|
Easter
is an annual festival observed throughout
the Christian world. The date for Easter
shifts every year within the Gregorian
Calendar. The Gregorian Calendar is the
standard international calendar for civil
use. In addition, it regulates the
ceremonial cycle of the Roman Catholic and
Protestant churches. The current Gregorian
ecclesiastical rules that determine the
date of Easter trace back to 325 CE at the
First Council of Nicaea convened by the
Roman Emperor Constantine. At that time
the Roman world used the Julian Calendar
(put in place by Julius Caesar).
The Council decided to keep Easter on a
Sunday, the same Sunday throughout the
world. To fix incontrovertibly the date
for Easter, and to make it determinable
indefinitely in advance, the Council
constructed special tables to compute the
date. These tables were revised in the
following few centuries resulting
eventually in the tables constructed by
the 6th century Abbot of Scythia, Dionysis
Exiguus. Nonetheless, different means of
calculations continued in use throughout
the Christian world.
In 1582 Gregory XIII (Pope of the Roman
Catholic Church) completed a
reconstruction of the Julian calendar and
produced new Easter tables. One major
difference between the Julian and
Gregorian Calendar is the "leap year
rule". See our FAQ on Calendars for a
description of the difference. Universal
adoption of this Gregorian calendar
occurred slowly. By the 1700's, though,
most of western Europe had adopted the
Gregorian Calendar. The Eastern Christian
churches still determine the Easter dates
using the older Julian Calendar
method.
The usual statement, that Easter Day is
the first Sunday after the full moon that
occurs next after the vernal equinox, is
not a precise statement of the actual
ecclesiastical rules. The full moon
involved is not the astronomical Full Moon
but an ecclesiastical moon (determined
from tables) that keeps, more or less, in
step with the astronomical Moon.
The ecclesiastical rules are:
- Easter
falls on the first Sunday following the
first ecclesiastical full moon that
occurs on or after the day of the
vernal equinox;
- this
particular ecclesiastical full moon is
the 14th day of a tabular lunation (new
moon); and
- the
vernal equinox is fixed as March
21.
Resulting
in that Easter can never occur before
March 22 or later than April 25. The
Gregorian dates for the ecclesiastical
full moon come from the Gregorian tables.
Therefore, the civil date of Easter
depends upon which tables - Gregorian or
pre-Gregorian - are used. The western
(Roman Catholic and Protestent) Christian
churches use the Gregorian tables; many
eastern (Orthodox) Christian churches use
the older tables based on the Julian
Calendar.
In a congress held in 1923, the eastern
churches adopted a modified Gregorian
Calendar and decided to set the date of
Easter according to the astronomical Full
Moon for the meridian of Jerusalem.
However, a variety of practices remain
among the eastern churches.
There are three major differences between
the ecclesiastical system and the
astronomical system.
- The
times of the ecclesiastical full moons
are not necessarily identical to the
times of astronomical Full Moons. The
ecclesiastical tables did not account
for the full complexity of the lunar
motion.
- The
vernal equinox has a precise
astronomical definition determined by
the actual motion of the Sun. It is the
precise time at which the apparent
longitude of the Sun is zero degrees.
This precise time shifts within the
civil calendar very slightly from year
to year. In the ecclesiastical system
the vernal equinox does not shift; it
is fixed at March 21 regardless of the
actual motion of the Sun.
- The
date of Easter is a specific calendar
date. Easter starts when that date
starts for your local time zone. The
vernal equinox occurs at a specific
date and time all over the Earth at
once.
Inevitably,
then, the date of Easter occasionally
differs from a date that depends on the
astronomical Full Moon and vernal equinox.
In some cases this difference may occur in
some parts of the world and not in others
because two dates separated by the
International Date Line are always
simultaneously in progress on the
Earth.
For example, take the year 1962. In 1962,
the astronomical Full Moon occurred on
March 21, UT=7h 55m - about six hours
after astronomical equinox. The
ecclesiastical full moon (taken from the
tables), however, occured on March 20,
before the fixed ecclesiastical equinox at
March 21. In the astronomical case, the
Full Moon followed its equinox; in the
ecclesiastical case, it preceeded its
equinox. Following the rules, Easter,
therefore, was not until the Sunday that
followed the next ecclesiastical full moon
(Wednesday, April 18) making Easter
Sunday, April 22.
Similarly, in 1954 the first
ecclesiastical full moon after March 21
fell on Saturday, April 17. Thus, Easter
was Sunday, April 18. The astronomical
equinox also occurred on March 21. The
next astronomical Full Moon occurred on
April 18 at UT=5h. So in some places in
the world Easter was on the same Sunday as
the astronomical Full Moon.
Following are dates of Easter from 2006 to
2023:
|
2006
-
|
April
16
|
|
2015
-
|
April
5
|
|
2007
-
|
April
8
|
|
2016
-
|
March
27
|
|
2008
-
|
March
23
|
|
2017
-
|
April
16
|
|
2009
-
|
April
12
|
|
2018
-
|
April
1
|
|
2010
-
|
April
4
|
|
2019
-
|
April
21
|
|
2011
-
|
April
24
|
|
2020
-
|
April
12
|
|
2012
-
|
April
8
|
|
2021
-
|
April
4
|
|
2013
-
|
March
31
|
|
2022
-
|
April
17
|
|
2014
-
|
April
20
|
|
2023
-
|
April
9
|
|