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  1. Since 1981 EU (formerly EEC and EC) Directives have prescribed the dates of summer time in all member states. In 1996 all clocks in Europe were changed on the same date for the first time. The current arrangement was set out in Directive 2000/84/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 January 2001 on summer-time arrangements.

  2. Germany had already introduced a similar scheme when the Summer Time Act was finally passed in the UK on 17th May 1916. The clocks went forward one hour on the following Sunday, 21st May. The time changes were widely advertised in the press. To return to GMT on 1st October 1916, people were advised to put their clocks forward by 11 hours rather ...

  3. On Sunday 31st March, the clocks 'spring forward' by one hour, marking the annual move from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) to British Summer Time (BST). The first BST clock change happened over 100 ...

  4. At 1am on the last Sunday in March, clocks 'spring forward' by one hour. BST ends when the clocks go back in autumn. At 2am on the last Sunday in October, the clocks 'fall back' by an hour. Although this change has no effect on the length of each day, sunrise and sunset each appear an hour later in the summer.

  5. 4 days ago · This Sunday marks the end of summer and the start of winter in the UK. The colder season brings darker days and a change to the UK’s time zone, meaning everyone gets an extra hour of sleep on ...

  6. The clocks go back at 2am Sunday 30 October 2022, marking the end of Daylight Saving Time, which is often referred to as simply ‘Daylight Savings’ or ‘summer time’. This means that for us here in the UK, sunset will be around one hour earlier, shifting from 6:30pm to 5:30pm.

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  8. Oct 5, 2024 · Clocks will go back an hour in the early hours this Sunday 27 October. This marks the end of British Summer Time (BST) and daylight saving, and a return to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). The clocks ...

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