When is Easter 2021? The date of next year’s holiday and why it changes from year to year


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When is Easter 2021? The date of next year's holiday and why it changes from year to year

When is Easter 2021? The date of next year’s holiday and why it changes from year to year

This year’s Easter holidays have been drastically changed by the coroanavirus outbreak, which shut the UK’s schools well ahead of schedule and ruined holidaymakers’ carefully-laid travel plans.

With no indication of exactly when the measures will lift, many families frustrated by lockdown will already be looking ahead to next year’s holidays, when restrictions will hopefully no longer be in place.

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The date of Easter changes from year to year, which means that the holidays can sneak up on you – so to ensure you’re prepared here’s when it falls in 2021, and how the process of calculating Easter Sunday’s date works.

When is Easter 2021?

In 2021, Easter Sunday falls on on Sunday 4 April, just over a week earlier than this year’s date of 12 April.

For most people in the UK, this should fall towards the beginning of the school holidays, whereas this year’s celebrations should have been in the middle weekend of the break.

The holiday can take place on any date between 22 March and 25 April, with Easter last year falling on 21 April, the latest since 2011.

The position of Easter in the calendar depends on when the Spring Equinox falls (Photo: Getty Images)

How do we work out when Easter will be?

The date of Easter is calculated from the first Sunday after the first full moon following the Spring equinox in March.

“The reason for this is that Easter must occur after the biblical festival of Passover, on the full moon, when Jesus was crucified,” said Professor Sacha Stern, head of the Hebrew and Jewish Studies department at University College London.

Next year the equinox will take place on its usual date of 20 March, with the next full moon on 28 March –  the Sunday exactly a week before Easter.

The decision on how and when Easter should fall each year was made by the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD, the first major church council.

Why did the Council of Nicaea need to intervene?

As the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus happened after Passover, some early Christians decided to celebrate it then – on the 14th of the month of Nisan (from the Assyrian and Hebrew calendars). This correlates with March or April in the Gregorian calendar (named after Pope Gregory XIII), which is what we use today.

Other early Christians preferred to celebrate on a Sunday because it is thought Jesus’s tomb was found on this day, according to Brent Landau, a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Texas.

The Council of Nicaea was asked to resolve this. It decided Easter should be after the first full moon following the March equinox.

Easter can take place on any date between 22 March and 25 April (Photo: Taronga Zoo via Getty Images)

Why is Easter on a different date each year?

The predominant reason why Easter falls on a different date each year is because we now use the solar, Gregorian calendar rather than a lunar one. This means the full moon occurs on different dates each year, and therefore so does Easter.

Dr Greg Brown, astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, said Easter is based on a combination of the seven-day week and the cycle of the phases of the Moon.

“The March equinox is the date when the sun crosses from the southern hemisphere of the sky to the northern hemisphere marking the beginning of spring.

“The day and night of the equinox are of approximately equal length. As neither the calendar year (365 days) nor the cycle of the phases of the Moon (29.5 days) divide evenly by the seven-day week, the date of Easter Sunday can move irregularly by up to a month, from between late March and late April.”

Occasionally Orthodox churches celebrate Easter on the same date as Catholics and other western churches (Photo: Getty Images)

Why do different churches celebrate Easter on different days?

It’s down to using different calendars.

Eastern Churches (Greek and Slavic) and Oriental Churches (Syrian, Armenian, Coptic Egyptian and Ethiopian) continued using the Julian Calendar, named after Julius Caesar, even after Europe adopted the Gregorian Calendar in 1582.

“This is why even now Easter is calculated differently by the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches to the Catholic and other western Churches,” said theology and religion Professor Emma Loosely, from the University of Exeter.

“Easter is only ever celebrated by all Christians on the relatively rare occasions when the two calendars align,” she added.

Easter last took place on the same day last year for both Christian Churches in 2021, but this will not happen again until 2034.

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