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  1. May 7, 2014 · On market day, country folk would come to the city and city dwellers would buy eight days' worth of groceries. By the time the seven-day week was officially adopted by Constantine in A.D. 321, the ...

  2. Mar 18, 2023 · Tuesday. Tuesday is the first to be named after a Germanic god – Tiu (or Twia) – a god of war and the sky and associated with the Norse god Tyr, who was a defender god in Viking mythology. Tiu is associated with Mars. He is usually shown with only one hand. In the most famous myth about Týr he placed his hand between the jaws of the wolf ...

  3. Jan 4, 2022 · The seven-day week is based on the lunar cycle; it takes roughly seven days for the Moon to transition from one of its states (e.g. "full") to the next (e.g. "waning half"). That explains why we follow a seven-day week. But if we want to trace the origins of the names of the days of the week, then the Roman Empire is the best place to look.

  4. The names of the 7 days of the week in most Latin-based languages come from the Roman calendar, which related each day with 7 celestial bodies considered to be gods: the Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Planets visible tonight. The English language has retained the planet names for Saturday, Sunday, and Monday.

  5. Tuesday was named for the Roman god of war, Mars, so in Latin was known as dies Martis. However, the Germanic god of war was known as Tiu and the English day of the week is derived from this Germanic god’s name instead, first known as Tiwsday and eventually Tuesday. Wednesday. Similarly, the Germanic equivalent of the Roman god Mercury was ...

  6. The days of the week that we all recognise today are indeed named after the mainly Anglo-Saxon gods that controlled everyday life, for example; Monday – Monandæg (Moon’s day – the day of the moon, in Old Norse Máni, Mani “Moon”, please see below); Tuesday – Tiwesdæg (Tiw’s-day – the day of the god of war and combat.

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