Dieser Vorschlag wurde 1790 von Sieyès gemacht.

Revolutionäre waren von der Standardisierung besessen. Manchmal ging das einen Tick zu weit.

Auch die Namen der französischen Départements und Regionen wurden während der Revolution von ihren historischen Namen geändert und basierten mehr auf geografischen Markierungen und zufälligen Dingen, um den Einfluss des Adels zu beseitigen.

Sie versuchten es auch mit einem neuen Kalender, der jedoch schnell wieder aufgegeben wurde.

Von Solid-Move-1411

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38 Kommentare

  1. They were freestyling overthrowing an over 1000 year old world order so I’m willing to cut them some slack

  2. Own-Dust-7225 on

    As a Croatian, that one square is rightfully ours. I demand it to be returned.

  3. They later used the same method on Africa so I’m willing to argue they learned from this but in a bad way.

  4. TechnologyFamiliar20 on

    „Decimal time was also introduced in France in 1793 with 100 seconds= 1 minute, 100 minutes=1 hour and 1 day=10 hour.“

    Yet still, their 80 is 4*20. Right.

  5. Excellence7777777 on

    the french revolution was basically just the enlightenment era version of „my source is that i made it up“… imagine trying to explain to a 1790s farmer that he now lives in square b4 and there are 100 minutes in an hour… no wonder they ended up with a guillotine… they were just tired of the math…

  6. AmonGusSus2137 on

    Let me guess, the calendar consisted of 10 day weeks, 10 week months and 10 month years?

  7. also decimal weeks of ten days, three weeks a month, 360 days a year, 5 or 6 extra days for partying. also decimal angles instead of 360 based (which itself divisible by 12)

  8. ConsistentAmount4 on

    A new clock and new calendar is just too much work.
    There’s 86,400 seconds in a day. That French clock would have had 100,000 seconds in a day, the equivalent of a 28 hour day. Unless they were going to shorten the length of a second, idk how all that was supposed to work.

  9. VilleKivinen on

    That’s quite understandable, at least the current system is a tad bit complicated.

    France is a wet dream of the agrarian Bureaucracy.

    Sometimes the right-wing agrarian bureaucrats rule, sometimes the left-wing agrarian bureaucrats, sometimes the centrist agrarian bureaucrats and sometimes even the military agrarian bureaucrats, but always the agrarian bureaucrats.

    The amount of local government is absolutely incredible. Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements, which should not be confused with the 333 arrondissements into which the rest of France is divided. They are completely different things even though they have the same name. There are 13 provinces, 96 departments and 1996 cantons. Their responsibilities overlap with each other, and in some places something belongs to the department, in some places the same thing belongs to the arrondissement and in others it is the canton’s business.

    In addition to these, there are of course 34,826 municipalities, each of which has its own local government, taxation and responsibilities, which of course overlap and cross over with the aforementioned parties. And to make things even easier, there are of course also 710 municipal associations in France. Most municipalities, but not all, also belong to associations of municipalities, of which there are 2585. These too all have their own local government.

    In addition, Marseille is divided into 16 arrondissements and 8 sectors. These too, of course, all have their own local government.

    Of course, the 15 overseas regions, but not Corsica, also have their own regional government, which may or may not be the same as in mainland France.

    I don’t understand how the entire French population is enough for all those levels of government, including political representatives and civil servants.

  10. tanukis_parachute on

    I worked at a print shop where the time clock was on the 100 minute clock. At least what it put on your time card. The actual clock was not. One day someone put a hand written conversion so you could look at your time card and figure out easier what was 30 minutes later and what not. Owner ripped it down. He was friends with my dad through Rotary and said that it saved him money because people would clock out a few ‚minutes‘ off and with rounding he saved a bit here or there. That he took that time and energy to figure it out and was gleeful sat wrong with my dad (and he felt it was against the rotarian creed). My dad made one up and printed it (this was the 90s) and made little wallet card laminated for me and my coworkers. Only rule was to keep it hidden from the boss.

    Sometimes I still think about things like that and watch videos on the 60 minute hour and whatnot.

  11. GovernmentBig2749 on

    Well, ar least they kept the strange numbering habbit..but 100 minutes per hour would be cool

  12. lieutenantbunbun on

    Sick. Then all the farms could be square too and Carcassone would be a lot easier 

  13. NthngToSeeHere on

    Fun fact, you can buy a decimal watch from Svalbard Watches. They have a model that has both standard and Decimal time.

  14. benjamin_t__ on

    The plan was actually carried out: departments were created on this base, but this map was just a working document. And the new calendar wasn’t abandoned so quickly: it’s only Napoleon that went back to the Gregorian calendar. (And the Republican calendar would actually be revived by the Paris Commune)

  15. I’m very in favor of a metric time, specially when we have people living outside earth for a long time

  16. Fireballs44 on

    interestingly enough, a french second like this would be 0.864 normal seconds, very close

  17. >100 seconds= 1 minute, 100 minutes=1 hour and 1 day=10 hour.

    ![gif](giphy|OxQv20is5XVJVc7GNs)

  18. Cool-Coffee-8949 on

    The new calendar lasted longer than you’d think: much longer than metric clocks, for instance.

  19. pokerpaypal on

    Just an absolute terrible idea. If they had just made the meter the size of a yard we would have metric in the US right now.

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