Sansculottides
The Sansculottides were the five complementary days—known as jours sansculottides—added at the end of each year in the French Republican Calendar, with a sixth day inserted in leap years to align the 360-day structure of twelve 30-day months with the solar year of approximately 365 days; these days functioned as national holidays dedicated to celebrating revolutionary virtues including virtue, genius, labor, opinion or reason, and rewards, along with the Revolution itself in leap years.[1][2] Enacted by decree of the National Convention on 14 Frimaire Year II (24 October 1793 in the Gregorian calendar), the Sansculottides derived their name from the sans-culottes, the militant working-class revolutionaries of Paris who wore trousers rather than aristocratic breeches and embodied the radical egalitarian ethos of the Jacobin phase of the French Revolution.[1] These holidays fell outside the decimal-based décades (10-day weeks) and months named for natural phenomena, such as Fructidor for harvest fruits, reflecting the calendar's broader aim to supplant the Christian Gregorian system with a rational, secular framework tied to seasonal cycles and equinoxes.[2][1] The Sansculottides underscored the revolutionary government's de-Christianization efforts, positioning public festivals on these days to promote civic virtues over religious observances, though practical resistance from rural populations and inconsistencies in leap-year adjustments limited widespread adoption.[2] Abolished by Napoleon in 1805 alongside the full calendar, they remain a notable emblem of the era's utopian reforms, highlighting tensions between imposed rationality and entrenched traditions.[1]Historical Context
The French Republican Calendar
The French Republican Calendar was established by the National Convention on October 5, 1793, amid the revolutionary dechristianization campaign, which sought to dismantle the Gregorian calendar's ties to Christian liturgy, saints' commemorations, and monarchical precedents in favor of a secular, nature-based system.[3] This reform aligned with broader efforts to purify public life of religious influence, including the suppression of ecclesiastical holidays and the promotion of civic virtues over theological observances.[4] The calendar's structure emphasized decimal rationality and astronomical alignment, with the new year beginning on the autumnal equinox—fixed around September 22 Gregorian—to anchor timekeeping in observable celestial events rather than papal decrees.[3] It consisted of 12 months, each precisely 30 days long, yielding 360 days annually, with the remaining days adjusted to match the solar cycle; months were further organized into three décades of 10 days apiece, supplanting the seven-day week to facilitate metric consistency in temporal divisions.[1][5] Month nomenclature reflected seasonal realities and agricultural rhythms, promoting a materialist worldview: Vendémiaire evoked the grape harvest, Thermidor signified scorching heat, and others like Frimaire (frost) and Floréal (blossoming) tied nomenclature to empirical natural cycles, eschewing anthropomorphic or divine references.[3] This design pursued scientific uniformity, extending to experimental decimal timekeeping—dividing days into 10 hours of 100 minutes each—to harmonize measurement with the metric system's base-10 logic, though practical resistance limited its enforcement.[6][7] The overall intent was causal realism in chronology, prioritizing verifiable phenomena over inherited customs to foster revolutionary ideology.[3]Emergence of the Sans-Culottes
The sans-culottes emerged as a distinct radical faction among the Parisian working classes during the early phases of the French Revolution, particularly from mid-1792 onward, comprising artisans, shopkeepers, and laborers who rejected the silk knee-breeches (culottes) worn by the upper classes in favor of practical long trousers (pantalons).[8] [9] This sartorial distinction underscored their self-identification as the authentic representatives of the sovereign people, contrasting with the perceived elitism of revolutionary deputies and moderates.[8] Their political activism intensified through the 48 sections of Paris, where they demanded price controls on bread and other essentials to combat inflation and shortages, alongside calls for expanded suffrage and purges of suspected aristocrats or Girondin sympathizers.[10] [11] In August 1792, the sans-culottes mobilized decisively in the uprising of 10 August, when approximately 20,000 armed militants from the sections stormed the Tuileries Palace, massacring much of the king's Swiss Guard and compelling Louis XVI's suspension, thereby precipitating the monarchy's collapse and the convening of the National Convention.[8] [12] This event, driven by fears of royalist counter-revolution amid military defeats, elevated their status as kingmakers who compelled politicians to court popular support.[10] Shortly after, from 2 to 7 September, sans-culottes-led mobs conducted the September Massacres, summarily executing around 1,100 to 1,600 prisoners deemed threats to the Republic, an outburst of vigilantism that pressured the Convention toward more radical measures without formal trials.[8] [11] Under the Jacobin dominance from 1793 to 1794, the sans-culottes reached their zenith of influence during the Reign of Terror, functioning as informal enforcers who backed Maximilien Robespierre's Committee of Public Safety in implementing the levée en masse—a decree of 23 August 1793 mandating universal conscription that mobilized over 1 million men—and enforcing the Maximum on grain prices to address subsistence crises.[9] [10] Operating through sectional assemblies and the Revolutionary Army, they exerted bottom-up coercion on deputies, advocating for de-Christianization campaigns and the elimination of "enemies of the people," though their agency often amplified rather than originated top-down policies amid wartime exigencies.[8] This period symbolized their embodiment of direct popular sovereignty, influencing the choice to name the Republican Calendar's complementary days Sansculottides as a tribute to their purported role as the Revolution's unbreeched guardians.[11] Their ascendancy eroded rapidly following the Thermidorian Reaction of 9 Thermidor Year II (27-28 July 1794), when Convention moderates arrested Robespierre and dismantled the radical apparatus, associating the sans-culottes with the Terror's estimated 16,000 to 40,000 executions and economic disruptions.[10] [9] Subsequent repressions disbanded sectional militias, closed Jacobin clubs, and quelled sans-culottes insurrections like the failed journée of 1 Prairial Year III (20 May 1795), as Thermidorians prioritized stability and property rights over populist demands, leading to the faction's marginalization by 1795.[8] [10]Establishment and Structure
Legislative Introduction in 1793
The Sansculottides were established by decree of the National Convention on October 24, 1793, as the five complementary days concluding the French Republican Calendar's twelve 30-day months.[1] This reform, part of broader efforts to rationalize timekeeping and sever ties with the Gregorian calendar's religious origins, positioned the days immediately after Fructidor at the year's end.[1] The decree took effect retroactively from September 22, 1792, marking the start of Year I on the autumn equinox and the Republic's founding.[1] Poet and deputy Philippe Fabre d'Églantine, tasked with naming the calendar's elements, initially referred to these epagomenal days as jours complémentaires but advocated renaming them Sansculottides during debates on October 24, 1793.[17] He argued the term complementaires lacked national resonance and proposed Sansculottides—derived from sans-culottes, the breeches-wearing revolutionary militants—to evoke the populace's unadorned liberty, tracing it symbolically to ancient unbreeeched Gauls.[17] This shift honored the sans-culottes' role in the Revolution's radical phase, infusing the holidays with ideological fervor amid the Reign of Terror.[17] In common years, the Sansculottides comprised five non-working holidays; leap years, occurring every four years to synchronize with solar cycles, added a sixth day termed the Journée de la Révolution.[1][17] Intended as secular festivals supplanting saints' days, they promoted virtues like labor and reason over ecclesiastical commemorations, aligning with dechristianization campaigns.[14]Composition of the Complementary Days
The Sansculottides comprised five days added immediately after the 360 days of the twelve 30-day months in the French Republican Calendar, extending the common year to 365 days.[15] These days fell in late September according to the Gregorian calendar, positioned between the end of Fructidor and the start of Vendémiaire.[5] In leap years, which occurred every four years to maintain rough synchrony with the solar cycle, a sixth day known as the Jour de la Révolution was inserted following the five Sansculottides but preceding Vendémiaire's first day, yielding 366 days total.[15][16] The Sansculottides stood apart from the calendar's standard décade system, under which months were grouped into 10-day cycles with a rest day on the tenth (décadi); instead, these days were designated as holidays without incorporation into the décade sequence, effectively pausing the routine work patterns of the 36 annual décades from the months.[16][5]Thematic Content and Symbolism
Festivals and Dedications
The five Sansculottides, proposed by Philippe Fabre d'Églantine in his report to the National Convention on 24 October 1793, were established as national holidays to honor key republican ideals through public ceremonies and festivities.[17] These days followed the 360-day structure of the twelve months, occurring roughly mid-September in the Gregorian calendar, and served as occasions for civic renewal without religious connotations.[15] The first day, designated Primidi or Fête de la Vertu, was dedicated to moral integrity and civic duty, featuring public gatherings where citizens renewed vows of liberty, equality, and fraternity while pledging opposition to threats against the republic.[17] The second, Duodi or Fête du Génie, celebrated human intellect, invention, and the arts, with exhibitions of mechanical and fine works, presentations by innovators, and awards to those advancing useful knowledge.[17] The third, Tridi or Fête du Travail, recognized productive labor and manual effort, positioning it as a counter to pre-revolutionary aristocratic leisure and idleness, often through communal acknowledgments of workers' contributions.[15][18] The fourth day, Quartidi or Fête de l'Opinion (sometimes rendered as Fête de la Raison), promoted open public discourse and reasoned critique, allowing citizens to voice grievances, ideas, and satirical commentary on government without fear of reprisal, thereby fostering accountability through transparent debate.[16][15] The fifth, Quintidi or Fête des Récompenses, involved ceremonies of national gratitude, publicly awarding merits and honors to individuals for services rendered to the republic, emphasizing recognition of patriotic deeds.[17] In leap years (every four years, specifically years 3, 7, and 11 of the republican era), a sixth day, Sextidi or Fête de la Révolution, was inserted before the first, commemorating the transformative events of 1789 and the ongoing revolutionary process through solemn reflections on political upheaval.[15][18]Ideological Representation
The Sansculottides encapsulated the Jacobin pursuit of Enlightenment rationalism by instituting secular holidays that exalted abstract republican virtues—such as labor, genius, and reason—over the religious observances of the Gregorian calendar, which revolutionaries viewed as relics of feudal superstition and clerical dominance. This redesign aimed to reorient societal rhythms toward productive activity and scientific progress, with the five complementary days (six in leap years) serving as culminations of the year's cycle to reinforce a decimal-based temporal order divorced from ecclesiastical cycles.[19] The emphasis on labor as a dedicated holiday underscored a valorization of artisanal toil as the foundation of civic virtue, contrasting sharply with the leisure-associated feasts of the ancien régime that perpetuated class idleness.[20] In embodying Jacobin egalitarianism, the Sansculottides honored the sans-culottes as the unadorned exemplars of popular sovereignty, drawing from Jean-Jacques Rousseau's doctrine of the general will, which positioned the direct expression of the people's authentic voice against elite-mediated governance. This naming choice elevated the working-class radicals—symbolized by their rejection of aristocratic breeches—as the moral arbiters of the Republic, promoting a vision of equality rooted in communal labor and anti-corruption fervor rather than hierarchical privilege.[21][22] The anti-clerical dimension of these days facilitated dechristianization efforts by supplanting saint's days and Christian holidays with dedications to impersonal ideals, thereby aiming to dismantle the Catholic Church's temporal influence and recalibrate time measurement to Newtonian mechanics and empirical observation. This causal mechanism sought to embed revolutionary ideology in everyday chronology, eroding superstitious attachments to divine providence in favor of human agency and rational causality.[23]Implementation and Reception
Usage from 1793 to 1805
The Sansculottides were established as national public holidays through decrees of the National Convention, including the specification of their dedications—Virtue, Genius, Labor, Opinion, and Revolution—via the decree of 4 Frimaire Year II (24 November 1793), with a sixth day of Equality added in leap years starting Year III (1795).[24] In Paris, observance involved state-organized events such as assemblies, processions, and speeches, with a dedicated decree prescribing gatherings in the Palais garden for the final day to reinforce republican unity.[25] Contemporary records describe elaborate public spectacles, including a notable procession on the fifth Sansculottide (21 September 1794 Gregorian equivalent), highlighting their role in urban revolutionary pageantry.[26] Regional implementation diverged sharply from the capital's model, with enforcement hampered by rural skepticism toward dechristianization efforts and active resistance in counter-revolutionary zones like the Vendée, where civil war from March 1793 onward prioritized military suppression over calendar rituals.[27] [28] Provincial reports from representatives on mission reveal sporadic compliance, often limited to administrative centers, as local populations clung to Gregorian customs amid broader disruptions from federalist revolts and ongoing conflicts.[29] These days integrated into wider civic practices, such as year-end oaths of allegiance and mass gatherings symbolizing republican virtues, yet archival evidence from decrees and local correspondences indicates uneven application, sustained more by official symbolism in printed almanacs than widespread voluntary participation.[28] Outside Parisian sans-culotte strongholds, enthusiasm waned, with studies of popular reception underscoring their appeal confined primarily to radical urban networks rather than achieving broad societal embedding during the Directory period (1795–1799) and into the Consulate.[27]Contemporary Criticisms
Moderate revolutionaries, including surviving Girondin sympathizers, criticized the naming of the complementary days as Sansculottides for enshrining the influence of the radical Parisian sans-culottes, whom they regarded as a disruptive force prone to mob violence and excessive direct democracy that undermined representative institutions.[30] This nomenclature was seen as factional favoritism, elevating a specific revolutionary vanguard—characterized by their trousers-wearing proletarian identity and demands for price controls and purges—over the Convention's broader authority, potentially alienating provincial and bourgeois republicans who favored measured reform.[8] Administrative concerns emerged in legislative discussions, where deputies debated the clustering of these five holiday festivals at the year's end, arguing it interrupted the regular décades (10-day cycles) and concentrated non-productive time during the post-harvest period, exacerbating economic strains amid wartime shortages. Proposals surfaced to redistribute the days across months for smoother integration into work rhythms, aiming to balance ideological symbolism with practical continuity in labor and agriculture, though these were not adopted in the initial 1793 decree.[28] Public reception included widespread confusion and derision, as the Sansculottides' themes—Virtue, Genius, Labor, Opinion, and Revolution—clashed with ingrained rural calendars tied to seasonal sowing and traditional harvest feasts, leading to inconsistent observance and satirical mockery of the "precious" epagomenal names in pamphlets and local reports.[28] Such reactions highlighted a disconnect between urban revolutionary elites and provincial populations, who often reverted to Gregorian equivalents, viewing the festivals as artificial impositions that failed to supplant customary rhythms.[31]Controversies and Failures
Political Associations and Name Changes
The designation "Sansculottides" for the five (or six in leap years) complementary days at the end of the Republican year explicitly honored the sans-culottes, the militant urban laborers and artisans who formed the radical base of the revolutionary movement, advocating direct democracy, price controls, and aggressive measures against perceived enemies of the Republic. This naming, decreed on 24 October 1793 alongside the calendar's adoption, aligned the holidays with the sans-culottes' self-image as virtuous patriots rejecting aristocratic finery, but it also evoked their ties to extremist subgroups like the enragés—led by figures such as Jacques Roux—who demanded expropriation of the wealthy and enforcement of the Maximum on goods to combat hoarding and speculation.[14][32] Critics, particularly after the Thermidorian Reaction of July 1794 that toppled Robespierre and curbed Jacobin dominance, associated the Sansculottides with the Hébertist faction's promotion of déchristianisation campaigns and atheistic cults, viewing the days' festivals (e.g., of Reason, Labor, and Opinion) as vehicles for mob-orchestrated violence and populist demagoguery that had fueled the Terror's 16,000–40,000 executions.[33] Hébertists, executed en masse in March 1794 for their ultra-radicalism, had mobilized sans-culottes sections in Paris to pressure the Convention, linking the calendar's nomenclature to perceptions of unchecked anarchy and anti-clerical fervor that alienated moderates and contributed to the guillotine's excesses.[34] In response to these associations amid the Thermidorian purge of radical elements, the name "Sansculottides" was suppressed by late 1794, reverting to the neutral "jours complémentaires" to signal a break from the sans-culottes' influence, which waned as Thermidorian leaders consolidated power and prepared the more conservative Constitution of Year III (adopted 22 August 1795).[14][33] Defenders of the original naming, including surviving Montagnards, argued it symbolized popular sovereignty and the laboring classes' role in overthrowing monarchy, essential to the Revolution's egalitarian ethos; opponents, however, contended it pandered to violent factionalism, prioritizing symbolic flattery of the enragés and Hébertists over institutional stability, a critique that underscored broader post-Thermidor efforts to rehabilitate governance by distancing from the Terror's egalitarian extremes.[34] This renaming reflected causal shifts in power dynamics, where the sans-culottes' sectional assemblies were dissolved and their rhetoric marginalized to prevent recurrence of 1793–1794's upheavals.Practical and Economic Disruptions
The clustering of the five Sansculottides as consecutive holidays at the conclusion of the Republican year—equivalent to late September in the Gregorian calendar—imposed a block of non-productive days amid France's acute economic strains from 1793 to 1795, a period marked by war-induced shortages, hyperinflation of assignats exceeding 500% annually, and requisitioning that halved agricultural output in some regions. These holidays, intended as civic celebrations, compounded productivity losses by halting workshops, markets, and administrative functions for up to a week when aligned with adjacent décadis rest days, at a time when the Committee of Public Safety prioritized continuous labor to sustain revolutionary efforts.[35] Internal correspondence from the era, such as decrees enforcing work on traditional saints' days, reveals efforts to mitigate such interruptions, yet observance remained inconsistent, fostering reliance on informal Gregorian scheduling for essential trades.[36] Foreign rejection of the Republican Calendar exacerbated commercial disruptions, as no major trading partners adopted it, necessitating dual dating in bills of exchange and contracts to avoid mismatches— for instance, a payment due on the 1st Vendémiaire might fall mid-September Gregorian, complicating synchronization with British or Dutch merchants operating on the Julian-derived system.[36] This administrative friction contributed to delays in transatlantic shipments and port clearances, with French exporters reporting up to 10-15% losses from disputed due dates during the Continental System's precursors, while domestic markets saw black-market premiums for goods timestamped in the old calendar to evade revolutionary price controls.[37] Legislative debates in 1793 highlighted these issues, prompting provisional allowances for Gregorian use in financial instruments, underscoring the calendar's isolating effect on France's export-dependent economy, which relied on 40% overseas trade pre-revolution.[36] Rural economies, tied to seasonal fairs historically pegged to Gregorian dates, exhibited uneven compliance, with archival ledgers from Provence indicating persistent use of old almanacs for harvest sales despite mandates.[29]Abolition and Legacy
Termination Under Napoleon
The French Republican Calendar, encompassing the Sansculottides as its supplementary days, was formally abolished through an imperial decree promulgated on 9 September 1805 (corresponding to 22 Fructidor an XIII in the Republican reckoning), bearing Napoleon's signature and referencing a report by the astronomer Michel-Louis-Étienne Morin.[38][39] This measure directed an immediate reversion to the Gregorian calendar commencing 1 January 1806, thereby eliminating the Sansculottides—previously observed as non-working days dedicated to revolutionary virtues from 17 to 21 Fructidor (or adding a sixth day in leap years)—and restoring the traditional seven-day week with Christian holidays.[3] The termination stemmed from pragmatic imperatives of governance under the Napoleonic regime, particularly the exigency of synchronizing dates in international diplomacy and peace accords following the Treaties of Pressburg (December 1805) and subsequent negotiations, where discrepancies with foreign Gregorian usage had complicated treaties and correspondence.[38] Reinstatement of the Gregorian system also aligned with the Concordat of 1801, which had reestablished Catholic worship in France and necessitated calendar conformity to mitigate ecclesiastical tensions and bolster domestic stability amid post-revolutionary consolidation.[3] Napoleon's administration viewed the Republican Calendar's decimal structure and atheistic connotations as impediments to centralized order, especially as it had engendered administrative friction without achieving widespread societal embedding. The shift elicited negligible opposition, with official gazettes and civil registries effecting the change seamlessly by early 1806; the Sansculottides, already sporadically enforced and overshadowed by practical economic disruptions in prior years, faded without protest from revolutionary holdouts, reflecting the calendar's superficial entrenchment beyond elite and administrative circles.[38] This abrupt discontinuation underscored Napoleon's prioritization of functional uniformity over ideological experimentation, facilitating smoother integration into European norms during the Empire's expansion.[39]Long-Term Historical Evaluation
The Sansculottides offered a short-term mechanism for reinforcing revolutionary solidarity through dedicated festivals honoring secular virtues—such as Virtue on the first day, Genius on the second, Labor on the third, Reason or Opinions on the fourth, and Revolution on the leap-year fifth—providing communal celebrations that supplanted traditional religious observances and aligned with dechristianization campaigns from 1793 to 1795.[19] These events briefly enhanced unity among urban radicals, including sans-culottes, by embedding republican ideals into the annual cycle, while contributing to rudimentary secular education efforts that promoted rationalist thought over ecclesiastical dogma.[40] The decimal framework underpinning the calendar's structure, including the appended Sansculottides, reflected the same Enlightenment-driven push for base-10 uniformity that birthed the metric system in 1795, influencing its adoption by demonstrating the feasibility of systematic decimalization in standardization projects, though timekeeping proved less adaptable than measurement due to entrenched daily habits.[41] Long-term, the Sansculottides epitomized the pitfalls of revolutionary rationalism, collapsing under popular resistance to imposed innovations that disregarded deep-seated attachments to the seven-day sabbath and seasonal traditions, as the calendar's irregular rest cycles—clashing with market days and family routines—sparked economic friction and cultural alienation evident in uneven adoption rates even during enforcement from 1793 to 1805.[42] This failure underscored causal oversights in human psychology, where abstract redesign ignored organic temporal rhythms, yielding transient disruption rather than enduring reform; the swift reversion to the Gregorian calendar on January 1, 1806, without notable backlash against restoration, empirically validated the limits of top-down temporal engineering.[37] The Sansculottides thus symbolized hubristic overreach, mirroring how ideological fervor prioritized ideological purity over practicality, inadvertently amplifying the Reign of Terror's coercive dynamics by enforcing conformity in mundane life.[43] Interpretations diverge starkly: advocates of revolutionary progressivism hailed the Sansculottides for eroding clerical influence and seeding modern secularism, yet their confinement to a dozen years—followed by total obsolescence—debunks sustainability claims, as no comparable system revived despite subsequent atheistic movements.[44] Traditionalist perspectives, conversely, decry them as elite contrivances violating inherited social orders and natural-law embedded traditions, alienating the masses through disruptive festivals that masked authoritarian control as enlightenment, a pattern borne out by persistent folk adherence to old saints' days amid official mandates.[42] This duality highlights the Sansculottides' marginal historical footprint, preserved chiefly as a footnote in failed utopian experiments rather than a pivot in civilizational timekeeping.Calendar Mechanics
Integration with Decimal Time
The Sansculottides were positioned outside the French Republican Calendar's décades, the 10-day cycles that replaced weeks and aligned with decimal principles by dividing the 360-day year (12 months of 30 days) into exactly 36 such periods.[14] This exemption preserved the integrity of the décade structure, with rest days (décadis) occurring solely on the tenth day of each cycle within the months, underscoring the Sansculottides' distinct status as non-routine festival days dedicated to virtue, labor, and genius rather than standard civic or work rhythms.[45] Parallel to the calendar's decimal-inspired divisions, the revolutionary government experimented with decimal timekeeping from late 1793, redefining the solar day into 10 hours of 100 minutes each, with minutes and seconds similarly subdivided into 100 units, to extend metric rationality to daily measurement.[46] However, Sansculottide observances retained conventional solar day boundaries and duodecimal clock usage for public events, as decimal clocks—produced in limited numbers for institutions and enthusiasts—saw negligible adoption among the populace, limiting any practical linkage to mere ideological alignment.[47] By April 1795, widespread rejection of decimal time, evidenced by persistent use of traditional horology in markets, factories, and homes despite mandatory decrees, rendered the Sansculottides' integration with these reforms functionally inert, reducing it to a symbolic gesture within the era's failed metrification of temporality.[47][46]Conversion to Gregorian Equivalents
The Sansculottides, comprising five days in common years or six in leap years, followed immediately after 30 Fructidor and preceded the start of the next Republican year, typically aligning with mid-to-late September in the Gregorian calendar due to the calendar's structure of 360 regular days plus these extras totaling 365 or 366 days.[48] In Year I, a common year beginning 22 September 1792 Gregorian, 30 Fructidor fell on 16 September 1793, making the Sansculottides 17–21 September 1793.[48] This pattern held approximately for subsequent common years, with the five days generally corresponding to 17–21 September Gregorian, as the Republican year's fixed length closely matched non-leap Gregorian intervals in early usage.[48] In Republican leap years (years III, VII, and XI), the additional day extended the period to six days, typically 17–22 September Gregorian.[48] For Year III, starting 22 September 1794 Gregorian, the Sansculottides aligned with 17–22 September 1795.[48] Precise equivalents varied modestly across years owing to decrees setting each New Year's Day to the observed autumn equinox in Paris, which occasionally shifted the start to 21 or 23 September Gregorian rather than 22, thereby advancing or delaying the Sansculottides by one day.[49] Over the calendar's span, this resulted in the days beginning as early as 17 September or as late as 18 September, and ending near the equinox on 22 or 23 September.[48] Conversions can be computed by adding the cumulative days from the year's verified Gregorian start date, accounting for the 359 days to 30 Fructidor plus the Sansculottides sequence, with Republican almanacs or astronomical ephemerides providing equinox-based adjustments for accuracy.[49]| Republican Year | Type | Gregorian Equivalents |
|---|---|---|
| I (1792–1793) | Common | 17–21 September 1793 |
| II (1793–1794) | Common | 17–21 September 1794 |
| III (1794–1795) | Leap | 17–22 September 1795 |
| IV (1795–1796) | Common | 17–21 September 1796 |