UTC+00:20 | |
---|---|
Time zone | |
UTC offset | |
UTC | UTC+00:20 |
Current time | |
05:26, 15 January 2024 UTC+00:20 [refresh] | |
Central meridian | |
5 degrees E | |
Date-time group |
UTC+00:20 is an identifier for a time offset from UTC of +00:20.
History
UTC+00:20 was used in the Netherlands from 1 May 1909 to 16 May 1940. It was known as Amsterdam Time or Dutch Time.
The exact time zone was GMT +0h 19m 32.13s until 1 July 1937, when it was simplified to GMT +0h 20m. When Germany occupied the Netherlands in World War II, Berlin Time was adopted, and this has been retained ever since.
The reason for the specific offset of +0h 19m 32.13s was that the time zone was centered on the mean solar time of the Westertoren (4° 53' 01.95" E Longitude), the tower of the Westerkerk church in Amsterdam.
UTC+00:20 was also used as daylight saving time in the British colony Gold Coast between 1919 and 1942.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ Gold Coast (1910–1936). "Ordinances of the Gold Coast, Ashanti, Northern territories, and Togoland under British mandate". Government of Ghana. p. 76. "The Determination of the Time Ordinance, 1919 (No. 18 of 1919)", 2 November 1919. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
External links
- Albertus Antonie Nijland, "Time in Holland", The Observatory, 32 (1909), 301.
- Wettelijke tijdregeling in Nederland (in Dutch)
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