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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 seven-day week was adopted in early Christianity from the Hebrew calendar, and gradually replaced the Roman internundinum. [citation needed] Sunday remained the first day of the week, being considered the day of the sun god Sol Invictus and the Lord's Day, while the Jewish Sabbath remained the seventh.

  3. Holy Week - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Week

    Holy Week in the liturgical year is the week immediately before Easter. The earliest allusion to the custom of marking this week as a whole with special observances is to be found in the Apostolical Constitutions (v. 18, 19), dating from the latter half of the 3rd century and 4th century.

  4. Sabbath in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbath_in_Christianity

    Regarded as the "prince of Methodist theologians" William Burt Pope explained that "Its [the Sabbath] original purpose to commemorate the creation and bear witness to the government of the One God was retained, but, as the new creation of mankind in Christ Jesus had more fully revealed the Triune God, the day of the Lord's resurrection, the ...

  5. Biblical Sabbath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_Sabbath

    The Biblical Hebrew Shabbat is a verb meaning "to cease" or "to rest", its noun form meaning a time or day of cessation or rest. Its Anglicized pronunciation is Sabbath. A cognate Babylonian Sapattu m or Sabattu m is reconstructed from the lost fifth Enūma Eliš creation account, which is read as: "[Sa]bbatu shalt thou then encounter, mid[month]ly".

  6. Sabbath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbath

    The tenth day of each week, décadi, replaced Sunday as the day of rest and festivity in France. From 1929 to 1931, the Soviet Union mandated a five-day week in which each day designated by color as a state rest day for a different 20% of the workforce; members of the same family did not usually have the same rest day. Three weeks each year ...

  7. Ussher chronology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ussher_chronology

    Ussher further narrowed down the date by using the Jewish calendar to establish the "first day" of creation as falling on a Sunday near the autumnal equinox. [9] The day of the week was a backward calculation from the six days of creation with God resting on the seventh, which in the Jewish calendar is Saturday—hence, Creation began on a Sunday.

  8. Saint Nedelya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Nedelya

    Saint Nedelya (St. Sunday, St. Anastasia, [1] in folk Orthodoxy of the Slavs is the personification of Sunday as day of the week. [2] It is correlated with Saint Anastasia (in Bulgarians also with Saint Kyriakia. [3] The veneration of the Week is associated with the prohibition of various kinds of work (cf. the origin of the Slavic week from ...

  9. Three Pilgrimage Festivals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Pilgrimage_Festivals

    The Three Pilgrimage Festivals or Three Pilgrim Festivals, sometimes known in English by their Hebrew name Shalosh Regalim (Hebrew: שלוש רגלים, romanized: šāloš rəgālīm, or חַגִּים, ḥaggīm), are three major festivals in Judaism—two in spring; Passover, 49 days later Shavuot (literally 'weeks', or Pentecost, from the Greek); and in autumn Sukkot ('tabernacles', 'tents ...