ProjectFlammarion
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Hello, this is my first post here. This was inspired after reading Brian Cotnoir's Practical Alchemy. Figures from the book too.
As a kid when I asked why the days of the week are named after various deities (Thursday = Thor's Day, Friday = Freya's Day) and the sun and moon (Sunday = Sun's Day, Monday = Moon's Day). I got a vague answer about it being a linguistic legacy from the Vikings. Here's what Google gives me.
What about why we have a 7 day week when the solar year's 365 days is not divisible by 7? Well that's because God created the world in 7 days, resting on the last.
So let's break it down. 7 days a week because Abrahamic religions believe God created the world in 7 days, and somehow the pagans picked 7 as well. Specifically, Sunday = Sun's Day, Monday = Moon's Day, Tuesday = Tyr's Day, Wednesday = Wodin's (Odin) day, Thursday = Thor's Day, Friday = Freya's Day, Saturday = Saturn's Day. Saturn being the only Roman deity among all the Norse ones.
Well, apparently our alchemist friends, who are their own rabbit hole, have a different version of history. We have 7 days in a week, named not after 2 celestial objects and 4 Norse deities, and 1 Roman deity, but the 7 ruling celestial objects. The Sun, the Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. See the alchemists say the each day of the week is ruled by one of the celestial objects. Specifically, the "First Hour" aka the hour starting at sunrise, is ruled the celestial object of the day, and the ruling celestial object changes every hour, making it so that the ruling celestial object is different on each day, repeating in cycles of 7. Here is the chart from the book.
So what we have is Sunday = Sun, Monday = Moon, Tuesday = Tyr the God of War AKA Mars, Wednesday = Woden/Odin except the Roman's according to Tacitus associate that being with Mercury just like our Alchemical chart, Thursday = Thor = Jupiter because they're both thunder gods, and Saturday = Saturn.
A few more thoughts from personal knowledge.
1. In Islamic cultures, the first day of the week is Sunday, not Monday like in the west, which I guess is the original form.
2. In Catholicism and Judaism, priests and monks base their prayers based on the "Hours of the Day" structured similar to the alchemist, where the "First Hour" = Sunrise.
So my question is, is our current weekly calendar based on an amalgamation of Norse, Roman, and Abrahamic cultures... or is it based on the empirical observation of astrologers of a past civilization?
As a kid when I asked why the days of the week are named after various deities (Thursday = Thor's Day, Friday = Freya's Day) and the sun and moon (Sunday = Sun's Day, Monday = Moon's Day). I got a vague answer about it being a linguistic legacy from the Vikings. Here's what Google gives me.
What about why we have a 7 day week when the solar year's 365 days is not divisible by 7? Well that's because God created the world in 7 days, resting on the last.
So let's break it down. 7 days a week because Abrahamic religions believe God created the world in 7 days, and somehow the pagans picked 7 as well. Specifically, Sunday = Sun's Day, Monday = Moon's Day, Tuesday = Tyr's Day, Wednesday = Wodin's (Odin) day, Thursday = Thor's Day, Friday = Freya's Day, Saturday = Saturn's Day. Saturn being the only Roman deity among all the Norse ones.
Well, apparently our alchemist friends, who are their own rabbit hole, have a different version of history. We have 7 days in a week, named not after 2 celestial objects and 4 Norse deities, and 1 Roman deity, but the 7 ruling celestial objects. The Sun, the Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. See the alchemists say the each day of the week is ruled by one of the celestial objects. Specifically, the "First Hour" aka the hour starting at sunrise, is ruled the celestial object of the day, and the ruling celestial object changes every hour, making it so that the ruling celestial object is different on each day, repeating in cycles of 7. Here is the chart from the book.
So what we have is Sunday = Sun, Monday = Moon, Tuesday = Tyr the God of War AKA Mars, Wednesday = Woden/Odin except the Roman's according to Tacitus associate that being with Mercury just like our Alchemical chart, Thursday = Thor = Jupiter because they're both thunder gods, and Saturday = Saturn.
A few more thoughts from personal knowledge.
1. In Islamic cultures, the first day of the week is Sunday, not Monday like in the west, which I guess is the original form.
2. In Catholicism and Judaism, priests and monks base their prayers based on the "Hours of the Day" structured similar to the alchemist, where the "First Hour" = Sunrise.
So my question is, is our current weekly calendar based on an amalgamation of Norse, Roman, and Abrahamic cultures... or is it based on the empirical observation of astrologers of a past civilization?