Leap week calendar


A leap week calendar is a calendar system with a whole number of weeks every year, and with every year starting on the same weekday. Most leap week calendars are proposed reforms to the civil calendar, in order to achieve a perennial calendar. Some, however, such as the ISO week date calendar, are simply conveniences for specific purposes.
The ISO calendar in question is a variation of the Gregorian calendar that is used in government and business for fiscal years, as well as in timekeeping. In this system a year has 52 or 53 full weeks.
Leap week calendars vary on whether the concept of month is preserved and whether the month has a whole number of weeks. The Pax Calendar and Hanke-Henry Permanent Calendar preserve or modify the Gregorian month structure. The ISO week date and the Weekdate Dating System are examples of leap week calendars that eliminate the month.
A leap week calendar can take advantage of the 400-year cycle of the Gregorian calendar, as it has exactly 20,871 weeks: with 329 common years of 52 weeks plus 71 leap years of 53 weeks, a leap week calendar would synchronize with the Gregorian every 400 years since

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