No Astronomical Basis
Unlike days (Earth's rotation), months (Moon's cycle), and years (Earth's orbit), the 7-day week has no direct astronomical counterpart. It is a purely cultural invention — and yet it has spread to virtually every corner of the globe.
Mesopotamian Origins
The 7-day week likely originated in ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), where Babylonian astronomers identified 7 celestial bodies visible to the naked eye: the Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. Each body was assigned to govern an hour of the day in a repeating sequence. The "planet" governing the first hour of each day gave that day its name — producing a 7-day cycle.
Roman Planetary Week
The Romans adopted this system and named each day after the seven planets:
- Dies Solis (Sun) → Sunday
- Dies Lunae (Moon) → Monday
- Dies Martis (Mars) → Tuesday
- Dies Mercurii (Mercury) → Wednesday
- Dies Jovis (Jupiter) → Thursday
- Dies Veneris (Venus) → Friday
- Dies Saturni (Saturn) → Saturday
Germanic Renaming
As Latin spread northward, Germanic peoples substituted their own gods for Roman ones. Tuesday became Tiw's day (god of war, ≈ Mars), Wednesday became Wōden's day (≈ Mercury), Thursday became Þūnor's/Thor's day (≈ Jupiter), and Friday became Frīge's day (≈ Venus). Saturday (Saturn) and Sunday/Monday (Sun/Moon) were retained or translated directly.
The Hebrew Sabbath and Christian Influence
The Hebrew Bible established a 7-day week with the 7th day (Shabbat) as a day of rest. Christianity adopted Sunday as the Lord's Day, and Islam designated Friday as the day of congregational prayer (Jumu'ah). These religious traditions reinforced and spread the 7-day week globally.
Days in East Asian Languages
Japanese, Korean, and Chinese day names use celestial elements:
- 日曜日 (Sunday) — Sun | 月曜日 (Monday) — Moon
- 火曜日 (Tuesday) — Fire | 水曜日 (Wednesday) — Water
- 木曜日 (Thursday) — Wood | 金曜日 (Friday) — Gold/Metal
- 土曜日 (Saturday) — Earth/Soil
These names reflect the Chinese Five Elements (五行) plus Sun and Moon — a parallel but distinct tradition from the Roman planetary week, converging on the same 7-day structure.