The Origins of the Seven Day Week

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
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    Why does our week have seven days?
    Some sources:
    Sources of the Seven-Day Week by Leland S. Copeland
    Understanding Planets in Ancient Mesopotamia by Enn Kasak and Raul Veede
    Teutonic Mythology, Volume 1 By Jacob Grimm
    Chapters:
    0:00 - intro
    1:00 - sponsored segment
    2:34 - video
    Music:
    Sneaky Snitch
    The Snow Queen
    The Forest Through the Trees
    and Teller of Tales all by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    #ad

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @TheGeneralistPapers
    @TheGeneralistPapers  Před 2 lety +34

    Hope everyone enjoyed the video!
    Grab AtlasVPN Special deal for 82% OFF get.atlasvpn.com/GeneralistPapers ! 😀

    • @tsg2009
      @tsg2009 Před 2 lety +1

      it was good but the music always drives me away

    • @redpill6201
      @redpill6201 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for the video. Also, there are 13 Houses in the full Zodiac including Ophiuchus The Serpent Bearer.
      There are 13 X 2,000 Year Ages in the Platonic Great Year Cycle of 26,000 Years.
      Just as there are 13 Moon Cycles (Full to New to Full) of 28 Days or 4 Weeks in a Solar Year. 28 X 13 = 364 days + 1.25 days = A Year And A Day (+ leap years).
      Each Week Day (a turning) is dedicated to an allegorical sky god.
      Sun-day, Moon-day, Mars of Mardi (Twi of Tuesday), Mercury of Mercredi (Woden of Wednesday), Jupiter of Jeudi (Thor of Thursday), Venus of Vendredi (Freya of Friday), Saturn of Saturday.
      Venus-Lucifera, The Morning Star, The Bearer of Light, The Divine Mother, The Holy Ghost, The Statue of Liberty, The Torch Bearing Bearer of Light visual pun, Columbia Goddess.
      She who bore and gave birth to the sun god (Horus, Ra, Apollo, Jesus, etc.).
      Do you know the fable of Osiris (Moon) being cut up over 14 nights (Full to New) by Set (of the Night) and then Isis (Venus, Mother of Horus, the Sun/Son) reassembling him over 14 nights (New to Full) but that his giggle tackle fell into the River Nile and was eaten by fish, so lost?
      Moon God = Jehovah, Baal, Osiris, Yahweh, El or Allah. Obelisk, O-Baal-isk. Shaft of Baal. The missing giggle tackle. The tallest one is in DC at 555.5 feet tall, 6666 inches. 6666 is divisible by 3 for the 3, 4, 5 sacred triangle symbolism. Located on God's Longitude 77° West of London Greenwich Zero Longitude. United Grand Lodge England (UGLE) is in London.
      DC is 38.5 ° Latitude North of the Equator, 77/2=38.5.
      The Holy Trinity family with the Holy Ghost Mother.
      Venus, Isis, Minerva, Aphrodite, Freya, Athena, Astarte, etc.
      In Nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen (Amon-Ra)
      Moon Father + Venus Mother Begat The Sun/Son.
      Allegorical Symbolism: Sacred 3, 4, 5 right angle triangle.
      Vertical 3 = Father, Horizontal 4 = Mother, Hypotenuse = Son
      Square 3X3=9, Square 4X4 = 16, Square 5X5 = 25. 9+16 = 25.
      Father + Mother = Son. ☪= 🌞
      The square of the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the two adjacent sides.
      These sky gods were visible with the naked eye before telescopes.
      Allegorically, the Sinister Left Path Dark Path Craft of Satanism is not the same as the Right Path, White Path Craft of Luciferianism.
      See Black/White Masonic Chessboard and Yin/Yang symbolism.
      Allegorically, the Snake (Serpent) Enlightened "humanity" to the Knowledge (English), Gnosis (Greek) or Science (Latin) of the difference between Good versus Evil in the well-known "Garden of Eden" fable. It is the moral and ethical struggle that each Enlightened sentient mind/body organism has to struggle with internally, every day, during their incarnated existence.
      ~~~~~~~~~
      IX XI (09/11) mm/dd or XI IX (11/09) was New Year Day, Enkutatash, because it marked the heliacal rising of Sirius (Dog-God) Canis-Major, the Star of Bethlehem and the annual flooding of the River Nile period.
      K is letter 11 so K9 is a pun for Canine (Sirius) and for 11th September.
      There was no year zero, which is a more modern maths concept.
      Anno Lucis = The Year of Light.
      Anno Domini = The Year of our Lord.
      Age of Taurus IX XI Anno Lucis Year I to MMI
      Age of Aries IX XI Anno Lucis Year MMI to MMMMI
      Age of Pisces IX XI Anno Lucis Year MMMMI to MMMMMMI
      Age of Aquarius IX XI Anno Lucis Year MMMMMMI to MMMMMMMMI
      ~~~~~~~~~
      Age of Taurus Enkutatash Year 4001 BC (Age of Pisces Year 1) ~ 2001 BC.
      Age of Aries Enkutatash Year 2001 BC ~ Anno Domini Year 1 (Jesus-Fish).
      Age of Pisces Enkutatash Anno Domini 1 ~ AD 2001 (Jesus-Fish Era).
      Age of Aquarius Enkutatash (11th September) Anno Domini 2001 ~ 4001.
      ~~~~~~~~~
      *13 HOUSE ZODIAC INCLUDING OPHIUCHUS linked to Moon (Moonth) cycles.*
      Rather like the Easter (Eostre) Moon linked fertility festival drifts around in "Spring" (in the Northern Hemisphere) the 28 day X 13 month Moon cycles drift around the Christian Era 12 month Solar Year a little.
      There was a bit of a Satanic sacrificial "ritual" going on in the US on the first day of this New Age of Aquarius. A K9 Bomb Sniffing Yellow Labrador Dog called SIRIUS (no kidding) allegedly died in the illegal demolition of the North Tower.
      ~~~~~~~~~
      So Approximately:
      VIRGO = SEPTEMBER ~ OCTOBER
      LIBRA = OCTOBER ~ NOVEMBER
      SCORPIO = NOVEMBER ~ NOVEMBER
      OPHIUCHUS = NOVEMBER ~ DECEMBER
      SAGITTARIUS = DECEMBER ~ JANUARY
      CAPRICORN = JANUARY ~ FEBRUARY
      AQUARIUS = FEBRUARY ~ MARCH
      PISCES = MARCH ~ APRIL
      ARIES = APRIL ~ MAY
      TAURUS = MAY ~ JUNE
      GEMINI = JUNE ~ JULY
      CANCER = JULY ~ AUGUST
      LEO = AUGUST ~ SEPTEMBER

    • @redpill6201
      @redpill6201 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@James Warden Jr. The French Revolution tried to create a 10 day week, 30 day month, a 10-hour day, 100 minutes per hour, and 100 seconds per minute. It obviously didn't catch on!

    • @markrademaker5875
      @markrademaker5875 Před 2 lety +2

      "In the beginning God Created the heavens and the earth." [Genesis 1:1] He/The Triune God Did it in six 24-ish hour days then Rested on the seventh. Long story short, at the tower of Babel, The I Am/The Lord God Dispersed the people...they took with them the 7 day week. This is why we have a 7 day week. 🙂

    • @davidbenner2289
      @davidbenner2289 Před 2 lety

      Bull sh*t.

  • @clawsoon
    @clawsoon Před 2 lety +286

    As a math kid, my guess was always that 7 was special to the Babylonians because it was the smallest number that didn't fit nicely into their base-60 number system. It's the smallest prime that creates infinitely repeating decimals if you try to divide with it when you're using base-60.

    • @EMNstar
      @EMNstar Před 9 měsíci +19

      Yeah, I think people forget all the time that different peoples over time used different mathematical base systems. We use base ten. That doesn't mean EVERYONE uses and used base ten.

    • @urbangorilla33
      @urbangorilla33 Před 9 měsíci +16

      Seven is also interesting because it has a quite unusual repeating decimal. 1/7 is .142857 repeating infinitely. 2/7 is the same, just starting on the 2.

    • @us3rG
      @us3rG Před 8 měsíci +4

      The moon

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 Před 8 měsíci +7

      ​@@EMNstarHeck. English still has remnants of base 12 and base 20 with the gross and the score.

    • @Rameshh3847
      @Rameshh3847 Před 8 měsíci +1

      how do you know base-60 and why do they used?

  • @SamPandiangan
    @SamPandiangan Před 2 lety +17

    The 7 days of a week already exist before Babylon.

  • @naiman4535
    @naiman4535 Před 2 lety +92

    In Japanese: Sunday = Nichiyobi (Nichi = Sun); Monday = Getsuyobi (Getsu = Moon); Tuesday + Kayobi (Ka = Fire, for Mars, the fiery planet, or Kasei); Wednesday = Suiyobi (Sui = Water, for Suisei, the watery planet Mercury); Thursday = Mokuyobi (Moku = Wood, for Jupiter as the Wood planet, because its lines and markings resemble wood grain); Friday = Kinyobi (Kin = Gold or Metal, with Venus being the golden hued planet); Saturday = Doyobi (Do = Earth, because Saturn is earth colored). In Japanese astrology, the Sun was called Taiyo, or the Great Yang, as it was the Great Yang luminary; the Moon was called Taiyin, or the Great Yin luminary. The other five of the seven classical planets were each associated with each of the Chinese Five Elements: Mars = Fire; Saturn = Earth; Venus = Gold / Metal; Mercury = Water; and Jupiter = Wood.

    • @danieldoherty5034
      @danieldoherty5034 Před 2 lety +4

      Surprising connections! Thanks for posting.

    • @debbiecurtis4021
      @debbiecurtis4021 Před 2 lety +4

      Very through explanation

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 Před 2 lety +5

      The association of Jupiter with wood is very amusing, if you know what i mean :P

    • @BBarNavi
      @BBarNavi Před rokem

      That's tied directly into Babylonian astrology

    • @astrohari
      @astrohari Před 7 měsíci

      Great, new information.

  • @williamking3301
    @williamking3301 Před 2 lety +242

    In comparison, for example, the Ancient Egyptians had a solar calendar in which there were 10-day weeks comprising a 30-day month, with seasons tied to the flooding of the Nile. It would be interesting for you to make a video comparing the time reckoning systems of say the Hindus, Aztecs, Mayans, Arabs, and Incas.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Před 2 lety +12

      13 months a year would give 28 day month with one extra day plus leap year day.

    • @justmote
      @justmote Před 2 lety +12

      @@hydrolito this is the original amount of days in a month. The moon faces take exactly 28 days to complete and align directly with women's menstrual circle which in Africa we say "she's seeing the moon", as translated literally.

    • @Inkulabi
      @Inkulabi Před rokem

      This may have been covered in the Zeitgeist documentaries

    • @adiboy010
      @adiboy010 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Thanks for the comment.. I can say that hinduism does have a similar 7 planet name convention.. Somvar (moon day- monday) , Mangalvar (mars day - Tuesday), Budhvar (mercury day), Brahspativar (Jupiter day), Shukarvar (Saturn day) and Rawivar (sun day)..

    • @ariapinandita9240
      @ariapinandita9240 Před 6 měsíci +2

      According to Penanggalan Jawa (Saka-Mataram Islam calendar) in Java, Indonesia, we use a 5 day/week system (pancawara) and 7 day/week system (saptawara)... Yups... The legacy of Aji Saka/Ajiwaka... Our unifying figure from Kali Serayu river region (Bumi Majeti)...

  • @DontStopBrent
    @DontStopBrent Před 2 lety +78

    “We have to go further back than creation.” That’s an interesting trick.

    • @mickyfingaz5132
      @mickyfingaz5132 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Back before the book

    • @thewberry
      @thewberry Před 6 měsíci +1

      Silly

    • @darrenmott
      @darrenmott Před 6 měsíci +2

      I thought the same thing. But then I caught myself n realize he must've meant before the bible

    • @ryankelly5308
      @ryankelly5308 Před 6 měsíci +11

      For real, right? Babylon was founded around 2300 BC. For those like me they believe the Bible to be inspired by God and truth, it was literally at creation that God spoke a 7 day week into existence. This is a disappointing video to try and state with fact something otherwise.

    • @ryankelly5308
      @ryankelly5308 Před 6 měsíci +6

      And on this note, Babylon did not grow in importance for either trade or technology until around 800 BC, which is more than likely when this came into common use in the empire. Moses wrote Genesis at around 1600 BC, reflecting inspiration given to Him by God who invented the 7 day week. Better question for me - why 365.25 days per year?

  • @adiabd1
    @adiabd1 Před 8 měsíci +27

    For me that knows lunar calendar and always go to work before sunrise, in many times I can see the phases of the moon and from there I can simply deduce roughly what day is it. So my thought for why a week is seven days is simply because its the easiest way to divide a moon in four. Namings of those days depends on cultures so its fine which name we use

    • @MrSanTang
      @MrSanTang Před 6 měsíci

      Exactly! No need to look any further than the moon. The moon is the easiest and most obvious celestial body to observe. It has been observed for many thousand years. Especially also because of its apparent relation to women menstrual cycles. The lunar phases were easily distinguished and were very early in human history associated with the passage of time. Of course the one day period was already known as constant. Observations confirmed that there are 28 days (counted with 28 rocks or twigs on the ground) between one full moon to another : that is a lunar month. Eventually, the moon phases were also observed as being constant. Full moon (1st row of rocks), Last quarter (2nd row), first quarter (3rd row) and new moon (4th row). Each are separated by seven days distributed on four rows of seven rocks. Voilà! This is how I imagine our prehistoric ancestors came up with this first 'magical' way of measuring time.

  • @peterwielhouwer426
    @peterwielhouwer426 Před 2 lety +113

    You can still see the clear Roman Latin influence in modern romance languages, too. For example compare the Roman weekdays with the Spanish and French names for those days:
    English - Latin/Roman - Spanish - French
    Monday - Lunae - lunes - lundi
    Tuesday - Martis - martes - mardi
    Wednesday - Mercurii - miércoles - mercredi
    Thursday - Iovis - jueves - juedi
    Friday - Veneris - viernes - vendredi

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 Před rokem +10

      Filipino and Tagalog weekday names are practically a carbon copy to the Spanish version.

    • @chrismill5303
      @chrismill5303 Před rokem +9

      strange, though, that latin and the succeeding romance languages christianized (abrahamized?) "dies saturni" to reflect the hebrew "sabbath", while english retained the old name. saturday is "sabado" in spanish and "sabato" in italian. sunday, too, was imbued with religious significance as "dominicus".

    • @andrewwalsh6790
      @andrewwalsh6790 Před rokem +8

      The English names for days of the week come from the names of norse gods

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 Před 11 měsíci +15

      In Portuguese it's:
      Domingo - Sunday (from the Latin "dies Domini", or "day of the Lord")
      Segunda-feira - "second fair day
      Terça-feira - "third fair day"
      Quarta-feira - "fourth fair day"
      Quinta-feira - "fifth fair day"
      Sexta-feira - "sixth fair day"
      Sábado - Saturday (from the Biblical Sabbath)
      The "fair day" expression was equivalent to the modern English "business day". The medieval Portuguese did sometimes use the Spanish names (except for Sábado and Domingo) in their reckoning of the days of the week, but since that was a direct reference to pagan gods, the Church sought to stamp it out. That worked in Portugal, but much less so in Spain

    • @chrismill5303
      @chrismill5303 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@vulpes7079 thanks for that! i thought the portuguese habit of putting numbers on their days came from the arabs (yowm al ahad, the first day, and so on...). your explanation makes more sense to me.

  • @TrevorRGHolt
    @TrevorRGHolt Před 2 lety +28

    Just wow. I really appreciate how comprehensive this was through the eras.

    • @vaibhavsaxena1084
      @vaibhavsaxena1084 Před 6 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/1Pz9L7PDmg4/video.htmlsi=4hff-WySOa6K_auI

  • @lexx2645
    @lexx2645 Před 2 lety +21

    Amazing work as always! Still definitely the best channel. Very informative and extremely well-made video.

  • @roxannamason4400
    @roxannamason4400 Před 2 lety +10

    Explain why Saturday mean sabbath in hundreds of the world's languages.

    • @renemartin5729
      @renemartin5729 Před 2 lety

      Why don't you explain it?

    • @hassanwally9161
      @hassanwally9161 Před 2 lety +1

      In Arabic it’s “SABT” where all letters are pronounced. Maybe one is derived from the other.

  • @hanswust6972
    @hanswust6972 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome!
    Thanks for sharing your enlightening work.

  • @antoinekubler7472
    @antoinekubler7472 Před 2 lety +7

    Wednesday is named after Wotan, also known as Odin. The link is the following: Mercury is two-faces (metaphorically), as he protects thieves and merchants, side with one group one day and with a different one another day. Hence a “mercurial” type of character. The same goes with Odin, whose allegiance was very fluctuating.

  • @chagildoi
    @chagildoi Před 2 lety +3

    Amazing channel! I just “discovered” it and I’m binge watching your videos. Glad to see you’re getting sponsors!

    • @vaibhavsaxena1084
      @vaibhavsaxena1084 Před 6 měsíci

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  • @retiredtom1654
    @retiredtom1654 Před 2 lety +3

    We're never too old to learn, and today I did. Thanks!

  • @andrewlankford9634
    @andrewlankford9634 Před 8 měsíci +4

    5:13 Our word "planet" comes from the Greek word for "wanderer". It originally wasn't the huge ball of non-stellar matter that we conceive of now, but a distant object moved against the background of stars. Galileo and Copernicus weren't around to change their understanding.

  • @skrayraja
    @skrayraja Před 2 lety +17

    Amazingly the days were named after the same Gods or heavenly bodies. Ravi war is Sunday and Ravi is Sun. Mangal war is Tuesday and mangal is mars and so on. Remarkable

    • @roryclague5876
      @roryclague5876 Před 2 lety +2

      Proto Indo-Europeans got around.

    • @user-kt3jn7wx5f
      @user-kt3jn7wx5f Před rokem +2

      ​@@roryclague5876 there is no indo -european thing.... it's Bharatiya civilization 🙏🙏

    • @Sam-tz8ou
      @Sam-tz8ou Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-kt3jn7wx5fexactly

    • @vaibhavsaxena1084
      @vaibhavsaxena1084 Před 6 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/1Pz9L7PDmg4/video.htmlsi=4hff-WySOa6K_auI

  • @imaginaryangle
    @imaginaryangle Před 9 měsíci +7

    I learned bits and pieces of this story from different places, but your video ties them all together so nicely. Thank you!

  • @jozefkostelansky
    @jozefkostelansky Před 2 lety +73

    In Slavian languages the names have completely different origin of names:
    Sunday = nedeľa - from nedělá = without work
    Monday = pondelok - from po neděli = day after nedeľa = the day after sunday
    Tuesday = utorok - from vtoroj = the second (day)
    Wednesday = streda from stred = middle (of the week)
    Thursday = štvrtok - from štvrtý = the fourth (day)
    Friday = piatok - from piaty = the fifth (day)
    Saturday = sobota - from Jewish Sabbath = Saturday - but for Jewish it is like our Sunday
    A week starts on Monday, and not on Sunday. So standard 2 days weekend is always in the same week. 😀

    • @nyagolnyagolov7130
      @nyagolnyagolov7130 Před 2 lety +8

      Sabbath was deliberately translated to ...'the first day of the week'.... in the Bible, so to fit the changed day of worship by the pagan emperor Constantine when he created his fake hybrid pseudo-religion in the 4th century! You can check the oldest manuscripts on the matter! He deliberately divided the Church to conquer it, roman style, using 1/6 of the bishops who became apostates!
      In Bulgarian the days are like in Polish, but in Greek they differ! Ponedelnik/ponedelok is deutera which means second day of the week, and so on till you reach the 7th day called sabbato! And kiriaki/Sunday was called first day before the above mentioned fakery!
      And of course, the 7 day week comes from the Bible as it is a narrative of the Creation, Babylon was made centuries later! Every culture must have had some notion of the story as there are many stories of the Flood!

    • @CATAZTR0PHE
      @CATAZTR0PHE Před 2 lety +4

      Wow, I'm from Poland and it is very interesting, and indeed our words reminds those you mentioned.
      Niedziela, poniedziałek, wtorek, środa, czwartek, piątek, sobota.

    • @nyagolnyagolov7130
      @nyagolnyagolov7130 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CATAZTR0PHE Wow did you read what I wrote as a Christian and a Bulgarian?

    • @nicolashoareau5992
      @nicolashoareau5992 Před 2 lety +8

      Sounds very similar to Russian, except Sunday, which is "воскресенье" (i.e. "the day of the resurrection).

    • @modmaker7617
      @modmaker7617 Před rokem +3

      Every Slavic language uses the same exact names of the week except Russian. Russian using a different word for Sunday for some reason.

  • @ArchaeoastronomyDatabase
    @ArchaeoastronomyDatabase Před 2 lety +2

    Interesting video, thanks! I've been looking at some possible divisions of the year in the Neolithic.

  • @ASMRPeople
    @ASMRPeople Před 4 měsíci

    Nice job, concise and great illustrations.

  • @user-rd4qk6nz8i
    @user-rd4qk6nz8i Před 8 měsíci +3

    I am KARNATAKA (BHARAT, INDIA) our forefathers named seven days on the basis of planet. They considered Sun moon and venus as planets and named days of week as follows
    (Var = Day)
    Ravi var (Sun)
    Soma var (moon)
    Mangal var (mars)
    Budha var (mercury)
    Guru var (jupiter (teacher))
    Shukra var (venus)
    Shani var (neptune)

  • @johnrayner1643
    @johnrayner1643 Před 2 lety +107

    Probably also worth mentioning how the same Roman gods gave their names to French and Spanish (and probably others) days of the week - Lundi, Mardi, Mercredi, Jeudi, Venredi, Samedi, Dimanche or Lunes, Martes, Miercoles, and I forget the rest!

    • @andreascandido2130
      @andreascandido2130 Před 2 lety +12

      Italian: lunedì, martedì, mercoledì, giovedì, venerdì, sabato e domenica

    • @timotheelegrincheux2204
      @timotheelegrincheux2204 Před 2 lety +10

      Just a slight correction: The days of the week are not capitalized in French.

    • @simonruszczak5563
      @simonruszczak5563 Před 2 lety +2

      There were no Roman gods or Roman Empire.
      Dr Anatoly Fomenko, book "History: Fiction or Science?".

    • @adralestosdragonrider8759
      @adralestosdragonrider8759 Před 2 lety +9

      spanish lunes , martes, miercoles, jueves, viernes, sabado, domingo.
      moon, mars, mercury, jupiter, venus, saturn (more jewish sabath), domingo- domine day of the lord

    • @Malfurionxtc
      @Malfurionxtc Před 2 lety +6

      Probably also worth to mention the "sabado" in Spanish, and "sabato" in Italian, are words for the "rest day/holiday - Sabbath" that originates in Bibble, corresponding for final day of the week. In roman scripts (not really found in Bibble, but in some other historical source), Sabbath was mentioned as day when Jewish people gathered and rested, and they (romans) used it to raid them more efficiently.

  • @apmoy70
    @apmoy70 Před rokem +2

    In Greek the days of the week are named after the ordinal names of the cardinal numbers (bar Friday, Saturday & Sunday):
    Monday: Δευτέρα /ðefˈteɾa/ = Second
    Tuesday: Τρίτη /ˈtriti/ = Third
    Wednesday: Τετάρτη /teˈtarti/ = Fourth
    Thursday: Πέμπτη /ˈpempti/ = Fifth
    The three days that stray away from the norm:
    Friday: Παρασκευή /paɾasceˈvi/ = Preparation (after the name given to the day in the Christian Gospel of Mark (15:42): "Καὶ ἤδη ὀψίας γενομένης, ἐπεὶ ἦν παρασκευή, ὅ ἐστι προσάββατον" - "And now when the even was come, because it was the preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath" (English King James Version)
    Saturday: Σάββατο /ˈsavato/ < Hebrew שַׁבָּת (shabát)
    Sunday: Κυριακή /ciɾʝaˈci/ = Lord's (day).
    Note that all the names of the week in Greek have feminine gender (except Saturday which is neuter)

    • @loistverberg900
      @loistverberg900 Před 2 měsíci

      There are several other Greek references to the “day of preparation” being the day to prepare for the Sabbath - Friday.
      Alexander the great was very impressed with the Jewish Temple and brought many Jews in his army to Alexandria, Egypt. Their influence caused the Greeks to adopt the Jewish calendar. The Romans adopted the Greek calandar's style but filled it with pagan gods to mask the influence of the God of Israel.

  • @sanjoyroystravelblog5413
    @sanjoyroystravelblog5413 Před 2 lety +1

    It is interesting to know how name of days in a week came. Thank you very much for this valuable information.

  • @timotheelegrincheux2204
    @timotheelegrincheux2204 Před 2 lety +3

    Looking forward to a similar video about the names of the months.

    • @redpill6201
      @redpill6201 Před 2 lety +1

      For September to be the 7th Month and December the 10th Month you would need New Year to be March 1st (Mars God of War). April is for the Goddess Aphrodite. May, the Greek goddess Maia. June sacred to Juno. July, Julius Cæsar, + Augustus Cæsar. January the month of Janus. February, the Roman festival of purification called Februa. But, if you see my long post in the top pinned thread, New Year Day could instead be 11th September, in a 13 Moonth Lunar Calendar, based on the 13 Houses of the Zodiac including Ophiuchus.

  • @frankb3347
    @frankb3347 Před 2 lety +11

    The ancients also knew of seven metals (gold, silver, mercury, tin, copper, lead, and iron) that were each associated with a different one of the seven heavens (aka "planets"). Not to mention the seven primary colors. For example Venus = copper = orange = Friday.

    • @theophrastusbombastus1359
      @theophrastusbombastus1359 Před 2 lety

      The world's first religion. The only true religion that all others were born from.

    • @deirdre108
      @deirdre108 Před 2 lety

      @@theophrastusbombastus1359 And that would be the Sumerian religion, right?

    • @theophrastusbombastus1359
      @theophrastusbombastus1359 Před 2 lety

      @@deirdre108 Before even that. Long before.
      The Atlantean religion, which many would call today Hermetecism or Alchemy

  • @colinmccarthy7921
    @colinmccarthy7921 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I learn something new everyday.❤️

  • @josephcampos990
    @josephcampos990 Před 2 lety

    Awesome.thanks for info

  • @gshenaut
    @gshenaut Před 2 lety +37

    I assumed that the Babylonian mathematicians were trying to make a solar calendar. A pretty accurate way to do that is to have four seasons each with 13 seven-day weeks. This yields 364 days. Add one or two extra festival days per year and that's quite accurate.

    • @entropy5431
      @entropy5431 Před 2 lety +2

      Not really as your maths relies on 4 seasons as accepted knowledge. The seasons are totally blurred and overlap in reality and could easily be defined as three.

    • @gshenaut
      @gshenaut Před 2 lety +3

      @@entropy5431 No, it's just based on computing an accurate solar year with small integers. You could call them “fourths” if you don't want to know about seasons. But, since seasons were based originally on basic things such as when a sundial's shadow lines up exactly or when the day is shortest or longest or equal in duration to the night, I doubt the ancient Babylonians would have ignored that correspondence.

    • @entropy5431
      @entropy5431 Před 2 lety

      @@gshenaut Just no.

    • @retardno002
      @retardno002 Před 2 lety +4

      @@entropy5431 what season is redundant in the easily defined 3 season year? Depending on geographical position you could even say there are 2, but 3 is very odd (no pun intended). I'm genuinely curious.

    • @entropy5431
      @entropy5431 Před 2 lety +1

      @@retardno002 It doesn't really matter which one you remove but summer would make most sense for the English climate (joking a little). The ancient Egyptians had 3 seasons.

  • @donaldziemer1919
    @donaldziemer1919 Před 2 lety +3

    Day light savings time messes up everything!!!!!!

  • @rickcullarn1347
    @rickcullarn1347 Před 7 měsíci

    Interesting Thanks!

  • @justayoutuber1906
    @justayoutuber1906 Před 9 měsíci +1

    If the first day of the week is Sunday, the seventh day or Saturday is the Sabbath

  • @deniss2623
    @deniss2623 Před 2 lety +7

    Whatever the secondary reasons, the universal seven-day week bears eloquent testimony to the six days of creation plus the Sabbath.(Genesis 1)
    Glory to God!

  • @robertholt6444
    @robertholt6444 Před 2 lety +6

    Again another great video and I learned something new. I'm sure your channel will keep growing.

  • @rubberneckershorts8314
    @rubberneckershorts8314 Před rokem +2

    The Babylon tower is mentioned in the book of Genesis of the Bible and was built by the decedents of Noah. So there's still very good reason to believe that the 7 day celebration came from the actual history being told in the Bible. And the same reason every 7th day is religiously significant to the Babylonians (as you mention in the video). It would be the day that God rested. We call it the Sabbath day.

  • @bherber
    @bherber Před 2 lety

    Good video. Thank you

  • @danielmalinen6337
    @danielmalinen6337 Před 2 lety +12

    Possibly there were two Germanic groups, one choosing Frigga (frīatag/frīgedæg) and the other choosing Freyja (frjádagr/frīadagher). And I would consider this to be proven in the way how Swedish "fredag" and Finnish "perjantai" are pronounced. And it is more suitable with Freyja than with Frigga. But the Frigga became a Swedish "flicka" (girl) and a Finnish "likka" (gal).

    • @bradhartliep879
      @bradhartliep879 Před 2 lety

      My Grandmother's Name was "Frieda" - she was born in the US but her Parents and Older Sisters were all born in Sweden and Immigrated to the US just before my Grandma was born .. but there is also "Frida" in Switzerland [Anni-Frid Lyngstad of ABBA, born to a Norwegian Mother and German Father but grew up and still lives in Sweden] - are these two names cognate to each other or do they have a different meaning / different linguistic trail? .. Is "Frid" / "Frida" the Norwegian variant of Swedish "Frieda"? ..

    • @Tim_Nilsson
      @Tim_Nilsson Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@bradhartliep879 The spelling in Swedish is Frida. That was my great grandmothers (1901-2002) name and is still common.
      The oldest recording of the name in Sweden is from 1388.
      Frida is pretty much the only spelling you'll find in Scandinavia.
      Frieda I'd say is more German than anything so you might have German ancestry as well.
      Stockholm specifically had quite a large German population if you go back some hundred years.
      After a little research other variants can apparently also be Freida, Freda and Frinta.
      In older Swedish/Norse the word "fridh" apparently meant the beloved or beautiful which the Swedish version of the name is based on.
      In modern Swedish the words "frid" means peace so it's the same as German "friede".
      So Frida and Frieda might have different meanings depending on what the German origin is.

  • @chrismichael6048
    @chrismichael6048 Před rokem +14

    In Malay, every name of 7 days originally came from their Arabic root. Monday=hari Isnin (means Day 2), Tuesday=hari Selasa (means Day 3), Wednesday=hari Rabu (means Day 4), Thursday=hari Khamis (means Day 5), Friday=hari Juma'at (means Day of Congegration), Saturday=hari Sabtu (means Day 7), Sunday=hari Ahad (means Day 1); also known as hari Minggu (means Day of Our Lord, originally came from Portuguese word Domingo)

    • @marutanray
      @marutanray Před 11 měsíci

      it isnt arabic. it is chinese. days of the week are numbered in chinese.

    • @franciscoflamenco
      @franciscoflamenco Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@marutanray You're very easily proven wrong.
      1. The names of the days listed by @crismichael6048 have the Arabic names of the numbers (if they are numbered).
      2. The Chinese system uses Monday as the first day, while the Malay system starts from Sunday as the first day.

    • @marutanray
      @marutanray Před 9 měsíci

      @@franciscoflamenco the arabic influence on malaya is recent. the chinese influence is older.

    • @franciscoflamenco
      @franciscoflamenco Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@marutanray I'm sure you're able to realize on your own that that's a completely different topic to the one being discussed.

    • @Normal_user_coniven
      @Normal_user_coniven Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@marutanray
      As an Arabic native speaker, I can confirm that we say:
      Sunday Ahad
      Monday Ithnein
      Tuesday Thulatha
      Wednesday Arbia
      Thursday Khamis
      Friday Jum'ah
      Saturday Sabt
      They didn't even translate it, they kept the same names as we pronunce it in Arabic.
      But, Sabt can be either from Sab'ah wich means seven, or from the Semetic word Sabt/Subat which means rest or sleep, as Jews saying.
      And, about the Chinese week in Malay Archapilo, they must had left it. In Arabic we had different names in pre-Islamic era, but left it and made new one.

  • @tyrport
    @tyrport Před 8 měsíci +1

    The question is with a seven day week why weren’t there 13 months of 28 days and 4 weeks each. It leaves a spare day, two during a leap year.

  • @ansiaaa
    @ansiaaa Před 9 měsíci +1

    in Italian we kept the original roman names (Monday - Lunedì, from Luna - Moon, Tuesday is Martedì, from Marte - Mars, ...), apart from Sunday. For us is Domenica, which comes from dies Dominicus (day of the Lord), influenced by the Catholic religion that dominated our territory

  • @THEScottCampbell
    @THEScottCampbell Před 4 měsíci +2

    I would think that the seven day week predated Babylon by at least 1,000 years from Sumer and Akkad.

  • @Tsukiyasi
    @Tsukiyasi Před 2 lety +13

    In portuguese the names of the days are so simple.
    Sunday is considered the last day of the week, it's called "Domingo", coming from the Latin "dies Dominica" or "Day of the Lord", it was the first day of the fair.
    Them comes Monday, "Segunda-feira", the meaning is just the second day of the fair, but we never say "feira", we just say Segunda, that just means second.
    It's the same for all the other days, "Terça-feira" terça meaning third, "Quarta-feira" quarta meaning fourth, "Quinta-feira" quinta meaning fifth and "Sexta-feira" sexta meaning sixth.
    And there's Saturday, that we call "Sábado" which comes from hebrew shabbatt

    • @Thisissparta1972
      @Thisissparta1972 Před rokem

      very good.
      it is said that an arianist fled nicaea to bracari ,modern day braga, and somehow had an impact on the naming of the days because he later on became a saint...
      I read that somewhere and I might be wrong but still

  • @ibnhaydari2100
    @ibnhaydari2100 Před 2 lety +2

    great video

  • @DavidHaney1
    @DavidHaney1 Před 6 měsíci

    GR8 VID ~ WATCHED IT ALL ~ LOVE ❤ IT !!!

  • @graemesandstrom5654
    @graemesandstrom5654 Před 2 lety +4

    How amazing! Isn’t it incredible that normally, people just take the number and the names of the week days for granted. Why doesn’t every school child know this information? There’s enough historical, geographic, linguistic, astronomical, mathematical, scientific and history of religious branches to investigate for 7 months never mind 7 days!
    Thank you 🙏👍🇦🇺

    • @us3rG
      @us3rG Před 8 měsíci +3

      Kids don't learn how to navigate or anything about the world and the stars as it relates to us, they're just taught how to be good employees
      Linguistics should be studied like Linguistics
      History should be taught from words, numbers, arts, music, trade ....point of view

  • @bravehome4276
    @bravehome4276 Před 2 lety +3

    Just to be clear:
    One. There is no historical evidence indicating that the Hebrews took a seven day week from the Babylonians.
    Two. The seven day week was standardized in “modern“ times by Constantine, the first Christian emperor of Rome.
    Three. The Hebrew week begins on Sunday, and ends on the Sabbath, Saturday.

  • @user-ul5pt1yb8z
    @user-ul5pt1yb8z Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks a lot

  • @dralberthofmann
    @dralberthofmann Před 4 měsíci

    I enjoyed learning about the seven day week!😉👍

  • @sanjoydey1030
    @sanjoydey1030 Před rokem +7

    Greek learnt the seven days rule from Indians during the invasion of Alexander. The original book that describes the rule and naming of seven days are ancient Indian astronomical book like SuryaSiddhanta and Srimad Bhagavatam. No other astrological book provided such elaborated logic for making 7 days in a week and naming them after a planet or star.

    • @vaibhavsaxena1084
      @vaibhavsaxena1084 Před 6 měsíci

      The Europeans think everything started with them when the fact is they didn’t even know decimals to accurately depict length of day month and year.

  • @frankwalder3608
    @frankwalder3608 Před 2 lety +9

    An explanation I heard was that the Babylonians had six day weeks, six weeks in a month, and ten months in a year. An extra month was added to the beginning of every sixth year, and an extra week was added to the end of the tenth month every twenty-four years. According to the version I’m referring to, Romans originally had ten month years just like the Babylonian, and that Julius Caesar added “July” and Augustus Caesar added “August” named after themselves, taking days from February to make ‘their months’ 31-days long.

    • @silencemeviolateme6076
      @silencemeviolateme6076 Před rokem +3

      Not sure about the end part. Julius Caesar reformed the calendar. Augustus just renamed august. Also winter has fewer days than summer.

  • @flufflesss
    @flufflesss Před 2 lety

    Thank you

  • @EebstertheGreat
    @EebstertheGreat Před 4 měsíci

    One thing worth mentioning is the order of the days. Why do the days go in an order that seems unrelated to the order of the planets?
    Apparently it comes from a somewhat confusing convention. Astrologers divided the day into 24 hours and named each hour after a planet. The classical planets were thought to circle the Earth at different speeds and distances, and the ones that tended to move fastest across the sky were thought to be the closest. So the planets were ordered from most- to least-distant Saturn-Jupiter-Mars-Sun-Venus-Mercury-Moon, and hours were also given the same names in a cycle. This will repeat every 7 days, i.e. once a week, and each day of the week was named after the first hour of that day. So if a week starts on the Sun hour, then the first day is Sunday. The 8th hour of the day will be Sun again, as well as the 15th and 22nd. Then the 23rd hour will be Venus, and the 24th Mercury, making the first hour of the next day Moon. So the second day of the week was Moon day. Going like this gives the order Sun-Moon-Mars-Mercury-Jupiter-Venus-Saturn, which is still reflected in the names today.

  • @Hfil66
    @Hfil66 Před 2 lety +12

    The other significance of the number 7 is that many consider it to be approximately the number of items a human can store in short term memory. This was why for a long while phone numbers were 7 digits long (not so any longer, but these days few people can remember phone numbers easily, they just use their contact list on their phone to recall their phone numbers).

  • @346UNCLEBOB
    @346UNCLEBOB Před 2 lety +22

    28 (number of days in a lunar cycle) factors by 4 and 7.
    This 28 day period can be divided into 7, 4 day weeks or 4, 7 day weeks.
    Four days per week is to short so seven days per week it is.

    • @Altinget
      @Altinget Před 2 lety +2

      The week is the 4 phases of the moon:
      The four primary moon phases are:
      New Moon.
      First Quarter.
      Full Moon.
      Third Quarter (Last Quarter)

    • @PrivateSi
      @PrivateSi Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, but the question is how and WHY... "It takes 27 days, 7 hours, and 43 minutes for our Moon to complete one full orbit around Earth. This is called the sidereal month, and is measured by our Moon's position relative to distant “fixed” stars. However, it takes our Moon about 29.5 days to complete one cycle of phases (from new Moon to new Moon).".....
      --
      If they were just going by observed phases they'd have ranged from 28 to 31 days so could have easily chosen 30 day cycle and 6*5 or 5*6 day weeks... 360/30 days = 12 months all the same length + 5 (and a bit) extra days in a year... 28*13 months = 364 days so only 1 day short... Yet the ancients used 12 zodiac, 12 month calendars from early times. for 12 month calendars 6*5 (or possibly 5*6 but 5 can't be divided by 2 for a half-moon) makes more sense, with 30 day months + 5 day holiday time..
      --
      It seems various systems have been shoe-horned together.. Perhaps some places had 13 month calendars and 28 day months so 7 day weeks became the norm, then the zodiac lot forced their 12 month system and had to make all the months different lengths to fit it into 365... 13 months in the year and 4x7 day weeks in a month makes more sense if you want to make all the months the same length, which also makes more sense..
      --
      The Ancients were somewhat confused!

    • @celtspeaksgoth7251
      @celtspeaksgoth7251 Před 2 lety +2

      also anyone can gauge the duration of the phases of the moon - new to half (7) half to full (7) full to half (7) half to new (7). That's where the 7 comes from. To ancient man there were only two heavenly objects which clearly moved. In Welsh the days are : Dydd Sul (sol, Latin), Llun (lunar), Mawrth (Mars), Mercher (Mercury), Iau (Iove = Jupiter), Gwener (Venus), Sadwrn (Saturn)

    • @PrivateSi
      @PrivateSi Před 2 lety +2

      @@celtspeaksgoth7251 .. Then why not 13 months of 28 days = 364 days.. Could have gone with 6x5 day weeks, 12x30 months = 360 + 5 day holiday.. This can be divided into 2. 11*32=352+13 day holiday .. 12*28=336+29 day holiday so that doesn't make sense.. It's more complicated than you think, a mixture of compromises / systems shoehorned into someone else's system.. 13 months * 28 days + New Year's Eve holiday is the most sensible solution for modern times if you ask me... But 99% would disagree!

    • @davidlamb1107
      @davidlamb1107 Před 2 lety

      @@PrivateSi You're not crazy. I completely agree with you and have for years.

  • @Vates104
    @Vates104 Před 2 lety

    Glad I found your channel

  • @randywise5241
    @randywise5241 Před 7 měsíci

    In Sumerian numerology, 7 is the number of perfections. Multiples of it are perfection in progress.

  • @dg-hughes
    @dg-hughes Před 2 lety +3

    I think the base 12 counting system of Sumeria must have influenced Babylonia. They may have broken the year in 12 months knowing the moon was about 28 days so a month was known. That would mean one month 365 days/12 would be 30 days per month. Then those 30 days were probably be broken up into four groups of seven days for some reason. Maybe dividing a 30 day month by three or five giving a ten day or six day week meant that those didn't fit some ritual or people just didn't like those numbers.

  • @JorgeBrown
    @JorgeBrown Před 2 lety +4

    The word Babylon is often referred mostly because the first ancient documents translated were related to Babylon. However, most of all knowledge of even older civilisation such as Summer is also named Babylon. The specifics of this video refer to Summer not to Babylon.

    • @mirpopolos6209
      @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety +2

      You mean Sumer. Summer is a season.

    • @JorgeBrown
      @JorgeBrown Před 2 lety

      @@mirpopolos6209 Yes, you are right. Thanks! It was the bloody auto-correct. But the core of the comments keeps valid.

  • @saiwet1357
    @saiwet1357 Před rokem

    Thanks

  • @hubertk7363
    @hubertk7363 Před rokem +1

    Latin and Germanic weekdays: Gods and Celestial bodies and stuff
    Slavic weekdays:
    Sunday - the one you don't work on
    Monday - the one after Sunday
    Tuesday - the second one (after Sunday)
    Wednesday - the middle one
    Thursday - the fourth one (after Sunday)
    Friday - the fifth one (after Sunday)
    Saturday - the sabbath

  • @neillamontiii2911
    @neillamontiii2911 Před 2 lety +5

    How can Babylon be earlier than "In the beginning"????

    • @mirpopolos6209
      @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety +1

      "In the beginning" was written while the Jews were in Babylon,

    • @timsmith2525
      @timsmith2525 Před 2 lety

      @@mirpopolos6209 Moses wrote Genesis after the exodus from Egypt. In it, he is describing something that happened much earlier. What we now call the Old Testament was canonized around the time of the Babylonian captivity.

    • @mirpopolos6209
      @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety

      @@timsmith2525 Do you really think it was written by Moses? Anyway, it was revised in Babylon. I forget why you are telling me this. What is your point exactly ?

    • @timsmith2525
      @timsmith2525 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mirpopolos6209 Yes. I am correcting the false statement that you made. No, it wasn't. Huh? My point is to correct the myth that you are propagating.

    • @mirpopolos6209
      @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety

      @@timsmith2525 What myth ? You Americans are so ignorant. European scholars realised in the 18th century that Genesis was written by at least three different people, for starters. You would never be able to prove that one of them was Moses.

  • @Delgen1951
    @Delgen1951 Před 2 lety +16

    Seven is the number of completion and the number of God in Hebrew and six is the number of man (Adam), and a fortnight is two seven-day periods that was also used as a "week" by some other peoples. Also, anyone who works know that the real Monday's name is Morday.

    • @imamsev
      @imamsev Před 2 lety +10

      I believe the Babylonian’s took the seven days from the prophets like Ibrahim and Noah etc.

    • @nigelandmarycurtis3765
      @nigelandmarycurtis3765 Před 2 lety

      Sunday’s name came from the day pagans worshipped the sun, and Monday from the day they worshipped the moon.
      The word “fortnight” is a shortened term for “fourteen nights”, ie two weeks. An old, unused term for a week is “se’n night).

    • @happyface96
      @happyface96 Před 2 lety +4

      @@imamsev makes sense as the story of creation was passed down through word of mouth from Adam to the early kingdoms/empires of the Bronze age, the significance of 7 would have already been preeminent to Sumerian culture even before the existence of the First Babylonian empire. It would only be written in stone by Moses centuries later depicting a story already commonly known culturally in the near east.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před rokem

      ​@@happyface96 true.

    • @HolgerJakobs
      @HolgerJakobs Před 4 měsíci

      _fortnight_ is something very British. In all other languages I know there isn't even a word for a 14 day period.

  • @doncarlodivargas5497
    @doncarlodivargas5497 Před 9 měsíci +1

    In norway Saturday is called "lørdag" wich was earlier "lauderdag" which, means washing day, so, some people think being clean is more important than some god, probably 6 gods was sufficient they thought

  • @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar
    @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar Před 4 měsíci +1

    In Russuan, the first day of the week is Monday or понедельник (roughly, pu-ne-del-nik) - essentially 'the day after the day of not working.'
    Then вторник (f-tor-nik), or 'the second day.'
    Then среда (s-re-da), or 'the middle day.'
    Четверг (chit-ver-k), or 'fourth day.'
    Пятница (p-yat-nitz-a), 'fifth day.'
    Cуббота (su-bor-ta), from 'sabbath.'
    And finally воскресенье (vas-kri-sen-ya), which means 'recovery or get well day.' In older Russian it was was неделя (no work day), although that word now means 'week' but before that седмица, 'seven days,' was the word for a week.
    Unlike English, Russian days if the week only have a capital letter ✉️ fbthey are at the start if a sentance.

  • @anacondaeunectes1854
    @anacondaeunectes1854 Před 2 lety +3

    Saturday is named after the Roman deity Saturn. The Greek Titan (NOT Roman) was called Kronos.

  • @infinite5795
    @infinite5795 Před rokem +3

    This Babylonian system is somewhat similar to the indigenous/traditional lunisolar calendars followed in India as well, by the Hindus as well Buddhists and jains who modelled it on Old Hindu/Sanskrit calendar. In Sanskrit, the days of the week are also associated with a specific planet( Hindus worship the personification of that planet in form of a god, their positions are consulted for horoscopes), they are:-
    1)Monday- Somavasarah- Moon aka Chandra( the white one responsible for the thoughts and relations).
    2)Tuesday- Mangalavasarah- Mars aka Mangala( the reddish-brown one responsible for wars)
    3) Wednesday- Budhavasarah- Mercury aka Budha( the greenish one responsible for mental clarity and intelligence)
    4) Thursday- Guruvasarah- Jupiter aka Brhaspati( the whitish one for luck and prosperity)
    5) Friday- Shukravasarah- Venus aka Shukracharya( the golden one for luxuries and comforts)
    6) Saturday- Shanivasarah- Saturn aka Shani( the black one for justice and Karma)
    7) Sunday- Ravivasarah- Sun aka Surya/Ravi( the bright one who controls all these planets).
    Yes we Hindus also consider Sun and moon as planets, but somehow, we also believe that all planets depend on the sun for their influences and support. Also, Rahu and Ketu are considered 2 extra planets( North lunar node and South lunar node respectively). They are planets in Hindu astrology as they are believed to influence our life although they don't have any physical existence and are considered accountable due to eclipses. But, Hindu astronomy doesn't consider them as traditional planets, for the past 2500 years or so.

    • @nuwanda923
      @nuwanda923 Před 6 měsíci

      Do you know when did the seven day week format instaur in India? I am so curious about the “week” system. Did one particular day associate with a no-work day?

    • @swapnilkakde3339
      @swapnilkakde3339 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@nuwanda923 Answer lies in a scripture called "Jyotisha Shastra" which is a small part of " Vedanga" which is a part of " Veda". As per what I've perceived to some extent by doing some dig up, different days are ruled by different "Graha". (Graha cannot be translated exactly as planets, but just to understand what I'm tryinna say rn we can consider it). There are total 7 Graha(same as shown in the video), which influence life on the earth. And Sunday is actually the first day being influenced by sun. It is considered to be an auspicious day to start working, and not a holiday. You may easily find related videos on yt. Try some Sanskrit/Vedic awareness channel to skip through incidental truffles. good luck.

  • @209lapko
    @209lapko Před 2 lety

    Brilliant

  • @badidea932
    @badidea932 Před rokem +2

    the spanish language had influence on the philippine languages because of spanish colonization
    english - spanish - filipino
    sunday - domingo - linggo
    monday - lunes - lunes
    tuesday - martes - martes
    wednesday - miércoles - miyerkules
    thursday - jueves - huwebes
    friday - viernes - biyernes
    saturday - sábado - sabado
    although in my native language waray we also use "domingo" for sunday instead of "linggo"

  • @momochiyoda2960
    @momochiyoda2960 Před 2 lety +7

    7:11
    thousand/s of years later
    English = Spanish
    Monday = lunes
    Tuesday = martes
    Wednesday = miércoles
    Thursday = jueves
    Friday = viernes
    Saturday = sábado
    Sunday = domingo

  • @walterulasinksi7031
    @walterulasinksi7031 Před 2 lety +15

    On the basis of Occam’s razor, the most likely explanation was the cycle of the moon. This being the 28 day cycle between full moon and full moon. Secondly,it divided down to the four week, seven day period. Uniquely, it also corresponds to the fertility cycle of human females.
    The Hebrew year consisted of 13 months, most likely from the Babylonians also as a measure of the winter solstice. While these were not exact, as the Babylonians worked out mathematically and through observation, they like most humans were pragmatic and used the easiest method available.

    • @fanOmry
      @fanOmry Před 2 lety

      No.
      The Jewish year has twelve months.
      Every seven years Hadar repeats.

    • @arieleden
      @arieleden Před 2 lety +1

      @@fanOmry Wrong the second Hadar is added every 3 years, but because the cycle is 19 years (the sun cycle) at least once in that cycle second Hadar is added after 2 years.

    • @fanOmry
      @fanOmry Před 2 lety

      @@arieleden מה?

    • @arieleden
      @arieleden Před 2 lety

      @@fanOmry לא הבנתה מה כתבתי?

    • @fanOmry
      @fanOmry Před 2 lety

      @@arieleden כן.
      אדר ב' זה פעם בשבע שנים...

  • @phantomforester9337
    @phantomforester9337 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the multiple explanations. By the way, your buttons are on the wrong side.

  • @Rameshh3847
    @Rameshh3847 Před 8 měsíci

    on google i found base only till 36 and no other website is answering. where to find base more than 36?

  • @rkozakand
    @rkozakand Před 2 lety +8

    There seems to be confusion as to why the sun and moon were considered planets. The word planet means wanderer, and originally referred to the 7 objects which moved across the sky against the background of the "fixed stars". We changed the definition of the word after Copernicus.

    • @TrevorRGHolt
      @TrevorRGHolt Před 2 lety +2

      The sun and moon are historically called planets e.g. celestial bodies as most histories actually translate it.

    • @TrevorRGHolt
      @TrevorRGHolt Před 2 lety +1

      Planet and celestial bodies are synonymous because of what they turned out to be

  • @lourdescorreia4201
    @lourdescorreia4201 Před 2 lety +3

    Saturday is the seventh day of the week.Sabbath is Yahuah rest day after He’s Creation .

  • @anamicasinghkotwal
    @anamicasinghkotwal Před 5 měsíci +1

    . It is important to note here that Rig veda is dated nearly 3000 BCE by various scholars and historians but we Indians consider it to be tens of thousands if not hundred thousand year old. Although there also exists long list of other post Christ era texts like Aryabhatiyam by Aryabhata, Panchsidhhantika of Varahmihira , kalmadhava by Madhvacharya ,Siddhant shiromani by Bhaskarcharya to name a few.
    Theory and order
    Indian astronomers (siddhant jyotishi / khagol shastri) knew the Heliocentricity of the solar system before the Kepler’s Theory of Heliocentricity (1617-1621) which can be established by the facts mentioned in Aryabhatiyam (4th CE), Panchhsidhantikka(5-6TH CE ), Grahaganit (9TH CE ) .However while calculating the order of the day one needs to follow geocentric method .This is because we live on planet earth if we follow heliocentricity we will get Earth-Day instead of Sunday and Moon-day/Monday will get omitted altogether. To avoid this very error we follow geocentric model .
    One may get bewildered that as per vedic astrology we have 9 planets(pind) but we have 7 days ,the reason is Rahu and Ketu are considered to be lunar nodes not planets. To determine the order of weekdays one needs to know two things the first being speed of rotation of planets and the second being Hora (a Sanskrit word derived from another Sanskrit word Ahoratra meaning a complete Day ) . One ahoratra has 60 ghatis which is equal to 24 horas which corresponds to nearly 24 hours.
    To get the sequence of weekdays one must first arrange the planets from slowest to fastest (according to their speed of rotation). The order comes out to be Saturn(shani), jupiter (guru),mars(mangal) , Sun(ravi) , venus (shukr) ,
    mercury(buddh ) and moon(som) .And afterwards he/she needs to make the list of hours from 1st to 24th in a row and then start assigning the each hour a graha/planet staring with Saturn ,followed by Jupiter, mars and so on as mentioned above in the order of their rotation velocity. When one reaches the bottom that is 24th hour one will get mars(mangal) as per order .Carry over to next row following this very sequence starting with 1st hour again upto 24th hour doing so upto seven times one will get 7 rows with 1st hour of each row represented by its dinpati .Therefore first row will have Saturn/shani in its 1st hour which is also its dinpati . In second row’s 1st hour one will have sun/ravi which is dinpati of 2nd row . In 3rd row’s first hour one will have moon/som which is also dinpati of 3rd row .In 4th row’s first hour person will get mars/mangal which is dinapti of the 4th . In 5th row’s first hour

  • @jadenephrite
    @jadenephrite Před 6 měsíci +1

    Regarding 4:52, the astrological symbols for the planets were also represented by their alchemy symbols. The symbol ♀for the planet Venus was the alchemy symbol for copper. The symbol ♂for the planet Mars was the alchemy symbol for iron. The symbol ♃ for the planet Jupiter was the alchemy symbol for tin. The symbol ♄ for the planet Saturn was the alchemy symbol for lead. The symbol ☿ for the planet Mercury was the alchemy symbol for the metal Mercury. The symbol ☉ for the sun was the alchemy symbol for gold. The symbol ☾ for the Moon was the alchemy symbol for silver.

  • @pentegarn1
    @pentegarn1 Před 2 lety +7

    Its actually not strange at all that they seen Woten (Odin) as Mercury. We know from Caesar's "Gallic Wars" that Caesar decided the Celt's main God was Mercury. So it's not much of stretch to assume the Celt's neighbors pretty much had a similar God in charge of their pantheon. Just like the Celts had a one handed God and their neighbor had a similar one handed God.

  • @mirpopolos6209
    @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety +14

    You go from Latin to "Germanic" to Anglo-Saxon to English, but ignore German.
    In German, Wednesday is Mittwoch which simply means Midweek . Tuesday is Dienstag which seems to mean Service Day (cf "Ich dien"). I have heard it said that this day was devoted to working for the feudal lord instead of oneself (although if everyone did that on the same day, wouldn' t it have made his land overcrowded, and left unattended on all the other days ?).
    It has also been suggested that Dien refers to a sort of democratic assembly for freemen held on that day, the "ting" of "hustings". That seems the most likely.

    • @AbWischBar
      @AbWischBar Před 2 lety

      Mittwoch is indeed the middle of the week, which however only works if Sunday (Sonntag) is considered the first day of the week. As a child, our calendar weeks started with Monday. First later i found out that Sunday was considered the beginning.
      I do find it more likely, that Dienstag does actually derive from the same roots as Tuesday - the good Tyr, which in old Germanic was called Teiwa (Tiwesdæg). And yes, Tyr was the protector of the Thing (pronounced Ting). The word “Ting” - meaning assembly of the people - is still in use in Nordic countries, as an example in Danish: folketing, tinglysning etc. Though as a German, before i moved to the Nordic countries and got familiar with all these words, I also considered the relation to “duty” “Dienst/dienen” as the origin. Just did not make any sense :)

    • @mirpopolos6209
      @mirpopolos6209 Před 2 lety

      @@AbWischBar Thank you so much ! That is very interesting. I never actually counted where the mathematical middle was, but assumed the Germans had got it right, being very technical. Of course, the Jews started all this, and God made "the light" on the first day, which must mean the sun on Sunday, mustn't it ?
      The TH in "thing" must have been pronounced differently at some stage, as it must have in Theresienbad and Thalkirchdorf, Thüringen and Thurmstein, usw. It's like RH in Rhein or Rhine (the English), or Rhöndorf, or Rhossili and Rhyl (both in Wales, like many others), or WH in white (not black). RH is a special kind of R in Welsh, and many Scottish people pronounce WH properly, but it is dying out in England (my mother did it), It sounds like "hwite", which I think is how it was spelt in Anglo-Saxon, but the two sounds are pronounced together (an aspirated English W --- don't even try this in Germany !). The Welsh people expect us to do LL more or less correctly, but RH is never mentioned.
      As for our English "husting" (or "hustings", which has become more common) the Concise Oxford Dictionary reveals that the "hus" is "house". Why didn't I think of that ? It comes from Old Norse, and means "House Assembly" (I suppose this would be the big house in the village, where everyone met in the Great Hall, rather like Westminster Hall the oldest part of the Houses of Parliament). Even in the 18th century (when we had democracy, sort of anyway ) I can imagine hustings being held in the big house where the candidate lived !
      As I mentioned "ich dien" for the convenience of English people, you may not realise why. It is the motto of Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales (similar to Crown Prince, in effect), The Prince of Wales killed the King of Bohemia (König von Böhmen) and stole it from him, also his feathers. Mind you, this was in 1346. Those two words are also similar to "Your man" in Welsh, which is what the Prince of Wales says loyally to the Queen (or usually King). The modern Welsh is "Eich Ddyn" . Funny, that ! But on the tomb of the first prince of Wales to use the motto, it is shown as "Ich diene", and of course, altogether it does mean "I am your man; I serve you". It fits very well ! Perhaps Prince Edward said "Wow, that's just the thing for me !". This was at the Battle of Crécy. I don't know why he was there.
      Hustings is quite an unusual word now. It means Wahlveranstaltung. People have televisions these days instead.

    • @HolgerJakobs
      @HolgerJakobs Před 4 měsíci

      ​​@@AbWischBarActually, there is an ISO standard for date and time, and it says that the week starts on Monday and ends on Sunday. Since Saturday and Sunday are considered the weekend, this makes sense. Plus, according to the Bible, earth and its inhabitants were created in six days, so God could rest on the seventh day, which is Sunday. Of course that's just a tale, but even the week itself is something man-made.
      Mittwoch is the middle of the work week.

  • @anisothmen3712
    @anisothmen3712 Před rokem +2

    In Arabic days are named after numbers (1,2,3,4,5 ) exept Friday and Saturday . Friday is called the gathering (because people gather for prayer ) and Saturday is the Arabic name of shabbath in Hebrew (sabt )

  • @saigonmonopoly1105
    @saigonmonopoly1105 Před 6 měsíci

    how you devide uneven 365 into evenly 4 moon cycles? 3.5 pair 4/90x3.5 or wat fit into 360 ?

  • @jedgar63
    @jedgar63 Před 2 lety +4

    I had never thought of the seven day lunar cycle, but that would seem to be easier for the ancients to notice than the seven "wanderers". That a couple of constellations have seven stars, not most of them, makes that being the original source doubtful.

  • @gotzvonberlichingen6494
    @gotzvonberlichingen6494 Před 2 lety +5

    This is very good high iq visuals of elementary subject matter , but I would have liked them to go more in depth about like why one day is Thursday and not Monday, yeah I get where the names came from but why in that order ? Why isn’t Wednesday the day before Friday?

    • @redpill6201
      @redpill6201 Před 2 lety

      Saturn's-Day = The Mineral Age (Tin Man in "Wizard of OZ" Theosophy).
      OZ =77 in Gematria. Saturn, Satan, Santa, Kronos, Old Father Time, Death.
      Sun-Day = The Vegetable Age (Scarecrow).
      Moon-Day = The Animal Age (Lion).
      That is why those three days are apparently in that order, not sure about the rest. You might be interested in my long reply on the top "pinned thread" as well.

  • @nunyabidness117
    @nunyabidness117 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The week is 7 days long because that's how frequently payday rolls

  • @joshuamurray9403
    @joshuamurray9403 Před 2 lety +1

    There's little funnier than laughing at the dude who says we got to go further back than the beginning of time and everything 😂🤣🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @exoplanet11
    @exoplanet11 Před 2 lety +3

    Slight error at 5:45. The Babylonians had the lunar cycles mapped out exquisitely. They knew that after 223 lunations the exact conditions repeat, creating an identical eclipse, if there was an eclipse on the first day of this 18 year cycle. Look up Saros. They also probably inspired Meton of Athens, who calculated the similar Metonic cycle.
    It is still hard to divide the lunar synodic period (29.5 days) evenly. 28/4 = 7 is close... only off by 1.5 days.

    • @sethflores1680
      @sethflores1680 Před 2 lety +1

      The weekly cycle composing of seven literal days was long before the Babylonians. As a matter of fact it was long before the the peoples of the earth were devided into there separate kingdoms and tribes. The ancients already knew that the number seven held a special significance. If I'm not mistaken, I believe a discovery was made in a cave some years ago of a shrine built by a stone age culture which had no connections to the Babylonians. The researchers established that the builders of the shrine held the number seven of special significance. Moreover, as I mentioned earlier that the sacredness of seven by the ancients was long before the establishment of nations or kingdoms. According to the Bible, Noah also must have had a concept of the seven day cycle. (Note: all nations of the earth stemmed from Noah biblically) For the Bible mentions that Noah waited another seven days (a week) before he sent forth the dove.
      On a side note, the latest archaeological news of the research on Noah's ark is very exciting indeed. Information on the latest research can easily be Googled or attain on the internet. The new discoveries concerning this work appears to prove the authenticity of the biblical narrative.

  • @dpainter1526
    @dpainter1526 Před 2 lety +7

    ...You can't go back further than The Creation... Literally Day 1. (???)
    Another reason comes to mind on why the Babylonians adopted the seven day week: the Israelites were captured and enslaved by the Babylonians, and it is not unreasonable to me to suppose that some of their customs were adopted by them, especially as at least one prominent Israeli, King Jehoiachin, even lived in the palace and ate regularly with the Babylonian king (King Amel- Marduk, or Evil-Merodach).
    Given that King Nebuchadnezzar also acknowledged the God of Israel as Lord, he probably would have wanted to incorporate at least some of the new-found God's ways into Babylonian life.

  • @flrseeker
    @flrseeker Před 7 měsíci

    the lost book of ENKI has the best explanation

  • @ido8071
    @ido8071 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting.

  • @rkozakand
    @rkozakand Před 2 lety +7

    After doing some research, it is clear that the Babylonians did NOT have a 7 day week. True, the 7th, 14th and 21st days of the month had some significance, but so did other days. Also after the 21st, The cycle was broken until the next month started. So there was NOT an independent 7 day cycle in their calender. That started with the Jewish Calender. It is possible that the Jewish Sabbath was inspired in part by Babylonian practices, but they were the first ones to use the 7 day week. The Romans, Greeks, and others commented on this as one of the Jewish peculiarities, and they thought that the idea of resting every 7 days was completely absurd. The concept of the week was spread by Christianity, and later, Islam. This is when the 7 days were named after the planets, in the Christian era, by Christians. Noone in the pre Christian era used a 7 day week except the Jews.

    • @Malfurionxtc
      @Malfurionxtc Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly... And roman-christians (after emperor Constantine) accepted it, but changed it to Sunday to mark the end of the week/rest day from Sabbath day/Saturday, trying to still keep the old believes (Sunday representing god of sun) and mixing with new religion that came: Christianity, so it will be easier for people to accept it (cause it was huge change for the romans going from having multiple gods to having just 1), shifting the 7th day to be Sunday. Confirmation of this can be found in some Catholic scripts that they still brag about the feat to display their "power" as a church, by saying (and I quote) "perhaps the boldest things, the most revolutionary change the church ever did happened in the first century. The Holy Day, The Sabbath, was changed from Saturday to Sunday, not from any directions noted in the Scriptures (Bible) " that statement can be found in Saint Catherine Catholic Church Sentinel, May 21, 1995.

    • @musar03580
      @musar03580 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Malfurionxtc I think you'll find that Christians have always regarded Sunday as the first day of the week, not the last. The fact that Sunday supplanted Saturday as the holy day did not make it the last day. Sunday, the first day of the week, represented a new beginning, a fitting picture of the Resurrection and the day on which Christ rose from the dead.

    • @Malfurionxtc
      @Malfurionxtc Před 2 lety

      @@musar03580 therefore ignoring the God's third (not 8th,not 9th,but 3rd) commandment "remember to keep *HOLY* the Sabbath day" , without any biblical script/passage that allows that change. I say Good Game romans, good game. Those are some balls of steel. Ps: that change didnt came in time of Christ, neither Christ said anything that allows the change of Sabbath day, neither happened soon after it, as a direct cause of Christ's resurrecton, but when Constantine introduced Christianity to the Roman people. Who already had Sunday as 7th they... They where playing a bit in the "gray area" at first "yea sure, Sabbath should be holy BUT also Sunday" and eventually, "you cant serve 2 masters" and if ended up as Sunday. That change didnt happened over night tho.

    • @musar03580
      @musar03580 Před 2 lety

      @@Malfurionxtc Yes, I was not suggesting that Sunday is a legitimate sabbath. The Sabbath is the seventh day of the week, Saturday. I was only pointing out that Sunday has always been reckoned the first day of the week in traditional Judeo-Christian thinking.

    • @farmergiles1065
      @farmergiles1065 Před 2 lety

      @@Malfurionxtc Most of the first Christians were originally Jews; both Jews and Christians considered Sunday as the first day of the week, as they still do. Likewise, Saturday was always the last day of the week (the 7th). Jews called it the Sabbath, keeping it as a day of rest, and also as a holy day, both together. Roman Catholic and Orthodox have always, and still do, affirm Saturday as the Sabbath. But historically, in Christianity, the Sabbath, even the whole week, took on additional significance. Sabbath continues as the day of rest, but the entire week, every day, is to be kept holy, in work or in rest. Sunday is the day of Christ's Resurrection, and the remembrance of that event has always been pre-eminent among all within Christianity. The celebration of communion and the gathering of Christians for worship is central. This can be done on any day of the week, but it should be done at least once a week, and then most fittingly on the day of the Resurrection, Sunday. For this reason, Protestants have often given it the name "the Lord's Day". It does not supplant the Sabbath, though, for every day is holy, the Sabbath as well.
      As this video described, the English name "Sunday", like the other names of the week, were given for various pagan gods of varying locations. Those names are unrelated to the God of Christianity. Christ has always been known to Christians as the "Light of the World", the enlightenment of souls. The physical sun gives light in particles, a part of the universe we live in. Early on, Christians saw how that could be symbolic of Christ, but never has there been any confusion between them. There is no worship of the sun in Christianity, just worship of the Son of God, the Creator of All, including the sun. God's works are marvellous, and the pagans, not knowing Christ, can be recognized as seeing that also even though not understanding it well.

  • @JohannY2
    @JohannY2 Před 9 měsíci

    Soooo interesting.

  • @freebobafett
    @freebobafett Před 4 měsíci

    Sun day, Saturn day and moon day were easy enough to figure out in my own, but frida, Thor and Odin and the other one had me scratching my head until you explained then. Thanks.

  • @kiratdosanjh3772
    @kiratdosanjh3772 Před 2 lety +3

    Sunday is for worship sun
    Monday is for worship moon
    Tuesday is for worship mars
    Wednesday is for worship mercury
    Thursday is for worship Jupiter
    Friday is for worship venus
    Saturday is for worship satrun

    • @showmikalam8979
      @showmikalam8979 Před 2 lety +1

      where is uranus neptune and pluto?

    • @kiratdosanjh3772
      @kiratdosanjh3772 Před 2 lety +1

      Showmik Alam vedic astrology only count planets till satrun

    • @simonruszczak5563
      @simonruszczak5563 Před 2 lety +2

      Venus worship (goddess Ishtar, Is) evolved into the Islamic religion ("Is" = Ishtar).
      Saturn worship (god Elyon, El) evolved into Judaism.
      Sun worship (god Mithra, Ra) evolved into son worship (Christianity).
      And each of the 3 religions still have their respective same day of worshipping, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
      Israel = Is + Ra + El = Venus, Sun, and Saturn worship

    • @simonruszczak5563
      @simonruszczak5563 Před 2 lety +1

      @@showmikalam8979 See my main comment.

    • @kiratdosanjh3772
      @kiratdosanjh3772 Před 2 lety

      Simon Ruszczak shukra(venus) is represented by white colour it represents white blood cells in body,sexual pleasures in life etc
      Satrun colour is black it judge your bad and good karm and reward and punishes accordingly
      Sun colour is safron it represent your backbone, father in one’s life and also goverment
      Venus and satrun are friend plantes but they are not friend with sun as per say

  • @MaxHohenstaufen
    @MaxHohenstaufen Před 2 lety +3

    The week lasts 7 days bc each moon phase lasts roughly 7 days. The end.

  • @nageshbabukalavalasrinivas2875
    @nageshbabukalavalasrinivas2875 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Sir, the seven day a week in ancient India or Bharath much earlier to history that you have mentioned.

  • @LayKarKho
    @LayKarKho Před 2 lety

    Great vid and very informative. I left it running while doing stuff around the house. The one time I looked at the screen was at 8'59" and saw that "Thursday" was spelled "Thurday" ... 🤪 Hope that was a typo. Or perhaps it has been originally "Thurday" all along and we are all wrong. 😓

  • @paulohare4233
    @paulohare4233 Před 2 lety +3

    im not a bible/god believer but when YOU quoted the bible having 6 days of creation and then on the 7th day god rested you then said that babylon predated this - how can you predate in the beginning god created the haevens and the earth lol?

    • @milic5068
      @milic5068 Před 2 lety +1

      predated the bible, not the creation...
      meaning the 7 day week practice existed even before the bibile was written

    • @justleon721
      @justleon721 Před 2 lety

      @@milic5068
      Before it was written, sure. But the story also originated long before it was written. We have no way of knowing how long ago it actually began to be told.

  • @josephm2521
    @josephm2521 Před 2 lety +3

    how can Babylon be before the creation?????????

    • @simonruszczak5563
      @simonruszczak5563 Před 2 lety

      "Babylon" means baby lion (Baby + Lon)
      "London" means lion roaring (was Londin, Lon + Din) Why did they choose that name?
      Mithra god has the head of a lion. The founders of London (Babylon rebuilt) were Mithra worshippers.
      The lion and lamb = Mithra and Jesus (both the same Sun god)
      The lion (Mithra) is the star constellation Leo. The lamb (Jesus) is the star constellation Aries.

    • @dpainter1526
      @dpainter1526 Před 2 lety

      @@simonruszczak5563 Jesus and Mithra are Not the same. Jesus is the SON of God, not "sun." The New Testament was written in Greek, not English, so "son" = "gios," "sun = "hilios". Two different words. Enough with the English punning!

  • @dalphon987
    @dalphon987 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice video. There are also 7 notes in the major scale and 7 colors of the rainbow.

  • @ishigami5071
    @ishigami5071 Před 2 lety

    I was doozing off a lil bit and i suddenly forgot what I'm watching and I'm like "why am i watching this vpn ads" just as i was about to click to another video i remembered what i was watching 😂