When did Nuremberg adopt the Gregorian Calendar?When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?What was the motivation for the Gregorian Calendar?Who uses a pre-“Gregorian” calendar and why?Where and when was the shortest calendar day in history, due to DST and calendar changes, etc?Why does the Gregorian calendar start where it does?Were the dates of saints days moved as part of the Gregorian calendar reforms?When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?How was debt handled in the change over from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian?Correspondence between the modern and the antique calendarWhy was the date moved by 10 days instead of 9 during Gregorian calendar reform?How old was the Egyptian calendar system?
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When did Nuremberg adopt the Gregorian Calendar?
When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?What was the motivation for the Gregorian Calendar?Who uses a pre-“Gregorian” calendar and why?Where and when was the shortest calendar day in history, due to DST and calendar changes, etc?Why does the Gregorian calendar start where it does?Were the dates of saints days moved as part of the Gregorian calendar reforms?When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?How was debt handled in the change over from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian?Correspondence between the modern and the antique calendarWhy was the date moved by 10 days instead of 9 during Gregorian calendar reform?How old was the Egyptian calendar system?
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A similar question has been posed on this site in the past, "When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?. I'm trying to discern exactly when the city of Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar but haven't found a definitive answer yet.
Bavaria as a whole has a tradition of Catholic faith. Can we assume that Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar at 1583 along with the other Catholic states of the Holy Roman Empire? I would like to base my answer upon facts and not the assumptions I've made above if possible.
germany calendar holy-roman-empire
New contributor
add a comment |
A similar question has been posed on this site in the past, "When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?. I'm trying to discern exactly when the city of Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar but haven't found a definitive answer yet.
Bavaria as a whole has a tradition of Catholic faith. Can we assume that Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar at 1583 along with the other Catholic states of the Holy Roman Empire? I would like to base my answer upon facts and not the assumptions I've made above if possible.
germany calendar holy-roman-empire
New contributor
6
Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
5
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
3
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago
add a comment |
A similar question has been posed on this site in the past, "When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?. I'm trying to discern exactly when the city of Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar but haven't found a definitive answer yet.
Bavaria as a whole has a tradition of Catholic faith. Can we assume that Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar at 1583 along with the other Catholic states of the Holy Roman Empire? I would like to base my answer upon facts and not the assumptions I've made above if possible.
germany calendar holy-roman-empire
New contributor
A similar question has been posed on this site in the past, "When did Frankfurt am Main adopt the Gregorian Calendar?. I'm trying to discern exactly when the city of Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar but haven't found a definitive answer yet.
Bavaria as a whole has a tradition of Catholic faith. Can we assume that Nuremberg adopted the Gregorian Calendar at 1583 along with the other Catholic states of the Holy Roman Empire? I would like to base my answer upon facts and not the assumptions I've made above if possible.
germany calendar holy-roman-empire
germany calendar holy-roman-empire
New contributor
New contributor
edited 9 hours ago
Steve Bird
14.1k36471
14.1k36471
New contributor
asked 10 hours ago
forest_codesforest_codes
384
384
New contributor
New contributor
6
Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
5
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
3
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago
add a comment |
6
Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
5
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
3
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago
6
6
Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
5
5
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
3
3
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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According to this source, Nürnberg adopted the calendar in 1699:
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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According to this source, Nürnberg adopted the calendar in 1699:
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
add a comment |
According to this source, Nürnberg adopted the calendar in 1699:
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
add a comment |
According to this source, Nürnberg adopted the calendar in 1699:
According to this source, Nürnberg adopted the calendar in 1699:
answered 8 hours ago
Denis de BernardyDenis de Bernardy
17.3k25467
17.3k25467
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
I've accepted this answer. The additional information provided in the comments to my question add deeper contextual information and further support the answer provided, thank you.
– forest_codes
1 hour ago
add a comment |
forest_codes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
forest_codes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
forest_codes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Nuremburg was a Free Imperial City in 1583 and so there is no guarantee that it would have the same Catholic religion as Bavaria. Don't assume that a German city belonged to a principality - in this case Nuremburg was itself a state of the empire.
– MAGolding
8 hours ago
5
Nuremberg adopted Protestantism in 1525, thanks to Osiander and Lazarus Spengler, and thus was part of the Corpus Evangelicorum in the Regensburg Reichstag. So it's quite likely that Nuremberg followed the 1699 proposal of the Reichstag regarding the calendar reform in 1700 (just as comment since i can't provide any sources yet...)
– tohuwawohu
8 hours ago
3
Additional note: technically, the Nuremberg Council may in fact have adopted the Reichstag's recommendation in 1699. Its implementation may be a different question. Often, the calendar was adapted by leaving out 11 days in february 1700, so that march 1st followed on february 18.
– tohuwawohu
7 hours ago