Читать книгу The Natural History of Pliny (Vol. 1-6) - Pliny the Elder - Страница 87

CHAP. 79. (77.)—OF THE MODE IN WHICH THE DAYS ARE COMPUTED.

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The days have been computed by different people in different ways. The Babylonians reckoned from one sunrise to the next; the Athenians from one sunset to the next; the Umbrians from noon to noon; the multitude, universally, from light to darkness; the Roman priests and those who presided over the civil day, also the Egyptians and Hipparchus, from midnight to midnight526. It appears that the interval from one sunrise to the next is less near the solstices than near the equinoxes, because the position of the zodiac is more oblique about its middle part, and more straight near the solstice527.

The Natural History of Pliny (Vol. 1-6)

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