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Week

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A colorful Soviet calendar from 1930 showing months, days of the week, and national holidays.

A week is a unit of time equal to seven days. It is the standard time period used between a single day and a month in most parts of the world. There are just over 52 weeks in a year, or on average about 4 and a third weeks in a month. The days of the week are often used to organize work days, rest days, and special holy days. Sometimes, certain weeks are chosen for special purposes, like Golden Week in China and Japan, or awareness weeks such as National Family Week in Canada, which aim to highlight important topics.

Historically, not all cultures used a seven-day week. Some ancient cultures had weeks of different lengths, such as ten days in Egypt or an eight-day week for the Etruscans and ancient Romans. The seven-day week we use today began with the Romans, who named each day after a classical planet and its matching god. This idea mixed with the Jewish seven-day week, which centers on Saturday. In AD 321, Emperor Constantine the Great made the seven-day week official in the Roman Empire, and it spread around the world from there.

In English, the names of the days come from a mix of Roman and Germanic traditions. For example, we have Sunday for the sun’s day, Monday for the moon’s day, and so on, ending with Saturday for Saturn’s day. Different cultures may start the week on different days, but almost all consider either Saturday, Sunday, or Monday to be the first day of the week.

The three major Abrahamic religions each have a special holy day during the week. Muslims hold their main worship day on Friday, as taught in the Quran. Jews rest and celebrate on Saturday, known as Shabbat. Christians honor their holy day on Sunday, celebrating the resurrection of Jesus.

Name

The English word week comes from the Old English word wice. This word is linked to an older Common Germanic root. Before the Roman calendar was used, the word might have meant something like "a series," as seen in the Gothic word wikō used in Luke 1:8.

Many languages name the seven-day week using a word that means "seven." An old English word, sennight ("seven-night"), shows that people once counted time by nights, similar to the common word fortnight ("fourteen-night"). Words like hebdomad come from the Greek hebdomás, meaning "a seven." The term septimana shares roots with Romance languages from Latin [septimana], meaning "seven mornings."

Definition and duration

A week is a time period of exactly seven days. This means that one week has 168 hours, or 10,080 minutes, or 604,800 seconds.

In the Gregorian calendar, one year has 52 weeks plus one extra day, and two extra days in a leap year. The Moon’s path affects how we see weeks.

Days of the week

Main article: Names of the days of the week

"Days of the Week" redirects here. For the song, see Days of the Week (song).

An Italian cameo bracelet representing the days of the week by their eponymous deities (mid-19th century, Walters Art Museum)

The days of the week were named after the seven classical planets, which included the Sun and Moon. The names came from both old Greco-Roman gods and Germanic traditions.

The order of the days does not match the order of the planets. Each day is named for a planet that is three places away in the traditional list. This was talked about by the writer Plutarch around 100 AD. Dio Cassius also wrote about it in the early 3rd century.

A different way of numbering the days was used later. This influenced how some languages named the days, like calling Wednesday "mid-week" in Old High German. The old system is still used in Eastern Christianity, but in the Latin West it is only found in modern Icelandic, Galician, and Portuguese.

SundayMondayTuesdayWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday
PlanetSunMoonMarsMercuryJupiterVenusSaturn
Greco-Roman deityHelios-SolSelene-LunaAres-MarsHermes-MercuryZeus-JupiterAphrodite-VenusCronus-Saturn
Greek:ἡμέρα Ἡλίουἡμέρα Σελήνηςἡμέρα Ἄρεωςἡμέρα Ἑρμοῦἡμέρα Διόςἡμέρα Ἀφροδίτηςἡμέρα Κρόνου
Latin:dies Sōlisdies Lūnaedies Martisdies Mercuriīdies Iovisdies Venerisdies Saturnī
interpretatio germanicaSunMoonTiwazWodanazÞunrazFrige
Old Englishsunnandægmōnandægtiwesdægwōdnesdægþunresdægfrīgedægsæterndæg
"First Day" or
"Lord's Day"
(Sunday)
"Second Day"
(Monday)
"Third Day"
(Tuesday)
"Fourth Day"
(Wednesday)
"Fifth Day"
(Thursday)
"Sixth Day" or
"Jumu'ah"
(Friday)
"Seventh Day" or
"Sabbath"
(Saturday)
GreekΚυριακὴ ἡμέρα
/kiriaki iméra/
Δευτέρα ἡμέρα
/devtéra iméra/
Τρίτη ἡμέρα
/tríti iméra/
Τετάρτη ἡμέρα
/tetárti iméra/
Πέμπτη ἡμέρα
/pémpti iméra/
Παρασκευὴ ἡμέρα
/paraskevi iméra/
Σάββατον
/sáb:aton/
Latin[dies] dominica;
rarely feria prima, feria dominica
feria secundaferia tertiaferia quarta;
rarely media septimana
feria quintaferia sextaSabbatum; dies sabbatinus, dies Sabbati;
rarely feria septima, feria Sabbati
HebrewHebrew: יום ראשון, romanizedYom rishon, lit. 'first day'Hebrew: יום שני, romanizedYom sheni, lit. 'second day'Hebrew: יום שלישי, romanizedYom shlishi, lit. 'third day'Hebrew: יום רביעי, romanizedYom revi'i, lit. 'fourth day'Hebrew: יום חמישי, romanizedYom chamishi, lit. 'fifth day'Hebrew: יום שישי, romanizedYom shishi, lit. 'sixth day'Hebrew: שבת, romanizedShabbat, lit. 'Rest/cessation'

History

Ancient Near East

The earliest idea of a seven-day period started with a rule by King Sargon of Akkad around 2300 BC. The Akkadians liked the number seven. They saw seven important objects in the sky: the Sun, the Moon, and five planets.

Gudea, a leader in Lagash in Sumer around 2100 BC, built a temple with seven rooms. He celebrated a festival that lasted seven days. In old stories from Assyro-Babylonian culture, like the Epic of Gilgamesh, storms lasted seven days. Important characters left their boats seven days after they landed.

The Babylonians counted days from the new moon. They celebrated the 7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th days as special days. These days had rules about what people could and could not do. They were times to make offerings to gods.

Achaemenid Persia

The Zoroastrian calendar followed Babylonian ideas. It linked the 7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th days of the month to Ahura Mazda. The system used in the Persian Empire came from the Babylonians and was used from the 4th century BC.

Judaism

A regular seven-day cycle, not tied to the Moon, began in Judaism by the 6th century BC at the latest.

There are different ideas about where the seven-day week came from in Jewish history.

Some believe it came from the Babylonians. Others think it came from Jewish holy books or was a special idea of the Jewish people.

By the time of the Second Temple, Jews used the seven-day cycle. They had regular days of rest called Sabbaths.

Circular diagrams showing the division of the day and of the week, from a Carolingian ms. (Clm 14456 fol. 71r) of St. Emmeram Abbey. The week is divided into seven days, and each day into 24 hours, 96 puncta (quarter-hours), 240 minuta (tenths of an hour) and 960 momenta (40th parts of an hour).

Hellenistic and Roman era

Main article: Nundinae

The ancient Romans used an eight-day cycle. But after a new calendar started in 45 BC, the seven-day week became popular. People linked each day to objects in the sky like the Sun, Moon, and planets.

The seven-day week became common in the Roman Empire by the 1st century AD.

Islamic concept

In Islamic beliefs, the idea of a seven-day week began with the creation of the universe by Allah.

Adoption in Asia

China and Japan

The first known writing about a seven-day week in China is from Fan Ning in the late 4th century during the Jin dynasty. The idea spread to Japan in the 9th century. It was used for special purposes until the Meiji Period (1868–1912), when it became a regular part of the calendar.

India

The seven-day week was known in India by the 6th century. Some think it may have been known even earlier, but this is not certain.

Christian Europe

Further information: Holy Week and Easter Week

The seven-day week has been used continuously in Christendom for nearly two thousand years. Special traditions and beliefs about lucky or unlucky days developed in the Middle Ages, especially around Friday and Sunday.

Numbering

Further information: Leap week calendar

In many places, weeks in a year are numbered. This is common in Europe and Asia but less so in the U.S. and other regions.

The ISO week date system, part of ISO 8601, is one way to number weeks. In this system, each week starts on Monday and is linked to the year that contains the week's Thursday.

For example, Week 1 of 2015 started on Monday, December 29, 2014, and ended on Sunday, January 4, 2015. Week 1 of 2021 started on Monday, January 4, 2021, and ended on Sunday, January 10, 2021.

Some countries use different systems to number weeks. These systems may start the week on Saturday, Sunday, or Monday.

The epi week (epidemiological week) is used for reporting health data. It starts on Sunday and ends on Saturday.

Dominical letter(s) plus weekdays, dates and week numbers at the beginning and end of a year
Dominical
letter(s)1
Days at the start of JanuaryEffect1,2Days at the end of December1
1
Mon
2
Tue
3
Wed
4
Thu
5
Fri
6
Sat
7
Sun
W01-1301 Jan week...31 Dec week1
Mon4
2
Tue
3
Wed
4
Thu
5
Fri
6
Sat
7
Sun
G(F)0102030405060701 JanW01...W0131 (30)(31)
F(E)01020304050631 DecW01...W0130 (29)31 (30)(31)
E(D)010203040530 DecW01...W01 (W53)29 (28)30 (29)31 (30)(31)
D(C)0102030429 DecW01...W5328 (27)29 (28)30 (29)31 (30)(31)
C(B)01020304 JanW53...W5227 (26)28 (27)29 (28)30 (29)31 (30)(31)
B(A)010203 JanW52 (W53)...W5226 (25)27 (26)28 (27)29 (28)30 (29)31 (30)(31)
A(G)0102 JanW52...W52 (W01)25 (31)26 (25)27 (26)28 (27)29 (28)30 (29)31 (30)
SystemFirst day of weekFirst week of year containsCan be last week of previous yearUsed by or in
ISO 8601Monday4 January1st Thursday4–7 days of yearyesEU (exc. Portugal) and most other European countries, most of Asia and Oceania
Middle EasternSaturday1 January1st Friday1–7 days of yearyesMuch of the Middle East
Western traditionalSunday1 January1st Saturday1–7 days of yearyesCanada, United States, Iceland, Portugal, Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, Hong Kong, Macau, Israel, Egypt, South Africa, the Philippines, and most of Latin America
Broadcast CalendarMonday1 January1st Sunday1–7 days of yearyesBroadcast services in the United States

"Weeks" in other calendars

The word "week" can describe other time periods that last a few days. In the past, different places used "weeks" that lasted between four and ten days. Intervals longer than ten days are usually called something else, like a fortnight or a month.

Many old calendars had their own versions of weeks. For example, Ancient Rome used an eight-day week, and the ancient Chinese calendar had a ten-day week. Some cultures, like those in West Africa, used a six-day week, while others, such as the Javanese calendar, used a five-day week.

In some places, weeks were linked to market days. The Igbo people had a four-day market week, and the Aztecs and Mayas divided their calendars into weeks of 13 days.

Modern reforms

Further information: International Fixed Calendar, Decimal calendar, French Revolutionary Calendar § Ten days of the week, and Bahá'í calendar

Some modern calendars have tried new ways of organizing weeks. The International Fixed Calendar kept the seven-day week but arranged the year into 13 months of 28 days each. In Revolutionary France, a ten-day week called a décade was used for a short time. The Bahá'í calendar has a 19-day period that some consider a week.

Soviet

Further information: Soviet calendar

In the Soviet Union from 1929 to 1940, many workers used five or six-day work weeks instead of the usual seven-day week. The country still used the traditional seven-day week for most purposes.

Images

A colorful Soviet calendar from 1933 displaying months, days of the week, and important national holidays.
A marine sandglass, an old tool sailors used to measure time at sea.
Map showing the International Date Line in the Aleutian Islands region.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Week, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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