Pax Calendar


The Pax calendar was invented by James A. Colligan, SJ in 1930 as a perennializing reform of the annualized Gregorian calendar.

Design

No.NameDays
01January28
02February28
03March28
04April28
05May28
06June28
07July28
08August28
09September28
10October28
11November28
12Columbus28
13Pax 7
13/14December28

The common year is divided into 13 months of 28 days each, whose names are the same as in the Gregorian calendar, except that a month called Columbus occurs between November and December. The first day of every week, month and year would be Sunday.
Unlike other perennial calendar reform proposals, such as the International Fixed Calendar and the World Calendar, it preserves the 7-day week by periodically intercalating an extra seven days to a common year of 52 weeks.
In leap years, a one-week month called Pax would be inserted after Columbus.
To get the same mean year as the Gregorian Calendar this leap week is added to 71 of the 400 years in the cycle.
The years with leap week are years whose last two digits are a number that is divisible by six or 99: however, if a year number ending in 00 is divisible by 400, then Pax is cancelled.
Duncan Steel mentions the Pax Calendar proposal:

New Year's Day

Unlike the International Fixed Calendar, the Pax calendar has a new year day that differs from the Gregorian New Year's Day. This is a necessary consequence of it intercalating a week rather than a day.
The following tables compare the Gregorian dates of New Year's Day in the Pax Calendar for various years. Dates in December occur in the preceding Gregorian year. Dates in bold are Sundays. The Pax years run sequentially down each column, and a new column is begun when the year would need to go further up the column. Places marked "leap" means that there was no Pax year in the sequence which corresponded to that Gregorian date.
Jan 04 1931
Jan 03 1932 1937 1943
Jan 02 leap 1938 1944 1949 1955
Jan 01 1928 1933 1939 leap 1950 1956 1961 1967
Dec 31 leap 1934 1940 1945 1951 leap 1962 1968 1973 1979
Dec 30 1929 1935 leap 1946 1952 1957 1963 leap 1974 1980 1985
Dec 29 1930 1936 1941 1947 leap 1958 1964 1969 1975 leap 1986
Dec 28 leap 1942 1948 1953 1959 leap 1970 1976 1981 1987
Dec 27 leap 1954 1960 1965 1971 leap 1982 1988
Dec 26 leap 1966 1972 1977 1983 leap
Dec 25 leap 1978 1984 1989
Dec 24 leap 1990
Jan 02 2000
Jan 01 leap
Dec 31 2001 2007
Dec 30 1991 2002 2008 2013 2019
Dec 29 1992 1997 2003 leap 2014 2020 2025 2031
Dec 28 leap 1998 2004 2009 2015 leap 2026 2032 2037 2043
Dec 27 1993 1999 leap 2010 2016 2021 2027 leap 2038 2044 2049
Dec 26 1994 2005 2011 leap 2022 2028 2033 2039 leap 2050
Dec 25 1995 2006 2012 2017 2023 leap 2034 2040 2045 2051
Dec 24 1996 leap 2018 2024 2029 2035 leap 2046 2052
Dec 23 leap leap 2030 2036 2041 2047 leap
Dec 22 leap 2042 2048 2053
Dec 21 leap 2054
The next table shows what happens around a typical turn of the century and also the full range of 19 days that the Pax Calendar New Year Day varies against the Gregorian calendar.
Jan 06 2301 2307
Jan 05 2302 2308
Jan 04 2303 leap
Jan 03 2304 2309
Jan 02 2101 2107 leap 2310
Jan 01 2102 2108 2305 2311
Dec 31 2103 leap 2300 2306 2312
Dec 30 2104 2109 leap
Dec 29 leap 2110
Dec 28 2105 2111 2291
Dec 27 2100 2106 2112 2292 2297
Dec 26 leap leap 2298
Dec 25 2293 2299
Dec 24 2091 leap 2294
Dec 23 2092 2097 2295
Dec 22 leap 2098 2296
Dec 21 2093 2099 leap
Dec 20 2094
Dec 19 2095
Dec 18 2096

Alternative proposals by Colligan

Colligan published multiple alternative methods of organising the months, including three 12-month plans in addition to the 13-month plan, and in a follow-up work focuses on two possible 12-month calendars, in which Pax would be between September and October. He also provided two alternatives to the leap week plan, either extending one or two Mondays per year to 48 hours or making Pax a month of 28 or 21 days to be added 18 times in 400 years.