January 1st was not always the New year....
Ahh!! . . . here we are. January 1st, 2012…... A brand new month……. A brand new year.
January, the month of new beginnings and is a time to cherish memories. It is the month in which winter weaves her magically festive spell about us with it's cool and crisp days.
This is the month where the temperatures plummet and we gladly look forward to log bonfires and with thick wisps of fog descending around us. And then the New Year descends on us.
Happy New Year! That is the greeting that we will often hear for the first few weeks of 2012. But do you know that January 1st was not always celebrated as New Year's Day?
In the earliest times, the celebration of the New Year was one of the oldest recorded holidays.
It was first observed in ancient Babylon about 4000 years ago.
Babylon |
In the years around 2000 BC, the Babylonian New Year began with the first
New Moon …..That is the first visible crescent after the Vernal Equinox; this was the first day of spring. The beginning of spring is a logical time to start a new year, after all, it is the season of rebirth, a season of regeneration you could say. It was the time for planting of new crops and of blossoming.
New Moon …..That is the first visible crescent after the Vernal Equinox; this was the first day of spring. The beginning of spring is a logical time to start a new year, after all, it is the season of rebirth, a season of regeneration you could say. It was the time for planting of new crops and of blossoming.
Vernal Equinox |
The present-day January 1, on the other hand, has no astronomical or agricultural connotation. It is purely capricious.
The Babylonian New Year celebration was a real carnival true sense. They were a pageant of festivities that lasted for eleven days; each day had its own specific and definitive style and reason of celebration. In comparison, New Year's Eve of present-day festivities pales into insignificance
After this aberration the year was 365 days long, with an additional day added every four years.
In medieval Europe, however, the celebrations accompanying the New Year
were considered pagan and were considered not Christian, and they abolished
January 1st as the beginning of the year.
At various times and in various places throughout medieval Christian Europe,
the New Year was celebrated on Dec. 25, the birth of Jesus.
However, the Julian calendar was not perfect, and was, in turn, replaced by the
Gregorian calendar in 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII. This calendar was accepted
throughout Europe and eventually the New World.
Pope Gregory XI1 |
While most Catholic countries accepted the Gregorian calendar just about
straight away, The Protestant countries took time.
The British, for example, did not adopt this calendar until 1752.
From this you can see that The NEW YEAR has had quite a colourful travel through history.
HAPPY NEW YEAR to all my friends
Highly informative & uplifting.
Such had been the tradition from pagan laws as well