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Julian to Gregorian Date Converter — Old Style to New Style | LazyTools
Historical Calendar Tool

Julian to Gregorian Date Converter — Old Style to New Style Calendar

Convert dates from the Julian calendar (Old Style, OS) to the Gregorian calendar (New Style, NS) and back. The Julian and Gregorian calendars differ by a growing number of days — 10 days at the 1582 Gregorian reform and 13 days in the 20th century. Furthermore, the Calendar Difference tab shows the exact Julian–Gregorian offset for every century from 200 CE to 2100 CE in a single reference table.

Julian ↔ GregorianCentury difference table1582 reform shownHistorical chronologyJDN calculation

How to use the Julian to Gregorian Date Converter

1
Enter a Julian calendar date
Enter the day, select the month and type the Julian year. Furthermore, the tool defaults to 4 October 1582 — the last day of the Julian calendar before the Gregorian reform began. The Gregorian equivalent of this date was 15 October 1582 — the 10-day jump that launched the new calendar.
2
Click Convert to Gregorian
The result shows the Gregorian equivalent alongside the Julian–Gregorian offset in days for that period. Furthermore, the offset increases over time: it was 10 days at the 1582 reform and is 13 days in the 20th and 21st centuries.
3
Convert a Gregorian date to Julian
Click the Gregorian → Julian tab and enter any Gregorian date. Furthermore, the Julian equivalent appears with the day offset clearly stated — useful for historians converting modern anniversary dates back to the Julian calendar notation used in original sources.
4
View the Calendar Difference table
Click the Calendar Difference tab to see the Julian–Gregorian offset for every century from 200 CE to 2100 CE. Furthermore, the 1582 reform row is highlighted — showing that 4 October 1582 (Julian) was immediately followed by 15 October 1582 (Gregorian).
5
Use for historical date research
Historical dates in England (before 1752), Russia (before 1918) and other countries using the Julian calendar appear in Old Style (OS) notation. Furthermore, converting these to Gregorian (New Style, NS) is essential for accurate chronology in historical research.

The Julian–Gregorian difference by century

The Julian calendar has simpler leap year rules than the Gregorian — every year divisible by 4 is a leap year in the Julian system. Furthermore, this produces too many leap years over time, causing the Julian calendar to drift behind the Gregorian at a rate of approximately 3 days per 400 years.

PeriodJulian behind Gregorian byNote
Before 15820–10 daysJulian calendar was the standard
1582–170010 daysGregorian reform — "10 days lost"
1700–180011 days1700 was not a Gregorian leap year
1800–190012 days1800 was not a Gregorian leap year
1900–210013 days1900 was not a Gregorian leap year
From 210014 days2100 will not be a Gregorian leap year

Countries that adopted Gregorian late

Different countries adopted the Gregorian calendar at very different times. Furthermore, England and its colonies (including the American colonies) switched in September 1752 — at which point the offset had grown to 11 days. Moreover, Russia switched in February 1918 after the Bolshevik Revolution — skipping 13 days. This means many historical dates in Russian documents before 1918 are in Julian (Old Style).

How Julian to Gregorian conversion works

The conversion uses Julian Day Numbers as an intermediary. Furthermore, both calendars express their dates as JDNs using different formulas — the Julian formula has no century correction terms, while the Gregorian formula subtracts century years not divisible by 400.

Julian JDN = D + ⌊(153m+2)/5⌋ + 365Y + ⌊Y/4⌋ − 32083
Julian formula = same as Gregorian but without the −⌊Y/100⌋ + ⌊Y/400⌋ corrections
Conversion = Julian date → Julian JDN → Gregorian date from same JDN
Offset = Julian JDN − Gregorian JDN (for same nominal date) = days Julian is ahead
In 2025 = Julian calendar is 13 days behind Gregorian

Worked example: the Gregorian calendar reform of 1582

When Pope Gregory XIII introduced the Gregorian calendar in October 1582, 10 days were skipped. The day after Thursday 4 October 1582 (Julian) was Friday 15 October 1582 (Gregorian).

Julian dateGregorian equivalentOffset
4 October 1582 (Julian)14 October 1582 (Gregorian)10 days
5 October 1582 (Julian)15 October 1582 (Gregorian)10 days (Gregorian reform began)
25 December 1642 (Julian)4 January 1643 (Gregorian)10 days (Newton's birth)
14 February 1918 (Julian)1 March 1918 (Gregorian)13 days (Russia switches)
Isaac Newton's birth date illustrates the confusion well. He was born on 25 December 1642 in the Julian calendar (Old Style) — which corresponds to 4 January 1643 in the Gregorian calendar (New Style). Furthermore, this is why some sources cite Newton's birth year as 1642 and others as 1643.

What is the Julian calendar?

The Julian calendar was introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BCE as a reform of the Roman calendar. Furthermore, it set the year at 365.25 days by adding a leap day every 4 years without exception. This was more accurate than earlier Roman calendars but still slightly too long — gaining approximately 11 minutes per year over the true solar year.

By 1582, the Julian calendar had drifted 10 days ahead of the solar equinox. Furthermore, this meant the vernal equinox — originally set at 21 March by the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE — was falling on 11 March. Pope Gregory XIII reformed the calendar to correct this drift and prevent it from recurring. Moreover, the Gregorian reform removed the extra days and introduced the century-year exception to the leap year rule.

Old Style and New Style dates

Historians use "Old Style" (OS) for Julian calendar dates and "New Style" (NS) for Gregorian dates. Furthermore, many historical documents from countries that switched late — England, Russia, Eastern Orthodox countries — use OS dates. Converting these to NS for modern calendars requires knowing the exact offset for the year in question. Moreover, some historical documents include both styles, written as "3/14 November 1700" — Julian date first, Gregorian second.

Why Julian to Gregorian conversion matters

Historical research regularly requires date conversion. Documents from England before September 1752, Russia before February 1918 and Greece before 1923 use Julian dates. Furthermore, comparing events from these countries with contemporaneous Gregorian-calendar events requires converting all dates to a common system. Moreover, genealogical records, legal documents and ecclesiastical records from these periods all use Julian dating.

The Eastern Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar for its liturgical calendar. Furthermore, Christmas and Easter in the Orthodox tradition fall on Julian calendar dates — which correspond to Gregorian dates 13 days later in the 20th and 21st centuries. This is why Orthodox Christmas falls on 7 January in the Gregorian calendar while Western Christmas is 25 December. Moreover, this difference will increase to 14 days from the year 2100 onwards.

How Newton's birth year illustrates the date ambiguity

Isaac Newton was born on 25 December 1642 in the Julian calendar — the date recorded in English documents of the period. Furthermore, in the Gregorian calendar, this date is 4 January 1643. This is why Newton appears in some sources with a birth year of 1642 and in others with 1643. Moreover, this ambiguity appears throughout English historical records from before September 1752 — the date England adopted the Gregorian calendar.

Frequently asked questions

"Old Style" (OS) refers to dates in the Julian calendar. "New Style" (NS) refers to the Gregorian calendar. Furthermore, historical documents from England, Russia and other late-adopting countries often use Julian dates without indicating they are Old Style. Historians append "(OS)" or "(Julian)" to clarify. Moreover, some documents include both, e.g. "3/14 March 1700" where the first number is Julian and the second is Gregorian.
England and its colonies (including the American colonies) adopted the Gregorian calendar in September 1752. Furthermore, the switch skipped 11 days — the day after 2 September 1752 was 14 September 1752. This affected all British territories, meaning American historical records before this date use Julian dating. Moreover, this transition explains why George Washington's recorded birthday changed from 11 February to 22 February Old Style vs New Style.
Russia adopted the Gregorian calendar on 14 February 1918 (New Style), following the Bolshevik Revolution. Furthermore, the switch skipped 13 days — the day after 31 January 1918 (Julian) was 14 February 1918 (Gregorian). This means all Russian records before this date use Julian dating. Moreover, the "October Revolution" of 1917 is so called because it occurred in October 1917 (Julian) — which corresponds to early November 1917 in the Gregorian calendar.
In the 21st century (from 1900 to 2099), the Julian calendar is 13 days behind the Gregorian. Furthermore, this means the Julian calendar date of 1 March 2025 corresponds to Gregorian 14 March 2025. From 2100 onwards, the difference increases to 14 days because 2100 is a Gregorian non-leap year but a Julian leap year.
The Julian calendar treats every year divisible by 4 as a leap year. Furthermore, the Gregorian calendar skips the leap day in century years not divisible by 400 — so 1700, 1800 and 1900 were not Gregorian leap years. Each skipped leap day adds one more day of offset. Moreover, the cumulative offset grows by approximately 3 days per 400 years. Since the Gregorian reform in 1582, four century years have been skipped (1700, 1800, 1900, and 2100 will be the fifth) — adding 3 days to the original 10-day offset.

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