 1st century - early 2nd AD) The Life of Julius Caesar 59.2​ 

Ovid, in the first book of Fasti describes the New Year in Rome. January first starts the new year and the month is named for Janus who can see both ahead and behind. The Kalends was the first day of the month.

KALENDS IAN. 1st: See Janus comes, Germanicus, the herald of a lucky year to thee, and in my song takes precedence. Two-headed Janus, opener of the softly gliding year, thou who alone of the celestials dost behold thy back, O come propitious to the chiefs whose toil ensures peace to the fruitful earth, peace to the sea.-Ovid (published 8 AD), Fasti Book 1.63​ 

Ovid goes on to have a conversation with Janus asking questions about various New Year’s traditions – worth a visit to the link above. I am intrigued by the sky sparkling with fragrant fires, and Cilician saffron crackling on kindled hearths. Also interesting to note that January 1 was a workday for the Romans, "assigned the birthday of the year to business, lest from the auspice idleness infects the whole".

46 BC, The Longest Year (3)

Roman Republican Didrachm or Quadrigatus 225-212 BC 6.4g, 22mm

Obv: Laureate head of Janus.

Rev: Jupiter, holding sceptre and thunderbolt, in quadriga driven by Victory; incuse ROMA on raised rectangle.

In 46 BC - the calendar was off by 90 days. Julius Caesar was exposed to more functional calendar systems in Egypt and one of his enduring changes was the Julian calendar, only slightly adjusted as the Gregorian calendar that we use today. From 46 BCE, The Julian calendar added days to the months to get to 365 days in the year and created the leap year every 4 years to stay aligned with the sun.

Caesar laid the problem before the best philosophers and mathematicians, and out of the methods of correction which were already at hand compounded one of his own which was more accurate than any. This the Romans use down to the present time, and are thought to be less in error than other peoples as regards the inequality between the lunar and solar years.-Plutarch, The Life of Julius Caesar 59.5​ 

The Julian calendar was still in use when Mikuláš of Kadaň and Jan Šindel built their clock in 1410. However, the calendar was running fast by 11 min and 14 seconds a year, which by AD 1582 had become 10 days and needed adjustment by Pope Gregory and Christopher Clavius, a Jesuit astronomer. There was a 3 day discrepancy every 400 years, they adjusted the leap days put in place by Julius Caesar and Sosigenes of Alexandria, to have leap days in years ending in 00 only if they are divisible by 400 (eliminating 3 leap years every 400 years) – he also took 10 days out of October 1582 by jumping from the 4th to the 15th. Pope Gregory’s calendar took a while to be adopted – the British Empire didn’t adopt it until the 18th century.

The calendar that Sosigenes and Caesar created aligned against the backdrop of the stars.

Between the winter solstice and the period when the west winds begin to prevail, the following, according to Caesar, are the more important signs afforded by the constellations: the Dog sets in the morning, upon the third day before the calends of January; a day on the evening of which the Eagle sets to the people of Attica and the adjoining countries. On the day before the nones of January, according to Caesar's computation, the Dolphin rises in the morning, and on the next day, the Lyre, upon the evening of which the Arrow sets to the people of Egypt.-Pliny the Elder (1st Century AD), Natural History, 18.64​ 

Julius Caesar had to add 90 days as 2 "intercalary months" and an extra 23 days to February to the year 46 BCE – to realign – making the year 46 BC, 445 days long – the longest year.

Caesar therefore began the new arrangement of the calendar by using up all the days which could still have caused confusion, with the result that the last of the years of uncertainty was prolonged to one of four hundred and forty-three days. Then, copying the Egyptians – the only people who fully understood the principles of astronomy – he endeavored to arrange the year to conform to the duration of the course of the sun, which it takes three hundred and sixty-five days and a quarter to complete.-Macrobius, (5th century AD) Saturnalia XIV​ 

Macrobius seems to have made a 2 day math error and 445 is accepted based on other sources including Censorinus – who describes in this way Caesar's correction of the calendar in 46 BC.

The confusion was such that Caius (Julius) Cæsar, sovereign-pontiff, resolved in his third consulate and that of M. Emilius Lepidus to destroy the effects of past abuses by placing between the months of November and December, two intercalary months of 67 days, although he had already intercalated 23 days in the month of February, which gave 445 days to that year; and at the same time to prevent the return of similar errors, he suppressed the intercalary month, and established the civil year after the course of the sun.-Censorinus, (3rd century AD) De Die Natali XX​ 

Given this large shift it is surprising how little comment there is about difficulty with new calendar – perhaps that is because the Roman economy already found the calendar an unreliable and inconvenient tool. I suspect that today we would find a 445 day year a little more disruptive. Plutarch does relate that some were irritated:

"However, even this furnished occasion for blame to those who envied Caesar and disliked his power. At any rate, Cicero the orator, we are told, when some one remarked that Lyra would rise on the morrow, said: "Yes, by decree," implying that men were compelled to accept even this dispensation."-Plutarch, The Life of Caesar 59.6

Here are three Roman Republican denarii from the longest year, 46 BC.

46 BC, The Longest Year (4)

Mn. Cordius Rufus, c. 46 BC, AR Denarius, Rome mint

Obv: RVFVS IIIVIR, Conjoined heads of the Dioscuri right, wearing filleted pilei surmounted by stars

Rev: MN CORDI downwards (mostly off-flan), Venus Verticordia standing left, holding scales and scepter; Cupid on her shoulder

Ref: Crawford 463/1b; Sear, CRI 63a; Cordia 1

46 BC, The Longest Year (5)

Mn. Cordius Rufus, c. 46 BC, AR denarius, Rome mint

Obv: RVFVS Corinthian helmet with crest, owl standing above / MN CORDIVS

Rev: Aegis of Minerva, head of Medusa at center

Ref: Cordia 4; Syd. 978; C463/2

46 BC, The Longest Year (6)

T. Carisius, c. 46 BC, AR Denarius, Rome mint

Obv: Diademed and winged bust of Victory right, S.C. behind, wearing earring and necklace; jeweled hair pulled into knot

Rev: T. CARISI in exergue, Victory driving galloping biga right, holding reins and wreath

Ref: Crawford 464/4; CRI 72; Sydenham 986

I have seen 46 BC referred to as teh "last year of confusion" and to add to the confusion.

Apparently the first implementation of the Julian calendar was misunderstood and added a leap year every three years, which was corrected by Augustus who omitted the leap days between 8 BC and 8 AD to get back on track. Leap days added every four years after that. The month of Sextilius was eventually named for Augustus - it is fitting that the 8th month was named for Octavian, the month whne he first became consul and when Egypt came under the control of Rome.

"Augustus deinde est qui Sextilis antea vocabatur, donec honori Augusti daretur ex senatusconsulto cuius verba subieci: CUM IMPERATOR CAESAR AUGUSTUS MENSE SEXTILI ET PRIMUM CONSULATUM INIERIT. ET TRIUMPHOS TRES IN URBEM INTULERIT. ET EX IANICULO LEGIONES DEDUCTAE SECUTAEQUE SINT EIUS AUSPICIA AC FIDEM. SED ET AEGYPTUS HOC MENSE IN POTESTATEM POPULI ROMANI REDACTA SIT. FINISQUE HOC MENSE BELLIS CIVILIBUS INPOSITUS SIT. ATQUE OB HAS CAUSAS HIC MENSIS HUIC IMPERIO FELICISSIMUS SIT AC FUERIT. PLACERE SENATUI UT HIC MENSIS AUGUSTUS APPELLETUR."-Macrobius, XII.35-36 

Note: first published 9/16/202 and revised 12/31/2023

46 BC, The Longest Year (2024)

FAQs

46 BC, The Longest Year? ›

On Sosigenes' advice, Caesar added another two never-before-seen months to the year 46BC, one of 33 days and one 34, to bring the calendar in line with the Sun. The additions made the year the longest in history at 445 days long, with 15 months.

Why was 46 BCE called the year of Confusion? ›

In order to resolve previous years of incorrect calendaring, Caesar declared that 46 BCE would act as a 445-day transitional year. This has become known as the Year of Confusion.

What happened in 46 BC? ›

Civil War: January 4 – Titus Labienus fights Julius Caesar in the Battle of Ruspina. April - Caesar defeats Pompey loyalists at Thapsus. April 6 – Caesar defeats the combined army of Pompeian followers and Numidians under Metellus Scipio and Juba I of Numidia at Thapsus.

Why did the year 46 BCE have 445 days? ›

To align the civic and solar calendars, Caesar added days to 46 bce, so that it contained 445 days. Because of misunderstandings, the calendar was not established in smooth operation until 8 ce.

What was the longest year in human history? ›

The calendar that Sosigenes and Caesar created aligned against the backdrop of the stars. Julius Caesar had to add 90 days as 2 "intercalary months" and an extra 23 days to February to the year 46 BCE – to realign – making the year 46 BC, 445 days long – the longest year.

What calendar was used during Jesus time? ›

The Julian calendar is the one that was introduced in the year 46 BC by Julius Caesar to all of the Roman Empire, and it is the calendar that was used during the life of Jesus Christ and at the time of the early Church.

What happened to the calendar in 46 BC? ›

On Sosigenes' advice, Caesar added another two never-before-seen months to the year 46BC, one of 33 days and one 34, to bring the calendar in line with the Sun. The additions made the year the longest in history at 445 days long, with 15 months.

Why is it no longer BC? ›

The term BC stands for "Before Christ" and AD stands for Anno Domini, Latin for the "Year of Our Lord". Because non-Christians do not consider Jesus to be their "Lord", scholars developed the non-religious term "the Common Era", abbreviated CE. BCE stands for "Before the Common Era."

What is the oldest BC year recorded? ›

As such, adjusting for modern systems of time, the first recorded year corresponded to 4241 BCE, a date held by both Egyptians and those living in Mesopotamia. However, describing the actual names and the chronological makeup these ancient cultures used to establish this date are beyond the scope of this asset.

How did the Romans solve the confusion in time Telling? ›

The Romans used various ancient timekeeping devices. According to Pliny, Sundials, or shadow clocks, were first introduced to Rome when a Greek sundial captured from the Samnites was set up publicly around 293-290 BC., with another early known example being imported from Sicily in 263 BC.

Who still uses the Julian calendar? ›

The Julian Calendar was helpful when it was created, but it's not used much anymore. The Gregorian Calendar is simply more accurate, so that's what most countries use today. Some Orthodox churches, like the Orthodox Church in Russia, still use the Julian Calendar today to calculate the dates of moveable feasts.

Why was January named after Janus? ›

According to tradition, during his reign (c. 715–673 BCE) Numa revised the Roman republican calendar so that January replaced March as the first month. It was a fitting choice, since January was named after Janus, the Roman god of all beginnings; March celebrated Mars, the god of war.

How the leap year is called the year of confusion? ›

To fix his culture's calendar, Roman emperor Julius Caesar created the Year of Confusion when he decided that the year 46 B.C. was going to be 445 days long instead of 365 days long. He then made a 365.25-day year—a tiny bit longer than the 365.2422 solar year—that added a leap day every fourth year.

What's significant about the year 146 BCE? ›

The Battle of Carthage in 146 bce ended generations of war between the Phoenician-founded city and Rome, both vying for control of the Mediterranean Sea.

Why do years go backwards in BCE? ›

The work brought the A.D. system to the attention of more people and expanded it to include years before A.D. 1. Prior years were numbered to count backward to indicate the number of years an event had occurred "before Christ" or "B.C."

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