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Days of the week

In English the days of the week are:

Saturday and Sunday are commonly called the weekend and are days of rest and recreation in most western cultures. The other five days are then known as weekdays. Friday and Saturday are days of rest in Muslim and Jewish countries respectively.


Contents

Order

The week as we know it was introduced by astromancers around the 3rd century, replacing the Roman calendar in use until then. The order of the days was explained by Dio Cassius (and Chaucer gave the same explanation in his Treatise on the Astrolabe). According to Cassius, it was a principle of astrology that the heavenly bodies presided, in succession, over the hours of the day. The Ptolemaic system asserts that the order of the heavenly bodies, from the farthest to the closest to the Earth, is: Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Sun, Venus, Mercury, Moon. (This order was first established by the Greek Stoics.)

If the first hour of a day is dominated by Saturn (), then the second hour is dominated by Jupiter (), the third by Mars (), and so on, so that the sequence of planets repeats every seven hours. Therefore, the twenty-fifth hour, which is the first hour of the following day, is dominated by the Sun; the forty-ninth hour, which is the first hour of the next day, by the Moon. Thus, if a day is labelled by the planet which dominates its first hour, then Saturn's day is followed by the Sun's day, which is followed by the Moon's day, and so forth, as shown below.

In English, the Anglo-Saxon names of the days of the week obscure this relationship somewhat (see Names).

Hour: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Luminary → name
Day 1 Saturn → Saturday
Day 2 Sun → Sunday
Day 3 Moon → Monday
Day 4 Mars → Tuesday
Day 5 Mercury → Wednesday
Day 6 Jupiter → Thursday
Day 7 Venus → Friday
The same order can be derived "geometrically" from an acute heptagram, the {7/3} star polygon (as 24 Mod 7 = 3). The luminaries are arranged in the same Ptolemaic/Stoic order around the points of the heptagram. Tracing the unicursal line from one planet to the next gives the order of the weekdays.

According to Aleister Crowley, in The Book of Thoth (1944), "It is believed that this neat discovery is due to the late G. H. Frater D.D.C.F." (Pt. 1, Ch. 1). (Although, as Crowley calls the figure a hexagram, his reliability is somewhat suspect.) According to some sources this 'weekday heptagram is considerably older —

It was with the adoption and widespread use of the seven-day week throughout the Hellenistic world of mixed cultures that this heptagram was created. [1]

Modern ordering

According to the ISO 8601 norm the week begins on a Monday. This corresponds with the term weekend for the Saturday and Sunday. However following Constantine's decision to make the first day of the week the day of religious observance, Sunday may also be considered the first day of the week in historically Christian countries. In this regard calendars exist in two varieties. The traditional Sunday-first system is used by some English speakers and much of Latin America, while most of continental Europe uses the ISO order.

Names

In English all the days of the week are named after the ruling luminary, with most of the names coming from Anglo-Saxon gods and goddesses. Sunday and Monday are named directly from the sun and moon, although the Anglo-Saxon goddess Sunne is implicit in the name of the sun itself. Saturday is the only day named after a Roman god. Other Germanic languages generally follow the same pattern, but Dutch is the only other that preserves all the astronomical names.

In most Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, French, etc.), the names of the days except Saturday and Sunday come from Roman gods via the Latin. Welsh, the closest living language to that of Roman Britain, faithfully preserves all the Latin names, even though the language itself is not directly descended from Latin.

In Japanese and Korean, Sunday and Monday are named after the Sun and Moon, while the other five days are translated using the names of the five inner planets, which themselves are named using the Five Elements of traditional Chinese philosophy. For example, Mercury is called "planet of water" in Japanese and Korean, and the day Wednesday (Mercury's day in the Romance languages) is called "day of the planet of water". (In Chinese, the planets are also named using the elements, but the days of the week are numbered.)

The early Christian Church was uncomfortable using names based on "false" pagan gods, and introduced a simple numerical nomenclature which persists in many European languages, although in Slavic languages the numbering starts on Monday rather than Sunday (anticipating ISO 8601). Arabic uses a similar system (with the same numbering as the western european languages), although in this case Friday (the Muslim day of prayer) is named while Sunday is numbered. In Chinese, all days except Sunday are numbered.

The (suggested) purpose of these tables is to show how far different languages preserve the associations with the ruling luminaries (or not!) and the Church's numbering of the days. (That is, not to list the names in "every" language: Wiktionary entries for the day names offer such lists – click on the links in the header row.)

Astronomical

Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Luminary & symbol Sun Moon Mars Mercury Jupiter Venus Saturn
Latin dies solis dies lunea dies martis dies mercurĭi dies jovis deis venĕris dies saturni
Italian domenica (1) lunedì martedì mercoledì giovedì venerdì sabato (2)
Spanish domingo (1) lunes martes miércoles jueves viernes sábado (2)
French dimanche (1) lundi mardi mercredi jeudi vendredi samedi (2)
Welsh dydd Sul dydd Llun dydd Mawrth dydd Mercher dydd Iau dydd Gwener dydd Sadwrn
Old High German sunnuntag mānetag zeistag
Ziu's day
wodenstag
Woden's day
donerestag
Thor's day
friatag
Freia's day
sambaztag (2)
German Sonntag Montag Dienstag Mittwoch (3) Donnerstag Freitag Samstag (2) or Sonnabend ("sun's eve")
Danish søndag mandag tirsdag onsdag torsdag fredag lørdag
Dutch zondag maandag dinsdag woensdag donderdag vrijdag zaterdag
Old Norse sunnundagr
Sunna's day
mánandagr tysdagr
Tyr's day
óðensdagr
Odin's day
þorsdagr
Thor's day
friádagr
Freya's day
laugardagr (5)
Swedish Söndag Måndag Tisdag Onsdag Torsdag Fredag Lördag (4)
Finnish sunnuntai maanantai tiistai keskiviikko (3) torstai perjantai lauantai (4)
Old English sunnandæg
Sunne's day
mōnandæg tiwesdæg
Tiw's day
wodnesdæg
Woden's day
þunresdæg
Thunor's day
frigesdæg
Frige's day
sæternesdæg
English Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Japanese 日曜日
Sun's day
月曜日
Moon's day
火曜日
day of the planet of fire (Mars)
水曜日
day of the planet of water (Mercury)
木曜日
day of the planet of wood (Jupiter)
金曜日
day of the planet of metal (Venus)
土曜日
day of the planet of earth (Saturn)
Korean 일요일
Sun's day
월요일
Moon's day
화요일
day of the planet of fire (Mars)
수요일
day of the planet of water (Mercury)
목요일
day of the planet of wood (Jupiter)
금요일
day of the planet of metal (Venus)
토요일
day of the planet of earth (Saturn)
Luminary & symbol Sun Moon Mars Mercury Jupiter Venus Saturn
Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

Numerical

Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Latin
(Church usage)
prima feria
or dominica
secunda feria tertia feria quarta feria quinta feria sexta feria sabbatum
Portuguese domingo (1) segunda-feira terça-feira quarta-feira quinta-feira sexta-feira sábado (2)
Icelandic sunnudagur (5) mánudagur (5) þriðjudagur miðvikudagur (3) fimmtudagur föstudagur
("fast day")
laugardagur (4)
Estonian pühapäev
("holy day")
esmaspäev teisipäev kolmapäev or kesknädal (3) neljapäev reede
(ON friádagr)
laupäev (4)
Polish niedziela
("no work")
poniedziałek
("after no-work")
wtorek
("second")
środa
("middle")
czwartek
("fourth")
piątek
("fifth")
sobota (2)
Russian воскресенье
voskresen'ye
("resurrection")
понедельник
ponedel'nik
("after no-work")
вторник
vtornik
("second")
среда
sreda (3)
четверг
chetverk
("fourth")
пятница
pyatnitsa
("fifth")
суббота
subbota (2)
Chinese 星期日
("day of the week")
星期一
("first of week")
星期二
("second of week")
星期三
("third of week")
星期四
("fourth of week")
星期五
("fifth of week")
星期六
("sixth of week")
ISO 8601 # 7 1 2 3 4 5 6
Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

Notes

  1. The Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, French, etc.) break from the pattern of using the Roman associations in preference for a Christian association: Sunday being the Christian day of rest, these days are named after the "day of our Lord". This is the norm in languages, such as Portuguese, where names faithfully follow Church usage.
  2. The Romance languages, Old High German and German, and the Slavic languages have words for Saturday that reflect the Jewish Sabbath.
  3. German, Finnish, and Estonian call Wednesday, prosaically, "mid-week"; Icelandic "mid-week day"; Polish, Russian, etc. "middle".
  4. Old Norse, Swedish (and other North Germanic languages), and Finnish and Estonian (Finnic languages) call Saturday "washday" or "bathday", as it was the traditional day for washing and bathing.
  5. Icelandic sunnudagur and mánudagur are astronomical, persisting presumably because there's no explicit reference to pagan gods.

See also

External links

Bibliography

  • Falk, Michael (1999). "Astronomical Names for the Days of the Week", Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada , Vol. 93, p.122. 1999JRASC..93..122F. [2]
10-26-2009 08:16:03
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
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