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Date: | Thu, 29 Jan 2009 10:35:23 -0500 |
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Colleagues
The intricacies of the change in calendars has slipped away from my
original query in response to the date for Adam Smith's baptism (and
all his correspondence before 1752) and similar dated historical
events in the History of Economic Thought in that period and before.
The original enquiry was about whether as historians we write Adam
Smith's baptism as being 5 June, 1723 as recorded on his baptismal
certificate on the day he was baptised and as recorded on the
certificate in Registry House, or do we unilaterally change it
according to a calendar created and adopted in 1752 about 29 years later?
I asked what is the profession's view of these matters, as the
decision affects all documents, legal and otherwise, all letters and
all bills that passed through parliament.
It seems to me the administrative inconvenience of such a
post-editing of all such historical dates is riddled with lapses, and
likely to cause confusion when some historians retrospectively change
everything, some don't at all and some do one thing part of the time
and another thing when they forget, and many are not aware of the
issue at all.
The 'missing' 11 days in September 1752, only affects those days; the
alternative affects every single date for hundreds of years in the past.
So, has the profession made a decision on this? How many members of
HES follow one or other of the conventions?
Thank you
Gavin Kennedy
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