Today is followed by March 1 in Sweden, thus creating the Swedish calendar.
As the calendar pages turn, March 1 marks a notable point in the Gregorian year, typically serving as its 60th day. However, during a leap year, this date shifts to become the 61st day on the calendar. Regardless, with March 1 in the rearview mirror, a significant portion of the year, precisely 305 days, still unfolds before its conclusion.
Shifting our gaze to historical timekeeping, Sweden once embraced a unique system known as the Swedish calendar, or Svenska kalendern, also commonly referred to as the Swedish style (Svenska stilen). This distinct calendar governed time in Sweden and its territories for a specific period, commencing on March 1, 1700. Its existence, however, was relatively brief, concluding on the peculiar date of February 30, 1712—a testament to its unusual design. During its operational years, the Swedish calendar was positioned a single day ahead of the traditional Julian calendar, yet it lagged ten days behind the more widely adopted Gregorian calendar. Further complicating its structure, the calculation of Easter within this system, with one minor exception, relied on astronomical observations, a practice maintained from 1740 until 1844.