The ancient Romans made many attempts to fix the calendar year before landing on 12 months and leap years
The ancient Romans made many attempts to fix the calendar year before landing on 12 months and leap years

Why Julius Caesar's Year of Confusion was the longest year in history

I edited the title because my grammar is terrible
bastards could have at least not fucked up october november and december
I mean, March used to be the first month. Traditionally, New Year used to be a spring holiday. In Ukraine, the original lyrics of the Carol of the Bells sing about the spring beginning
March or April being the first month honestly would make so much more sense
Ukraine recently moved it back though to align with the Western New Year celebrations if I recall correctly. More of a "fuck Russia we're gonna do our own thing" cultural move.
"But my ego demands I name a month after myself and I'll be damned if it's one of those bloody cold months at the end of the year!"
Let's see, if we had 10 months we'd need 5 months of 36 days and 5 of 37 days. Each month is a little over 5 weeks, which is 35 days. Maybe 10 months of 35 days and a special month of 15 days.
(I still prefer 13 months of 28 days with 1 extra day, but superstitious people don't like 13.)(I also like my personal idea of 6 day weeks with 4 days working and 2 days off. That leaves 1 odd week of 5 days.)
Alright, hear me out. We go with the 10 months of 35 days and a special month of 15 days, but the 15 days is just one giant celebration. Just 15 days of nothing but arts and crafts and hanging out with friends.
Yeah, 4-day working week is long overdue