The History of Time: A Very Short Introduction
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Overview
An absorbing exploration of an aspect of our lives which we all take for granted
An accessible look at an immensely complicated subject, using original research and a range of tables and diagrams to fully explain the concepts involved
There is no comparable introduction to this subject available
Covers a wide range of cultures
Why do we measure time in the way that we do? Why is a week seven days long? At what point did minutes and seconds come into being? Why are some calendars lunar and some solar?
The organisation of time into hours, days, months and years seems immutable and universal, but is actually far more artificial than most people realise. The French Revolution resulted in a restructuring of the French calendar, and the Soviet Union experimented with five and then six-day weeks. Leofranc Holford-Strevens explores these questions using a range of fascinating examples from Ancient Rome and Julius Caesar's imposition of the Leap Year, to the 1920s' project for a fixed Easter.
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Author Information
Bio of Leofranc Holford-Strevens
Leofranc Holford-Strevens, a classicist, received a D.Phil from Oxford University in 1971. The author of Aulus Gellius (1988), and co-author of The Oxford Companion to the Year (OUP 1999), he is a desk-editor with Oxford University Press. He has a long-standing interest in calendars, chronologies, and the calculation of time.
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Additional Info
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Filesize
5.52 MB
Number of Pages
160
eBook ISBN
9780191517068











