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- From: fearnley@ERE.UMontreal.CA (Fearnley Anne)
- Newsgroups: alt.mythology
- Subject: Re: 7 Days
- Message-ID: <fearnley.728242330@brise.ERE.UMontreal.CA>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 17:32:10 GMT
- References: <1993Jan21.231655.3197@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Sender: news@cc.umontreal.ca (Administration de Cnews)
- Organization: Universite de Montreal
- Lines: 34
-
- prh2s@faraday.clas.Virginia.EDU (Patrick Harrison) writes:
-
- >A friend and I were discussing the possible origins of our seven-day week,
- >but came to an impasse. Jewish mythology of course describes a creation
- >taking place over seven days, and this myth apparently has some relationship
- >to the Babylonian myth of the children of Tiamat (six, corresponding to the
- >six "active" days of creation in Genesis). I have also read that the
- >Babylonians regarded the number seven as sacred/magical (because of some
- >correspondence to the deities?). Finally, we considered the possibility
- >that the seven-day lunar phases or the seven planets known to ancient
- >human beings might have had some effect on the establishment of the week.
- >Can anyone help us unravel the mystery? And can anyone say when, by whom,
- >and why the days in Anglo-Germanic cultures are named after the Germanic
- >gods? Specific responses and suggested readings are both welcome.
-
- About Babylonian days and the naming of days of the week in some European
- languages, there is a good article in sci.astronomy called something like
- "days of the week". It postulated the association of the them-known planets
- (7 of them (this includes the sun and moon; ie all the moving usual things in
- the sky)) to the hours of the day. Because 24 and 7 have no common denominators
- one ends up with 7 types of day, the first hour of each being under the
- influence of a particular planet. It then gets named for that planet, and we
- get the order of the days of the week.
-
- Note also that gods and celestial objects were linked. This is especially true
- for Babylon, but note also the English names of planets.
-
- I will post the sci.astronomy article here if I figure out how it is done.
-
-
- --
- Anne Fearnley Dept de math. et de stat.
- fearnley@ere.umontreal.ca Universite de Montreal
- Montreal, QC
-