How it was told
The clock strikes midnight and you embrace the nearest friend/family/partner/stranger and raise the nearest glass of fizz to a toast.
Auld Lang Syne breaks out and the sounds of Jools Holland and Hogmanay fade into the background. It’s new year, time to ring in 2019 and hope it’s a better year than 2018. But is that true for everybody? No, we don’t mean the New Zealanders letting off the fireworks 12 hours before us. There are plenty of other calendars and for the people who follow them 2019 is just a number.
Facts. Checked.
While we follow the Gregorian calendar – as does most of the world – it may not be too much of a surprise that things are done a little differently in North Korea.
Pyongyang switched to the Juche calendar in 1997, basing the years on founder of the democratic republic Kim Il-sung’s birthday in 1912. How modest. That year is designated as Juche 1 which makes 2019 actually 107 while Kim’s birthday is known as the Day of the Sun and is considered the North Korean equivalent of Christmas.
Armenia also eschews the Gregorian calendar and will be wondering what all the fuss is about while we let off the midnight fireworks. They celebrate new year on their equivalent of July 11 and is also a spring chicken with the year at a mere 1467. That’s down to the calendar kicking off in 552 and having a no leap year rule, meaning that its correspondence with the Gregorian calendar changes over time.
Still with us? OK, we’ll pivot to the Julian calendar instead. This one’s dead easy – it’s just 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar. Why, you ask? Power-hungry Julius Caesar didn’t much fancy the Roman calendar – which underpins the Gregorian and Julian – and wanted to keep it in line with the tropical year. So he made 46 BC 445 days long to compensate and here we are, although it is almost no use to anyone but the Eastern Orthodox Church and a variation on it used by a North African ethnic group called the Berbers.