Working Out the Date of Easter Day

Easter is the Christian celebration of the anniversary of the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. This happened at the Jewish festival of Passover, on a date representing the first Full Moon of Spring on the Jewish Calendar. Because of that, Easter Day is always the first Sunday after the first calculated Full Moon on or after March 21st. If the Full Moon is on a Sunday, Easter Day is on the next Sunday.

This means that Easter Day can be on any Sunday from March 22nd to April 25th!

For the past 1500 years, March 21st has been used to represent the date of the March equinox (the real equinox might be a day or two different). There are two equinoxes a year, one in March and one in September. Equinox means 'equal night' and on the Equinoxes the day and night are of the same length. The March Equinox is also known as the Vernal Equinox in the Northern Hemisphere and the Autumnal Equinox in the Southern Hemisphere.

Several methods have been used since early Christian times to work out the date of Easter Day. It was made more complicated in 1582 when Pope Gregory XIII replaced the old Roman 'Julian' calendar (started by Julius Caesar) with a new more accurate 'Gregorian' calendar, which most people still use today. In the UK, Easter was first calculated using the Gregorian calendar in 1753 when the country had changed calendars.

Catholic and western Christians now use the Gregorian calendar to find the date of Easter. However, some Orthodox churches celebrate Easter Day on a different day because they still use a different Calendar and also a different moon to calculate from.

In the Gregorian Calendar, Easter can be on the dates from March 22nd to April 25th.

The next time it will be on March 22nd (as early as it can be), will be in the year 2285. Easter last occurred on March 22nd in 1818! (However, in Orthodox churches in 2010 Easter was on March 22nd. It was on April 4th in the Gregorian calendar.)

In 2008, Easter was on March 23rd, about as early as it can be. This is probably the earliest Easter anyone reading this page will see in the rest of their lives! The next time Easter will be as early as in 2008 will be in the year 2160!

Calculating the Date of Easter

Working out the date of Easter Day is extremely tricky and you need to be pretty good at Maths to do it! There are still several version of how to calculate the date. Below is a version with all the complicated maths already done (it works for the Gregorian calendar for the years 1900 to 2199), so all you have to do is:

  1. Divide the year number by 19:
    2009/19=105.73
  2. Multiple the number before the decimal point by 19 (105 for 2009):
    105x19=1995
  3. Then subtract the result from Step 2 from the year number:
    2009-1995=14
  4. Add 1: 14+1=15
  5. Look up the 'Golden Number' in the following table (15 for 2009!).
    Easter is on the first Sunday after the date in the table.
    In 2009 Easter was on April 12th, so it works!
Golden Number Date Golden Number Date Golden Number Date
0 March 27 7 April 8 14 March 22
1 April 14 8 March 28 15 April 10
2 April 3 9 April 16 16 March 30
3 March 23 10 April 5 17 April 17
4 April 11 11 March 25 18 April 7
5 March 31 12 April 13 19 March 27
6 April 18 13 April 2

 

The number 19 is used to find the 'Golden Number' because the dates of Full Moons repeat, almost exactly, every 19 years. The dates in the table are the dates of the 'Paschal Full Moon' (a 'representative' Full Moon used in the calculations!), which represents the real Full Moon quite closely.

Use an Automatic Easter Date Calculator!

Here's a form where you can find the date of Easter in Western and Orthodox Church (and even the old Julian calendar) for years between 326 and 4099 AD.




(no longer used)

More about Dating Easter

If you'd like to know more about working out the date of Easter and things like Equinoxes, here are a some sites: