Sosigenes of Alexandria was named by Pliny the Elder as the astronomer consulted by Julius Caesar for the design of the Julian calendar. It appears that little or nothing is known about him apart from two references in Pliny's Natural History. Some web sources say that the calendar was designed by Aristarchus about 200 years earlier — it is not clear where this idea originates, although a similar reform of the Egyptian calendar was decreed by Ptolemy III Euergetes in 238 BC, but never implemented. The standard year of the Egyptian calendar had 365 days divided into 12 months plus five epagomenal days at the end of the year — the reform would have added a sixth epagomenal day.
He appears in Pliny book 18, 210-212:
In Pliny book 2, 8, Sosigenes is credited with work on the orbit of Mercury:
Sosigenes aus Alexandria | Созиген | Sosigenes | Sosigenes aus Alexandria | Sosigenes | Sosygenes | Созиген александрийский | Sosigen
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