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Thread: The month names & seven days of the week are named after ancient European Pagan Gods & Goddesses.

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    Слава Путину! Я люблю Россию. Z
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    Smile The month names & seven days of the week are named after ancient European Pagan Gods & Goddesses.



    The Seven-Day Week and the
    Meanings of the Names of the Days.


    http://education.newarchaeology.com/days.php
    http://www.crowl.org/Lawrence/time/days.html

    Like the names of the months originate from the names of European Pagan Gods and Goddesses,
    so do the seven days of the week too, which are also named after very ancient Pagan Gods and Goddesses.
    (These Gods and Goddesses represent energies in nature - Pagans are very attuned to nature).


    The Naming of the Days

    The Greeks named the days week after the sun, the moon and the five known planets, which were in turn named after the gods Ares, Hermes, Zeus, Aphrodite, and Cronus. The Greeks called the days of the week the Theon hemerai "days of the Gods". The Romans substituted their equivalent gods for the Greek gods, Mars, Mercury, Jove (Jupiter), Venus, and Saturn. (The two pantheons are very similar.) The Germanic peoples generally substituted roughly similar gods for the Roman gods, Tiu (Twia), Woden, Thor, Freya (Fria), but did not substitute Saturn.


    Sunday -- Sun's day

    Middle English sone(n)day or sun(nen)day
    Old English sunnandæg "day of the sun"
    Germanic sunnon-dagaz "day of the sun"
    Latin dies solis "day of the sun"
    Ancient Greek hemera heli(o)u, "day of the sun"


    Monday -- Moon's day

    Middle English monday or mone(n)day
    Old English mon(an)dæg "day of the moon"
    Latin dies lunae "day of the moon"
    Ancient Greek hemera selenes "day of the moon"


    Tuesday -- Tiu's day

    Middle English tiwesday or tewesday
    Old English tiwesdæg "Tiw's (Tiu's) day"
    Latin dies Martis "day of Mars"
    Ancient Greek hemera Areos "day of Ares"

    Tiu (Twia) is the English/Germanic god of war and the sky. He is identified with the Norse god Tyr.

    Mars is the Roman god of war.

    Ares is the Greek god of war.


    Wednesday -- Woden's day

    Middle English wodnesday, wednesday, or wednesdai
    Old English wodnesdæg "Woden's day"
    Latin dies Mercurii "day of Mercury"
    Ancient Greek hemera Hermu "day of Hermes"

    Woden is the chief Anglo-Saxon/Teutonic god. Woden is the leader of the Wild Hunt. Woden is from wod "violently insane" + -en "headship".
    He is identified with the Norse Odin.

    Mercury is the Roman god of commerce, travel, theivery, eloquence and science. He is the messenger of the other gods.

    Hermes is the Greek god of commerce, invention, cunning, and theft. He is the messenger and herald of the other gods.
    He serves as patron of travelers and rogues, and as the conductor of the dead to Hades.


    Thursday -- Thor's day

    Middle English thur(e)sday
    Old English thursdæg
    Old Norse thorsdagr "Thor's day"
    Old English thunresdæg "thunder's day"
    Latin dies Jovis "day of Jupiter"
    Ancient Greek hemera Dios "day of Zeus".

    Thor is the Norse god of thunder. He is represented as riding a chariot drawn by goats and wielding the hammer Miölnir.
    He is the defender of the Aesir, destined to kill and be killed by the Midgard Serpent.

    Jupiter (Jove) is the supreme Roman god and patron of the Roman state. He is noted for creating thunder and lightning.

    Zeus is Greek god of the heavens and the supreme Greek god.


    Friday -- Freya's day

    Middle English fridai
    Old English frigedæg "Freya's day"
    composed of Frige (genetive singular of Freo) + dæg "day" (most likely)
    or composed of Frig "Frigg" + dæg "day" (least likely)
    Germanic frije-dagaz "Freya's (or Frigg's) day"
    Latin dies Veneris "Venus's day"
    Ancient Greek hemera Aphrodites "day of Aphrodite"

    Freo is identical with freo, meaning free. It is from the Germanic frijaz meaning "beloved, belonging to the loved ones, not in bondage, free".

    Freya (Fria) is the Teutonic goddess of love, beauty, and fecundity (prolific procreation).
    She is identified with the Norse god Freya. She is leader of the Valkyries and one of the Vanir. She is confused in Germany with Frigg.

    Frigg (Frigga) is the Teutonic goddess of clouds, the sky, and conjugal (married) love.
    She is identified with Frigg, the Norse goddess of love and the heavens and the wife of Odin. She is one of the Aesir. She is confused in Germany with Freya.

    Venus is the Roman goddess of love and beauty.

    Aphrodite (Cytherea) is the Greek goddess of love and beauty.


    Saturday -- Saturn's day

    Middle English saterday
    Old English sæter(nes)dæg "Saturn's day"
    Latin dies Saturni "day of Saturn"
    Ancient Greek hemera Khronu "day of Cronus"

    Saturn is the Roman and Italic god of agriculture and the consort of Ops. He is believed to have ruled the earth during an age of happiness and virtue.

    Cronus (Kronos, Cronos) is the Greek god (Titan) who ruled the universe until dethroned by his son Zeus.


    The Seven-Day Week

    The Babylonians marked time with lunar months. They proscribed some activities during several days of the month, particularly the...

    first -- the first visible crecent,
    seventh -- the waxing half moon,
    fourteenth -- the full moon,
    nineteenth -- dedicated to an offended goddess,
    twenty-first -- the waning half moon,
    twenty-eigth -- the last visible crecent,
    twenty-nineth -- the invisible moon, and
    thirtieth (possibly) -- the invisible moon.

    The major periods are seven days, 1/4 month, long. This seven-day period was later regularized and disassociated from the lunar month to become our seven-day week.


    Sources

    http://www.crowl.org/Lawrence/time/days.html
    These sources are somewhat inconsistent. I have chosen interpretations that are predominate among sources or that seem most reasonable.

    William Morris, editor, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, New College Edition, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1976

    Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, Portland House, New York, 1989

    William Matthew O'Neil, Time and the Calendars, Sydney University Press, 1975


    See Also

    The Royal Greenwich Observatory provides information on time, the calendar,
    the date of the ancient Pagan festival of Oestara ('easter'),
    the equation of time, leap years, and the year 2000 AD.

    The United States Naval Observatory has several systems of time.


    Pagan Origin of Days of the Week, Word Etymology


    Origin Names of Months, Pagan Origins by College Girl Model

    ❀♫ ღ ♬ ♪ And the angle of the sun changed it all. ❀¸.•*¨♥✿ 🎶



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    Quote Originally Posted by Leo Aiolia View Post
    A thread worth reading, I can't help but notice a considerable gap between Proto-Germanic old English the modern standardized one, which looks more like an offspring of the first one plus the additional absorbing of consonants, vowels, certain words and expressions from other languages, mainly from Latin and French(e.g the word day seems to have evolved from the hybridization of the old Proto-Germanic dæg plus the Latin dias) the double vowel æ seems to have disappeared from English aswell, also it remains uknown to me if the Celtic Britons had any significant impact in your language?

    It's also interesting to note that Ancient Greek and Latin compose two different lingustical groups despite the close proximity, and they remained quite distant until the Roman expandion in the area in 146 BC, after the lost battle of Corinth.
    studying English when I was at school I remember a table with the explanation of the evolution of the word day, I remember that they used declensions for various words like daeg for example :

    Declension of dæg (strong a-stem)


    Cognate with Old High German tac (German Tag), Old Norse dagr (Swedish dag), Old Frisian dei, Old Saxon and Old Dutch dag (Dutch dag),





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    Quote Originally Posted by Leo Aiolia View Post
    A thread worth reading, I can't help but notice a considerable gap between Proto-Germanic old English the modern standardized one, which looks more like an offspring of the first one plus the additional absorbing of consonants, vowels, certain words and expressions from other languages, mainly from Latin and French(e.g the word day seems to have evolved from the hybridization of the old Proto-Germanic dæg plus the Latin dias) the double vowel æ seems to have disappeared from English aswell, also it remains uknown to me if the Celtic Britons had any significant impact in your language?
    Final velars turning into a soft y sound is a common phenomenon in phonology. You can see that too in western Romance languages: OCTO 'number eight' > OGTO > OYTO > HUIT (French)/VUIT (Catalan)/UEITO (Aragonese)/OITO (Portuguese)/OCHO (Spanish)

    In English, final velars turning into y were a feature of the language evolution, not a French influence.

    eye < ege
    say < segan
    may < mæg
    I < ic
    rain < regn
    etc
    < La Catalogne peut se passer de l'univers entier, et ses voisins ne peuvent se passer d'elle. > Voltaire

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    Quote Originally Posted by Comte Arnau View Post
    Final velars turning into a soft y sound is a common phenomenon in phonology. You can see that too in western Romance languages: OCTO 'number eight' > OGTO > OYTO > HUIT (French)/VUIT (Catalan)/UEITO (Aragonese)/OITO (Portuguese)/OCHO (Spanish)

    In English, final velars turning into y were a feature of the language evolution, not a French influence.

    eye < ege
    say < segan
    may < mæg
    I < ic
    rain < regn
    etc
    Gràcies, és interessant.
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