On 9/11/18 12:28 AM, aya sekido wrote:
According to the law of those days, the last day of summer time was made into 25 hours.
What came after 12:59 p.m. of the last day was 00:00 a.m. of the next day.
Thank you for looking into it. The Japanese law that we found <http://www.shugiin.go.jp/internet/itdb_housei.nsf/html/houritsu/002194804280...> says "第二条 四月の第一土曜日の翌日(日曜日)は二十三時間をもつて一日とし、九月の第二土曜日は二十五時間をもつて一日とする。" Google translates this as "Article 2. The day following the first Saturday of April (Sunday) shall be one day with twenty-three hours and the second Saturday of September shall be twenty-five hours a day." I see two ways to interpret how this law affected timekeeping during the September transition: 1. At 24:00 Saturday, people moved their 12-hour clocks back from 12 o'clock midnight to 11 o'clock P.M. Saturday, thus repeating the 23:00 Saturday hour, so that Saturday had 25 hours. 2. At 24:00 Saturday people left their clocks alone, and let them continue forward from 12 o'clock to 1 o'clock. The day was still Saturday, but the time was in the range 24:00 to 25:00. At 25:00 Saturday, people moved their 12-hour clocks back from 1 o'clock A.M. to 12 o'clock midnight and Sunday began at 00:00. This method also gives 25 hours to Saturday, and it is what you are suggesting. Method (1) would be likely used in the West; however, as I understand it method (2) is plausible in Japan (nowadays a Japanese bar might give a closing time of "26:00", for example). It is a tricky situation, since the law in question was done at the instruction of the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers which may well have ordered method (1). Although method (1) is what we currently have in the Internet Time Zone Database (tzdb), if the Japanese people generally used method (2) we should try to fix tzdb as best we can; unfortunately we cannot do so perfectly, since the database format does not let us represent times like "24:59". Is there a good way to resolve the question? For example, are there archived versions of Japanese newspapers from the early 1950s?