Annunciation, Feast of the
ANNUNCIATION, FEAST OF THE: A festival
celebrated in the Greek, Roman Catholic, and
Anglican churches on Mar. 25, in commemoration
of the beginning of the incarnation (Luke i. 26-38).
Though Augustine mentions the date of the event
as nine months before Christmas, the earliest indisputable evidence for the celebration of the feast is
furnished by Proclus, patriarch of Constantinople,
who died before the middle of the fifth century.
The probable date of its origin is about the end of
the fourth century. The Council of Toledo (656)
ordered its observance on Dec. 18, objecting to its
celebration in the mournful season of Lent; and
the church of Milan kept it on the fourth Sunday
in Advent; but the Roman date finally prevailed
throughout the West. The ancient Roman year
having commenced with March, on the twenty-fifth of which month the vernal equinox fell in the
Julian calendar, it was natural for Christian countries to date their years from the feast which commemorated
the initial step in the work of redemption; in some parts of England and the United
States this date is still the legal term from which
leases, etc. are reckoned.