I don't think the original poster had this in mind, but there is a Revised Julian Calendar which is described in Wikipedia, and is equivalent to the Gregorian Calendar until AD 2800. It has been adopted by some Orthodox churches. It was defined at a church meeting in the 1920s (before the changes in day length were quantifiable). The original version called for celebrating Easter and related holy days based on astronomical calculations of the equinox, but that part was ignored, only the leap day calculations were adopted, together with dropping some days to sync to the Gregorian Calendar.
The ostensible advantage is keeping the northward equinox closer to
March 21. I suspect the actual appeal is being able to match the civil calendar and the calendar used by other Christians without adopting a calendar mandated by a Roman Catholic pope (that is, until
2800).

Some countries have had the Orthodox church as their state religion at the time they abandoned the Julian Calendar, so it isn't perfectly clear whether they adopted the Gregorian Calendar or the Revised Julian Calendar (especially to foreigners who don't speak the respective language and don't
know how to find the relevant law, like me).

Gerry Ashton

On 1/5/2012 12:22 PM, Warner Losh wrote:
On Jan 5, 2012, at 12:16 AM, Ian Batten wrote:
Given there's some ambiguity about leap-year rules out into the far future 
anyway,
What's the ambiguity?  As far as I know, the official rules that were 
promulgated have never changed.  There's many proposal to deal with needing an 
extra leap day, but none have been ratified (mostly because there's no Pope to 
say do this or else anymore).

Warner

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