The French Revolutionaries invented a new Calendar

Minutes: 44% longer

Days: from 24 to 10 hours

The goal?

Make time-keeping more “scientific”

The result?

Total disaster

The story of the French Revolutionary Calendar banished by Napoleon, on this day, 217 years ago👇🏻
1/ This is a story of political arrogance

The revolutionaries overestimated the power of science

And underestimated the *stickiness* of religion

One hour = 100 minutes

One min = 100 seconds

New year shifted from 1st Jan to 22nd Sept

A radical attempt to redefine time itself
2/ The French revolutionaries adopted a new calendar for three reasons:

- To eliminate religious consciousness from the French society

- To make time more “rational”

- To announce the birth of an egalitarian era

In their zeal they forgot an important factor: human nature
3/ From 1793 to 1805 in France, 1 week had 10 days

The 7th day, traditionally a holiday - “holy day” - became a typical week day

Every 10th day was the rest day

John Quincy Adams called this change not just "irreligious" but also "superficially frivolous" and "coarsely vulgar"
4/ Sociologist Zerubavel notes that the 10-day week was meant to disrupt the “traditional, sacred seven-day cycle”

Purpose was to disorient people and make them lose track of “Sunday”

That is, the day for going to Church

And having a weekly sitdown with the divine
5/ The French Revolutionary Calendar was designed by the top experts of the day

The chief designer: CG Romme (Physics professor)

Mathematicians & astronomers chipped in

Tradition/old habits didn’t matter

The designers answered “solely to the principles of Reason and Science”
6/ Sociologist Zerubavel: “The Revolutionary Calendar was introduced in an age which advocated the total obliteration of the old order in the name of progress and modernity: the beginning of the new Republican Era marked the total discontinuity between past and present.”
7/ Every calendar has “critical dates” which are suffused with a symbolic importance

The Revolutionaries changed the first day of the year from January 1 to 22nd September - the day of the “foundation of the French Republic”

Society was to spin not around religion but politics
8/ Days which had a unique flavor due to their religious significance like “the saints' days, Sunday and the Church's religious holidays” were abolished. Each day became mathematically and symbolically alike. Differences were to be erased - whether among people or on the calendar
9/ By adopting calendrical rhythms alien to the rest of the world

The French created artificial barriers to communication, understanding, and ultimately trade

How would you fix delivery schedules with a country whose calendar is untranslatable into yours?
10/ Imagine you’re a French peasant in 1793

The revolutionaries have not just beheaded the King and slaughtered their own

But have also made the week 10 days long

The day is now 10 hours, not 24

Your old clocks - and your old instincts - need to be thrown out
11/ By denouncing all authority as arbitrary, the revolutionary finally harms himself

On what grounds will HE govern once the king is gone?

In hindsight we can see the “boomerang effect” of the Calendar redesign

If the old dogmas were random

Why are the new ones any better?
12/ The people HATED the new Calendar

It made them work for 9 days straight instead of 6

Plus it was confusing

Special clocks were made to translate the Revolutionary calendar into the Gregorian calendar and back

People’s age-long habits were redesigned without their CONSENT
13/ STALIN imposed a new calendar too

The week was cut to 5 days to eliminate the holiday of Sunday

Days were assigned colors, and workers were given colors

When it was your colored day, you took a day off

Families and friends had different colors and so they never hung out
Here’s the French Revolutionary Calendar. Designed by the biggest scientific minds of the time. A failed dream and a symbolic warning. An attempt to restructure time by politics instead of the sacred. Reasonable, rational, and hence doomed. An emblem to the madness of equality.
Here’s the man who ended the tyranny of artificial time and took his country back to the Gregorian calendar

On this day, 217 years ago

Common Napoleon W
Balzac, the famous French novelist, was a big fan of Napoleon

He systematically went through 100s of Napoleon’s speeches & public gazettes

And collected his most interesting aphorisms and maxims

Here are Napoleon’s best insights on war, love, and more:

oldbooksguy.substack.com/p/thirty-bonap…
Enjoyed this thread?

Appreciate your time!

Pls RT! 👇🏻

Here's to aiming high in 2023, but not so high that we try to radically redefine the definition and experience of time itself

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Jash Dholani

Jash Dholani Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @oldbooksguy

Dec 29, 2022
What in the world explains the typewriter's better aesthetics compared to the laptop?
The functional inferiority makes for artistic superiority?

If your text is infinitely backspaceable, you write without pressure...but the friction of going back with a typewriter makes you weigh words in your mind before putting them down

More gravitas?
The laptop represents the Dystopian Triumph of the Corporate Bureaucratic Class. With infinite backspace you can keep iterating to satisfy everyone's agendas, egos, and IQ levels. Minute meaningless changes ad-nauseaum. A thousand taps going nowhere
Read 4 tweets
Dec 28, 2022
What are the greatest books of all time?

In 1952, Encyclopædia Britannica set out to answer this question

With two maverick Professors, Adler and Hutchins, they published 54 Volumes that covered 450+ books

10 interesting books from this list - with a powerful quote from each👇🏻 Mortimer Adler posing with the first 54 volume set
1/ Agamemnon by Aeschylus

The father of Tragedy as an art form

The father of the “trilogy” format which continues to thrive today

Never mentioned his writing career on his epitaph

Only talked about his war heroics

That’s Aeschylus

2 memorable quotes from a timeless play:
2/ History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides

The father of “Scientific History”

The first to show how international relations boils down to fear & self-interest

A quote from Pericles’ Funeral Oration👇🏻

A thrilling passage about heroism & the meaning of happiness:
Read 13 tweets
Dec 21, 2022
Julius Evola On Symbolism🧵

In his essay "The Inversion Of Symbols"

Evola writes that when a new ideology wins -

- It remakes not just politics but also the SYMBOLS of the old order

When communism won, it transformed the meaning of three important symbols👇🏻
1/ Evola writes that modern revolutionary movements take "the principles, the forms, and the traditional symbols" of healthier societies from the past and give them a new spin

He digs into 3 symbols

- The color red
- The word revolution
- The symbol of the pentagrammic star
2/ The color red

In Ancient Rome, the Emperor was dressed and dyed in purplish Red to "represent Jove, the King of the Gods"

In Catholicism, the "Princes of the Church,” the cardinals, wear a scarlet red robe

Traditionally, red has been linked with hierarchy, order, and power
Read 13 tweets
Dec 21, 2022
The paranoid schizophrenic is more correct than the normie - everything *is* connected
In a perverse way, the schizophrenic is also correct that he's the center of the world - religion also recommends that you act as if you were the spiritual center of the cosmos and all your decisions enormously important
The schizophrenic is correct too that he's a victim - in a sense, elements are always constantly conspiring against you. This world is not a vacation town but a battleground. But the schizophrenic gets the proportions wrong, and he places all agency outside of himself
Read 5 tweets
Dec 14, 2022
Today I discovered a 135 year old lecture

Delivered by a man who advised Kings & Prime Ministers

And was nominated 11 times for the Nobel in Literature

John Morley has great insights on:

- How aphorism is the hardest art form
- Why cynicism is always a bad option

And more👇🏻
1/ Aphorists have the “cursed ambition to put a whole book into a page, a whole page into a phrase, and the phrase into a word”

If art is succeeding within the limitations we set for ourselves, there are fewer art forms more limiting and more demanding than that of the aphorist
2/ Aphorisms can be neither “enigmatical” nor “flat”

A “truism” is not worth listening to while a “riddle” has no direct relevance to life

A great aphorism strikes the perfect balance between the two:

It speaks of a new insight that is confirmed by one’s oldest instincts
Read 14 tweets
Dec 12, 2022
First Patrick O'Brian couldn't crack the Royal Naval College entrance

Then he was permanently rejected from the Navy due to bad health

Using his obsession with the sea

He wrote Master and Commander: a naval thriller that broke records, spawned 20+ sequels, and became a movie👇🏻
John Milius, the writer behind Dirty Harry & Apocalypse Now, failed to become a Marine during the Vietnam war

He felt "rejected as a human being" and this caused a life-long obsession "with war"

Milius: "Every writer wishes he could actually be doing the thing he writes about."
Patrick O'Brian used his obsession, angst, and dreams of adventure to create Captain Jack Aubrey and his ship surgeon Stephen Maturin

They've been called the Sherlock Holmes and John Watson of the sea

And they argue all the time:
Read 9 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(