Essay
New year, old festivals
There have been festivities to stamp the start of another year for a huge number of years. At times these were just an open door for individuals to eat, drink and have a ton of fun, yet in certain spots the merriments were associated with the land or cosmic occasions. For instance, in Egypt the start of the year corresponded with when the River Nile overflowed, and this typically happened when the star Sirius rose. The Persians and Phoenicians began their new year at the spring equinox (this is around 20 March when the Sun sparkles pretty much legitimately on the equator and the length of the night and the day are nearly the equivalent).
The most established festival
The city of Babylon in antiquated Mesopotamia was the place the primary New Year's festivals were recorded around 4,000 years prior. The Babylonians held their festivals on the principal new moon after the spring equinox and called this celebration Akitu (which originates from the word the Sumerians utilized for grain). Grain was cut in Mesopotamia in the spring, and during Akitu there was an alternate custom on every one of the 11 days that the festival endured. Statues of the divine beings were brought through the lanes of the city, and along these lines the Babylonians accepted that their reality had been cleaned to get ready for the new year and another spring.
吃了吗?想来玩目前STEEM上最火爆的drugwars游戏吗?还在等待什么?赶快加入战斗吧!drugwars.io倘若你想让我隐形,请回复“取消”。
Congratulations @chawl! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :
You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word
STOP
Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!
Thanks for your support.