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  2. Names of the days of the week - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_the_days_of_the_week

    The Babylonians invented the actual [clarification needed] seven-day week in 600 BCE, with Emperor Constantine making the Day of the Sun (dies Solis, "Sunday") a legal holiday centuries later. [2] In the international standard ISO 8601, Monday is treated as the first day of the week, but in many countries it is counted as the second day of the ...

  3. History of calendars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_calendars

    The Akan Calendar is a Calendar created by the Akan people (a Kwa group of West Africa) who appear to have used a traditional system of timekeeping based on a six-day week (known as nnanson "seven-days" via inclusive counting). The Gregorian seven-day week is known as nnawɔtwe (eight-days). The combination of these two system resulted in ...

  4. Early Germanic calendars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Germanic_calendars

    The concept of the week, on the other hand, was adopted from the Romans, from about the first century, the various Germanic languages having adopted the Greco-Roman system of naming of the days of the week after the classical planets, inserting loan translations for the names of the planets, substituting the names of Germanic gods in a process ...

  5. Unit of time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_of_time

    10 days. A period of time analogous to the concept of "week", used by different societies around the world: the ancient Egyptian calendar, the ancient Chinese calendar, and also the French Republican calendar (in which it was called a décade). megasecond: 10 6 s: About 11.6 days. fortnight: 2 weeks: 14 days lunar month: 27 d 4 h 48 min – 29 ...

  6. Why do we work 9 to 5? The history of the eight-hour workday

    www.aol.com/why-9-5-history-eight-105902493.html

    Given that people typically worked six days a week back then, that comes out to roughly 12 hours a day. Not that there weren’t examples in the early 20th century of people putting in far more ...

  7. Roman timekeeping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_timekeeping

    The natural day (dies naturalis) ran from sunrise to sunset. [6] The hours were numbered from one to twelve as hora prima, hora secunda, hora tertia, etc. To indicate that it is a day or night hour, Romans used expressions such as for example prima diei hora (first hour of the day), and prima noctis hora (first hour of the night). [7]

  8. Calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar

    For example, a calendar provides a way to determine when to start planting or harvesting, which days are religious or civil holidays, which days mark the beginning and end of business accounting periods, and which days have legal significance, such as the day taxes are due or a contract expires. Also, a calendar may, by identifying a day ...

  9. Week - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Week

    The day of the week can be easily calculated given a date's Julian day number (JD, i.e. the integer value at noon UT): Adding one to the remainder after dividing the Julian day number by seven (JD modulo 7 + 1) yields that date's ISO 8601 day of the week. For example, the Julian day number of 10 February 2025 is 2460717.