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It's time to celebrate:New Year

In Western culture, January 1 has been widely accepted as the start of the year since the Middle Ages. Regardless of this, other dates have been and continue to be used in different regions and at different times.
Man sieht eine feiernden Menschenmenge auf einer Tanzfläche mit stimmungsvoller Beleuchtung. Im Vordergrund formt eine Person mit den Händen ein Herz.
Date:
Jan 1, 2024
Location:
Holiday
By:
Friedrich von Test
Label or number:
St. Remigius
Sürther Hauptstraße 126
50999 Köln

At home or with friends

Where it is most beautiful!

In 153 BC, the Romans moved the start of the official year from March 1 to January 1, the day the consuls took office, according to their calendar. However, the calendar year still kept the March style with March 1 as the start of the year. It was not until Caesar's calendar reform (Julian calendar) that the originally appended months of January and February were placed at the beginning of the year, so that the calendar year and the official year began on January 1.

As a result, the counting months (September, meaning “seventh”; October, “eighth”; November, ‘ninth’; December, “tenth”) also lost their positions corresponding to their names.