Sorry this is so overdue guys. It took a LOT longer than I thought it would to find the appropriate images, as can be seen from the huge amount of fair use material.
Another video of the evolution of science through the ages? Narrated by some dashing debonair as he adds his own personal artistic flair to his telling of these stories hidden within the mist of ages past? Most delectable, good sir, I have the most voracious appetite for science delivered in such an artisan matter. And that little tease, part 1 of 3.... The level of effort you put into your projects is amazing.
My Astrophysics teacher began his introductory lecture with these words: "The first two things you must learn about the Big Bang are, 1) it wasn't big and, 2) it didn't bang."
"The reason why the Ancients couldn't accept such a simple explanation is that it required accepting that the Earth moved around the Sun." Another one occurs to me - all European and Asian civilizations of those eras were entirely in the northern hemisphere, limiting their available data. They lacked constant triangulated observations from similar latitudes at either side of the equator. Had they noticed the symmetry in depth and detail, some conclusions would have probably been inescapable even to men like Ptolemy. Having loved astronomy and kept up with it all my life, one more thing: ParallaxNick creates the best planetary astronomy content I have yet found anywhere.
I came in looking for a nice semi long video about why we start in January 1st. I got an incredible historical account on the calendar from the dawn of human civilization, and this is only part one. Fantastic work
The etymology of the word 'seconds' is definitely one of the most mindblowing moments in this video for me. Quite a bit of it I more-or-less knew, but the interconnectedness and complexity of the story of Cleopatra and Caesar is incredible and got me on the edge of my seat. Finding out that Augustus is responsible for the knuckle-counting technique to remember the length of individual months working as well as it does is also really cool :p I learned a lot of new stuff here and this is really feeling like the ultimate piece on how timekeeping came to be. I can't wait to find out about all the incredibly messy timekeeping stories to come. As a programmer, I'm quite well aware of some of the most weird and frustrating things that happened with timekeeping in the past 500 years, but I don't really know how any of them happened as they did. There is definitely a good reason why the "On This Day" section on the Wikipedia main page has a huge bias in favor of the past few hundred years, because figuring out how to calculate our calendar back to Cleopatra's time would definitely be a challenge ^_^; Thanks for the amazing video! :D
This is close to a masterpiece. The domestication of time is one of the most outstanding archivements of mankind, and you have shown it in its full meaning. Thank you for your work. I would like to know some of your references, just to start reading (about Flavius, the Annus Confusionis, etc... there is little information on the internet).
If you want a channel with excellent detail on Roman history, go watch Historia Civilis. That and ParallaxNick are probably my two most guilty pleasures on youtube.
Bravo good sir, bravo. Images, narration, music and timing, We all appreciate how much hard work and sleepless nights go into the making of these.Thank you so much.
10:03 the months in Czech are also based of natural processes. Květen (May) is like bloom. Leden is January and means "Icy". My favorite is Listopad. "Falling leaves".
I found your channel on the night of the lightbrimger 2018. And I have re-watched them one or two at a time the last month. I'm happy to find a new one. I wish you a wonderful 2020.
Loved the video! I don't know about everyone else, but I don't care if your videos take a little longer to produce. Every time I see that there's a new one, it instantly makes my day better.
Thank you again for all your hard work! can't thank you enough for taking the time to put together another of your fantastic videos! I really hope life is getting better for you and can't wait to see the next one! Thanks again Nick we appreciate it.
Another great story, told with just the perfect touch of detail. Waiting for the next part to be released is comparable to waiting for the next season or episode of your favourite tv-series. 😀
I feel like you are the kind of person the Great Race of Yith would exchange minds with. I also feel like that is a high compliment. Excellent video, and particularly well written. What a great channel.
WOW!!! Fantastic work Nick. This is by far your best work and honestly I think your TH-cam skills have reached the highest level of your previous Wikipedia fame. Nice work sir
Nick I think the stuff you put out is pretty amazing. I'm starting this 3 parter over cus I see you added the 3rd part and I know I've forgotten the other 2. Anyways thank you
Wow. Thank you so much for such a high quality video. It was a great pleasure to watch.. Also one question, your stories make me wonder why us (iranians) use the solar calendar since 25 centuries ago? Maybe we also got that from babylonians, right? We also celebrate the first of day of spring, as our new year :)
I never knew Iran celebrated Spring as the start of the new year, that's really cool to know. As a little kid, I just assumed the rest of the world celebrated the new year the same as the USA, but it honestly makes perfect sense why people in the Northern hemisphere would see Spring as the start of the year. Pretty much everything about the season says "New".
I did some surface-level digging on wikipedia and found this: "Although it is not clear whether Proto-Indo-Iranians celebrated a feast as the first day of the calendar, there are indications that Iranians may have observed the beginning of both autumn and spring, respectively related to the harvest and the sowing of seeds, for the celebration of the New Year.[49] Mary Boyce and Frantz Grenet explain the traditions for seasonal festivals and comment: "It is possible that the splendor of the Babylonian festivities at this season led the Iranians to develop their own spring festival into an established New Year feast, with the name Navasarda "New Year" (a name which, though first attested through Middle Persian derivatives, is attributed to the Achaemenian period)." Since the communal observations of the ancient Iranians appear in general to have been seasonal ones and related to agriculture, "it is probable that they traditionally held festivals in both autumn and spring, to mark the major turning points of the natural year."[49] Nowruz is partly rooted in the tradition of Iranian religions, such as Mithraism and Zoroastrianism. In Mithraism, festivals had a deep linkage with the Sun's light. The Iranian festivals such as Mehrgan (autumnal equinox), Tirgan, and the eve of Chelle ye Zemestan (winter solstice) also had an origin in the Sun god (Surya). Among other ideas, Zoroastrianism is the first monotheistic religion that emphasizes broad concepts such as the corresponding work of good and evil in the world, and the connection of humans to nature. Zoroastrian practices were dominant for much of the history of ancient Iran. In Zoroastrianism, the seven most important Zoroastrian festivals are the six Gahambar festivals and Nowruz, which occurs at the spring equinox. According to Mary Boyce,[50] "It seems a reasonable surmise that Nowruz, the holiest of them all, with deep doctrinal significance, was founded by Zoroaster himself"; although there is no clear date of origin.[51] Between sunset on the day of the sixth Gahambar and sunrise of Nowruz, Hamaspathmaedaya (later known, in its extended form, as Frawardinegan; and today is known as Farvardigan) was celebrated. This and the Gahambars are the only festivals named in the surviving text of the Avesta."
I absolutely adore your timeline of the first years of the Earth. As a geographer I totally concur. 🌎 Especially thought-provoking are the size of the Moon and the length of the day. 1:28 To the foolish satire becomes manifesto. To the wise insult becomes pride. (I just made that up...) ☮️❤️🌈 2:17 “The data are...”: that simple phrase just gave this grammatical purist a warm tingle.😜
yay new video i love your content so much man you should have 100 times the subscribers you do.. was about to say 10 but 250k even seems low for your level of quality ive been watching your content since like an addict since mid 2018... i like live on youtube in the science/space/astronomy./futurism comunity and you are one of my favorites right up there with jmg frasier cain or my main man isaac arthur i would love to see future collaboration.. if at all possible... goood day to you fine sir
I've been spreading the word about ParallaxNick in the comments section of other science youtubers. I hope others will join me in that so we can make TH-cam great again!
This is a fantastic dive into history I never learned while still having a lot to do with space. Why are the second and third parts seemingly non-existent? Hopefully you're waiting for another new year to release another part in the series, because you can't possibly leave us hanging like that.
Perhaps a mention of when the leap day was added would fit the tone of your videos. It wasn't added on the end, rather what we call the 24th of February was repeated. This makes slightly more sense with the way the Romans enumerated the days of the month (another topic you might cover); they didn't number them from one as done now. This repetition of the 24th of February persisted a long time in Christian church calendars, and maybe still does for churches using the Julian calendar. The Roman Catholic church only stopped this in 1970.
Thanks for the info! I didn't know that. I'm planning on covering the whole "kalends, ides, nones" thing in the next video, since it has a lot to do with the transition to mechanical time.
Before I get into this... are you planning to make parts 2 and 3? It’s been 4 months and I can find them. If already made, links? If not, expected dates?
interesting that you find that the solar year started with the Egyptians. I had considered the origin f the 360 degrees of the circle as coming from the number of days of the year(rounded down). And, then I "assmed" the Babylonians created their number system based on that.
@Peter Mortensen I am not aware of any. The mirrors are open and do not discriminate whose lasers are hitting them. You would, however, have to be seriously accurate to hit one and track it. I imagine you could find the location coordinates online somewhere. The Lunakhods did not stray far from their landing sites.
Man what was even more disturbing was learning Latin in 7th grade and being confused as hell about months named 7, 8, 9, and 10 being the 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th months, respectively. I was like where did it all go wrong?
17:12 And in Mesoamerica by the Maya and probably others. Although your essay is excellent, it is very Northern Hemisphere-centric. Like, when the sun is shining in the North "We" have summer. Not all of us. Still freaking Amazing though. 👍
This is the story of the common calendar we use today, which was a fusion of the Roman and Egyptian calendars. The Mayan calendar (really the Mesoamerican calendar) would require a video on its own.
A pedantic point, howbeit worth the making: "Begin at the beginning...and go on till you come to the end: then stop." - The King of Hearts (not the Mad Hatter)
Actually, the days get shorter in the summer and longer in the winter. The first day of summer is the longest day, after which the days shorten every day until the winter substance, the first day of winter, which is the shortest day.
I have watched series multiple times and enjoy channel often. Noticed a possible error this time. Ceasar was furious with Egyptian ministers , had wanted to be merciful with Pompey . not thankful they had killed him.
_"...and insults, however cutting, make terrible descriptors."_ Do they? If something is sufficiently strong then describing it by its weakness only draws attention to its strength. Insults cut, except with granite.
time doesn't have fields because it IS one. it's not a line because it's a place... a place for stuff to happen in. .. a place the universe is travelling through.
English screwed up the days of the weeks by introducing Norse gods. Monday is moonday not Mars day. You can see all of the 7 then “planets” If you look at the french/latin: Lundi -> Luna Mardi -> Mars Mercredi -> Mercury Jeudi-> Jupiter Vendredi -> Venus Samdi -> Saturn Solis-> Sol
Sorry this is so overdue guys. It took a LOT longer than I thought it would to find the appropriate images, as can be seen from the huge amount of fair use material.
Your content is worth the wait, though, so it's okay.
Yes, this was worth the wait. Your presentation here is a quality production. I have posted a link to it on my Twitter account.
Did Little Caesar's give you trouble? Cuz that was funny.
If I find out I'm actually older I'm going into a deep depression.
@@thejudgmentalcat Sorry but older than what?
@@parallaxnick637 Dirt, apparently :)
No person on youtube so eloquently shines a light on cosmology and the adjacent history enveloping it all.
His delivery reminds me of Carl Sagan.
Another video of the evolution of science through the ages? Narrated by some dashing debonair as he adds his own personal artistic flair to his telling of these stories hidden within the mist of ages past? Most delectable, good sir, I have the most voracious appetite for science delivered in such an artisan matter.
And that little tease, part 1 of 3.... The level of effort you put into your projects is amazing.
So fucking amazing.
I can sense a poetic soul in you too Trikki. I second your words.
Good content as usual.
Your voice is perfect for narration
Another gem from ParralaxNick. Ty for your poetic content
I spent the whole day looking forward to this and then I fell asleep with it on! 😳 Sorry! I'll watch it this evening.
My Astrophysics teacher began his introductory lecture with these words: "The first two things you must learn about the Big Bang are,
1) it wasn't big and, 2) it didn't bang."
"The reason why the Ancients couldn't accept such a simple explanation is that it required accepting that the Earth moved around the Sun."
Another one occurs to me - all European and Asian civilizations of those eras were entirely in the northern hemisphere, limiting their available data. They lacked constant triangulated observations from similar latitudes at either side of the equator. Had they noticed the symmetry in depth and detail, some conclusions would have probably been inescapable even to men like Ptolemy.
Having loved astronomy and kept up with it all my life, one more thing: ParallaxNick creates the best planetary astronomy content I have yet found anywhere.
Perfect viewing for a relaxing Saturday afternoon, thanks.
Great narration and production value! As always!
My favorite storyteller is back! Thank you so much for uploading!
17000 km/h great watching as always regardless! Said it before and will say it again, Universe Of Water should come out on dvd! Keep them coming Nick!
I came in looking for a nice semi long video about why we start in January 1st. I got an incredible historical account on the calendar from the dawn of human civilization, and this is only part one. Fantastic work
The etymology of the word 'seconds' is definitely one of the most mindblowing moments in this video for me. Quite a bit of it I more-or-less knew, but the interconnectedness and complexity of the story of Cleopatra and Caesar is incredible and got me on the edge of my seat.
Finding out that Augustus is responsible for the knuckle-counting technique to remember the length of individual months working as well as it does is also really cool :p
I learned a lot of new stuff here and this is really feeling like the ultimate piece on how timekeeping came to be. I can't wait to find out about all the incredibly messy timekeeping stories to come. As a programmer, I'm quite well aware of some of the most weird and frustrating things that happened with timekeeping in the past 500 years, but I don't really know how any of them happened as they did. There is definitely a good reason why the "On This Day" section on the Wikipedia main page has a huge bias in favor of the past few hundred years, because figuring out how to calculate our calendar back to Cleopatra's time would definitely be a challenge ^_^;
Thanks for the amazing video! :D
I'm so glad the quality of your audio is so good now, because your content deserves the best one.
This is close to a masterpiece. The domestication of time is one of the most outstanding archivements of mankind, and you have shown it in its full meaning. Thank you for your work. I would like to know some of your references, just to start reading (about Flavius, the Annus Confusionis, etc... there is little information on the internet).
My main source, and the inspiration for this video, was "The Calendar" by David Ewing Duncan :)
If you want a channel with excellent detail on Roman history, go watch Historia Civilis. That and ParallaxNick are probably my two most guilty pleasures on youtube.
@@Cipher71 I'm a fan of Historia Civilis too. I hope he finds time for a new topic soon.
Bravo good sir, bravo. Images, narration, music and timing, We all appreciate how much hard work and sleepless nights go into the making of these.Thank you so much.
This is wonderful, how perfect for a new year. I'd never thought about any of this and you illustrate it so wonderfully. As always. Thank you!
10:03 the months in Czech are also based of natural processes. Květen (May) is like bloom. Leden is January and means "Icy". My favorite is Listopad. "Falling leaves".
I found your channel on the night of the lightbrimger 2018. And I have re-watched them one or two at a time the last month. I'm happy to find a new one. I wish you a wonderful 2020.
That went well then... :'(
Great pace and always a welcomed surprise to find a new video from you, thank you! - Joe
Thank you!
27:15 Not just her, intellectuals throughout history. What treasures were lost in that fire, we will never really know.
Finally got round to watching this. It was about time.
Ah! Puns! :)
@@parallaxnick637 The lowest form of wit. :)
A truly outstanding vid Nick, hats off to you.
Amazing blend of astronomy, history, and etymology. Thank you so much for this content!
Loved the video! I don't know about everyone else, but I don't care if your videos take a little longer to produce. Every time I see that there's a new one, it instantly makes my day better.
Your narration and writing is beautiful. Thank you so much for this video.
Thank you again for all your hard work! can't thank you enough for taking the time to put together another of your fantastic videos! I really hope life is getting better for you and can't wait to see the next one! Thanks again Nick we appreciate it.
Another great story, told with just the perfect touch of detail. Waiting for the next part to be released is comparable to waiting for the next season or episode of your favourite tv-series. 😀
Liked even before watching. Great to see more of you!
Just brilliant. Amazed it hasn't had 745,000 views.
Bravo good sir 👏🏼
I feel like you are the kind of person the Great Race of Yith would exchange minds with. I also feel like that is a high compliment. Excellent video, and particularly well written. What a great channel.
It makes me happy when I hear people correctly use the word data. Well done.
Nick, I love your channel. Thank you for all you do.
A wonderful journey as always, Parallax Nick. I always learn something new from your videos. Wishing you a happy new year!
Great knowledge! Can't wait to see episode 2 and 3
HE LIVES!
EDIT: _[sigh]_ I guess I'll just rewatch this video several times while I wait for the next one.
This channel is my new binge.
WOW!!! Fantastic work Nick. This is by far your best work and honestly I think your TH-cam skills have reached the highest level of your previous Wikipedia fame. Nice work sir
Nick I think the stuff you put out is pretty amazing. I'm starting this 3 parter over cus I see you added the 3rd part and I know I've forgotten the other 2. Anyways thank you
Another excellent, informative video, Nick. Kudos 👏
Sleep will have to wait.
Who in the heck "dislikes" your videos, broi?!?
These are just the highlights of my days.
I love these videos so much. How does this channel only have 28k subs? So underrated...
Brilliant, Nick. More please. :)
Wow. Thank you so much for such a high quality video. It was a great pleasure to watch..
Also one question, your stories make me wonder why us (iranians) use the solar calendar since 25 centuries ago? Maybe we also got that from babylonians, right? We also celebrate the first of day of spring, as our new year :)
I never knew Iran celebrated Spring as the start of the new year, that's really cool to know. As a little kid, I just assumed the rest of the world celebrated the new year the same as the USA, but it honestly makes perfect sense why people in the Northern hemisphere would see Spring as the start of the year. Pretty much everything about the season says "New".
I did some surface-level digging on wikipedia and found this:
"Although it is not clear whether Proto-Indo-Iranians celebrated a feast as the first day of the calendar, there are indications that Iranians may have observed the beginning of both autumn and spring, respectively related to the harvest and the sowing of seeds, for the celebration of the New Year.[49] Mary Boyce and Frantz Grenet explain the traditions for seasonal festivals and comment: "It is possible that the splendor of the Babylonian festivities at this season led the Iranians to develop their own spring festival into an established New Year feast, with the name Navasarda "New Year" (a name which, though first attested through Middle Persian derivatives, is attributed to the Achaemenian period)." Since the communal observations of the ancient Iranians appear in general to have been seasonal ones and related to agriculture, "it is probable that they traditionally held festivals in both autumn and spring, to mark the major turning points of the natural year."[49]
Nowruz is partly rooted in the tradition of Iranian religions, such as Mithraism and Zoroastrianism. In Mithraism, festivals had a deep linkage with the Sun's light. The Iranian festivals such as Mehrgan (autumnal equinox), Tirgan, and the eve of Chelle ye Zemestan (winter solstice) also had an origin in the Sun god (Surya). Among other ideas, Zoroastrianism is the first monotheistic religion that emphasizes broad concepts such as the corresponding work of good and evil in the world, and the connection of humans to nature. Zoroastrian practices were dominant for much of the history of ancient Iran. In Zoroastrianism, the seven most important Zoroastrian festivals are the six Gahambar festivals and Nowruz, which occurs at the spring equinox. According to Mary Boyce,[50] "It seems a reasonable surmise that Nowruz, the holiest of them all, with deep doctrinal significance, was founded by Zoroaster himself"; although there is no clear date of origin.[51] Between sunset on the day of the sixth Gahambar and sunrise of Nowruz, Hamaspathmaedaya (later known, in its extended form, as Frawardinegan; and today is known as Farvardigan) was celebrated. This and the Gahambars are the only festivals named in the surviving text of the Avesta."
@@Cipher71 Thank you so mush for your informative comment :)
Yes! More please!
Thank you Nick
Love your narrations, Nick, can't stop listening.
Note: at 5:30 I think it's 1700 (not 17000) km/h
Your content being overdue is so forgivable, it's ALWAYS worth the wait!
"Perhaps we should begin at the beginning" Or should we begin "IN THE BEGINNING"
A story well told. Good work!
Good work. Really interesting and full of fun information. And seeing it just premiered a few hours ago, am now ready for Part 2 :D
I love your content, keep it up! I'm looking forward for part 2
I absolutely adore your timeline of the first years of the Earth. As a geographer I totally concur. 🌎 Especially thought-provoking are the size of the Moon and the length of the day.
1:28 To the foolish satire becomes manifesto. To the wise insult becomes pride.
(I just made that up...) ☮️❤️🌈
2:17 “The data are...”: that simple phrase just gave this grammatical purist a warm tingle.😜
SO good. I hope somehow you can make a living from this.
I love learning with you...! :)
yay new video i love your content so much man you should have 100 times the subscribers you do.. was about to say 10 but 250k even seems low for your level of quality ive been watching your content since like an addict since mid 2018... i like live on youtube in the science/space/astronomy./futurism comunity and you are one of my favorites right up there with jmg frasier cain or my main man isaac arthur i would love to see future collaboration.. if at all possible... goood day to you fine sir
I've been spreading the word about ParallaxNick in the comments section of other science youtubers. I hope others will join me in that so we can make TH-cam great again!
This was excellent. Again, PBS should be calling you. Just hoping there are another two. Didn't look like it from the video list filtered by time.
Good thing I was up til 6am, I guess.
This is a fantastic dive into history I never learned while still having a lot to do with space. Why are the second and third parts seemingly non-existent? Hopefully you're waiting for another new year to release another part in the series, because you can't possibly leave us hanging like that.
COVID, short answer. Second part due at the end of December :)
Perhaps a mention of when the leap day was added would fit the tone of your videos. It wasn't added on the end, rather what we call the 24th of February was repeated. This makes slightly more sense with the way the Romans enumerated the days of the month (another topic you might cover); they didn't number them from one as done now. This repetition of the 24th of February persisted a long time in Christian church calendars, and maybe still does for churches using the Julian calendar. The Roman Catholic church only stopped this in 1970.
Thanks for the info! I didn't know that. I'm planning on covering the whole "kalends, ides, nones" thing in the next video, since it has a lot to do with the transition to mechanical time.
Love this channel...
I eagerly await the return of this series 💙
Before I get into this... are you planning to make parts 2 and 3? It’s been 4 months and I can find them. If already made, links? If not, expected dates?
6 months later and still waiting, I'll just rewatch this one again
interesting that you find that the solar year started with the Egyptians. I had considered the origin f the 360 degrees of the circle as coming from the number of days of the year(rounded down). And, then I "assmed" the Babylonians created their number system based on that.
It's possible, though the sexigesimal number system is actually very useful regardless.
@@parallaxnick637 It would be hard to prove either way.
Don't forget the mirrors on the Moon placed by the Russians on the Lunakhod missions. Those, too, are still in use.
@Peter Mortensen I am not aware of any. The mirrors are open and do not discriminate whose lasers are hitting them. You would, however, have to be seriously accurate to hit one and track it. I imagine you could find the location coordinates online somewhere. The Lunakhods did not stray far from their landing sites.
Happy new year.
Cant wait for ep 2 and 3
Audio editing on part 2 nearly done
i like the vids
How I can have gone through life not noticing the 7,8,9,10 names of the last months is sort of disturbing. Thanks for the disturbance!
Man what was even more disturbing was learning Latin in 7th grade and being confused as hell about months named 7, 8, 9, and 10 being the 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th months, respectively. I was like where did it all go wrong?
17:12 And in Mesoamerica by the Maya and probably others. Although your essay is excellent, it is very Northern Hemisphere-centric. Like, when the sun is shining in the North "We" have summer. Not all of us. Still freaking Amazing though. 👍
This is the story of the common calendar we use today, which was a fusion of the Roman and Egyptian calendars. The Mayan calendar (really the Mesoamerican calendar) would require a video on its own.
Yezzzsssssssssss!!!!! Nickkkk yourr the best!
30:00 I bet Flavius would have been very pleased by the internet.
"Your standard stone age 'thicc girl'"
Kek
Has the other two been made yet? Thanks for all that you do
A pedantic point, howbeit worth the making: "Begin at the beginning...and go on till you come to the end: then stop." - The King of Hearts (not the Mad Hatter)
Actually, the days get shorter in the summer and longer in the winter.
The first day of summer is the longest day, after which the days shorten every day until the winter substance, the first day of winter, which is the shortest day.
Hello to all the fans!
Been waiting for a new one
'Anynobody'? Is he like a key grip?
so.. no part 2 and 3:(??????
I have watched series multiple times and enjoy channel often. Noticed a possible error this time. Ceasar was furious with Egyptian ministers , had wanted to be merciful with Pompey . not thankful they had killed him.
Time is a a series of rooms, with ppl inside.
Is there a part 2?
Waiting for the end of covid...
_"...and insults, however cutting, make terrible descriptors."_
Do they? If something is sufficiently strong then describing it by its weakness only draws attention to its strength. Insults cut, except with granite.
I bacame addicted to your narration style 😁 though i didn't like it much when i started listening
im subscribed too many science youtube channels most with hundreds of thousands to millions of subs, you are my favorite tho.
time doesn't have fields because it IS one. it's not a line because it's a place... a place for stuff to happen in. .. a place the universe is travelling through.
You know what else is roughly 25-30 days long?
Something that early humans might want to keep track of?
A womans’s menstrual cycle.
Moon-stral cycle
English screwed up the days of the weeks by introducing Norse gods. Monday is moonday not Mars day. You can see all of the 7 then “planets” If you look at the french/latin:
Lundi -> Luna
Mardi -> Mars
Mercredi -> Mercury
Jeudi-> Jupiter
Vendredi -> Venus
Samdi -> Saturn
Solis-> Sol
Mark "I Am The Wrong Horse" Antoni.
OMG Yes! so long sleep. see you in half hour.
Still waiting for Part 3!😕
WIll be up by Feb. Got two more videos to do first
Spring Equinox makes the year new. January 1 should be on March 20.
Why would ancient people only have 12 lunar month2 they could’ve just said that one year is how ever many cycles is needed to match the sun?
watched
HooWoo! 10th!
Damn people are messed up.
The answer to the title is "yo mama".