\

 

JANUARY, 2008

January 9 - 22:

1/9 (Wed):

In the ancient Roman calendar, 1/9 is the festival day of Janus, the god whose two faces gaze backward into the past and forward into the future. It was customary to keep the doors of Janus' temple closed in peacetime, to open them as soon as war began and to close them again when war was concluded -- thus invoking the blessing and protection of Janus, and his gifts of historic memory and foresight, when the continuity of the nation was in danger.

1/10 (Thu): In the Islamic calendar, this day is Al Hijra, first day of the month of Muharram and the lunar New Year, which is celebrated for the next 10 days.  Muslims have named this annual feast of renewal for the Hijra or Hegira, the pivotal moment in 622 CE when the Prophet Muhammad, his family and supporters rode from Mecca to Medina to establish a new faith based on the revealed word of the Qu'ran. Medina has ever since been second in dignity only to Mecca itself.
1/13 (Sun): In the Mayan calendar systems, this day begins the Uinal of Love, the fifth of the 20-day Uinals in the current cycle of the Tzolkin, or 260-day calendar (3 Imix, Tzolkin 81). The principles that rule this Uinal are Anchoring and Sprouting. The symbolic bird is the Hawk.

 1/14 (Mon):

Makara Sankranti, one of South India's great harvest festivals. As this day marks the annual date on which wind direction shifts from the Tropic of Cancer to the Tropic of Capricorn -- "makara" means Capricorn -- various gods of the wind are honored now, and there are many sailing competitions and festivals. Ritual offerings of water and food are offered to the resurging Sun, with prayers for an abundant harvest.

1/15 (Tue):

In the ancient Khemitian calendar, this is the first day of the month of Pamenot, sacred to Amun, the primordial water neter who embodies the potential of all living things. As this month is opposite on the zodiac wheel to what we call July, the month when the annual inundation of the Nile always used to begin on July 26, the month of Pamenot has always represented the seminal ingathering of energy and its concentration toward release in the surge of summer. For more on Amun, see 1/24.

This day is also celebrated as the feast of the Black Christ.

1/16 (Wed):

Birthday of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King (1929).

1/17 (Thu):

Among the Yoruba people of Africa and the Santeria communities of the Americas, this day is sacred to Ogun, the masculine orisha of strength, stamina and determination.

1/19 (Sat): In some Native American calendars, the Month of the Otter begins on this day.
Baha'i festival honoring the Deity as Sultan, supreme lord and sovereign of the universe.
1/19 eve - 1/20 eve:

In the Islamic calendar, this 10th day of the month of Muharram is Ashura (literally "ten"), a day that commemorates the martyrdom of Hoseyn, son of the Prophet's daughter Fatima, along with 72 of his family members and followers, including his sister Zeinab. This, as Azin Izadifar has kindly explained it, is one of those Muslim holy days that can differ widely in meaning and practice, depending on whether one is on the Sunni or Shia side of the faith. For Sunnis, whose ancestors carried out the bloody deed, this is an auspicious day on which believers fast and do other rites of purification. But for the Shiites, who are Hoseyn's spiritual descendents, this is a day of mourning on which fasting is strictly forbidden, and some believers bruise and bloody themselves in wild rituals self-flagellation.

1/20 (Sun):

The Sun enters Aquarius. This is a major annual transition point at which the year enters the Great Cold, and, before the Sun leaves Aquarius in February, begins the lengthening of the light and the transition to Spring. The importance of this annual passage point has been evident since ancient times in many cultures, for example the Chinese, who celebrate the lunar New Year at the first New Moon while the Sun is in what the West calls Aquarius. The Sun's entry into Aquarius gains increasing power now as Earth's people enter the Aquarian Age, which favors wide networks and lateral teams of friendship over Piscean hierarchies, emphasizing the identity of Aquarius as the ruler of the 11th House of Friendship.

In old Christian calendars, this is St. Agnes' Eve, which replaces an earlier British Celtic feast as the day on which prophecy and divination are favored. It is said that a young woman who correctly bakes a "dumb cake" - so called because it is prepared in strict silence - will be able to see the dream image of her future husband. This custom is the subject of a famous poem by Keats, "The Eve of St. Agnes". As this midwinter season is a time for introspection, it naturally abounds in rites of prophecy, including feasts of Thoth (1/24 - 27) and the Iroquois Mid-Winter ceremonies (1/28 - 2/5).

In the Roman Catholic calendar, this is the feast of St. Sebastian, one of the many notable martyrs from the last major wave of anti- Christian persecutions under Diocletian, at the end of the 3rd century and the beginning of the 4th, a few years before the reign of Constantine the Great, who was to designate Christianity the state religion of the Roman empire.

St. Sebastian is famous as a "double martyr", so called because when the emperor's attempt to have his fellow soldiers execute him with arrows failed to finish him off -- a scene depicted in countless works of art, including this one by Mantegna -- Sebastian had the temerity to affirm his faith before Caesar a second time, and was then clubbed to death. The symbolism of the arrows is ancient and archetypal, linking with countless stories in which the wound of divine love brings both excruciating pain and ineffable joy. Sebastian remains to this day the patron saint of soldiers, archers and athletes.

1/21 (Mon):

In the Roman Catholic calendar, feast of St. Agnes, one of the most admired of all virgin martyrs, who gave her life during the last great campaign of Christian persecutions by Diocletian in the early 4th century. She is always depicted with a lamb and a branch of hyssop, symbolizing respectively her innocence and her purity.

1/22 (Tue), 3:36am HT; 1:36pm UT:
Full Moon in Leo opposite Sun in Aquarius. The partners in this combination are not equally balanced now. The Sun continues to be "in detriment" in Aquarius, hia solar energies of control weakened, with the result that inner conflicts -- between people, within the same person -- are likely to manifest now. Every Full Moon is a potential moment for culmination and completion. This one, as there are no other planets aspecting the Sun-Moon pair, is a quiet opportunity for clearing grudges, heavy secrets and other soul sludge, especially in intimate relationships.
In the Celtic/Druidic and Wiccan calendars, this Full Moon is called Storm Moon. Also Quickening Moon and Wild Moon, in the “Great Winter” season close to Imbolc, 1/31 - 2/2. It is customary during this moon to wash clothes in clove and angelica, to purify them for the Spring.

1/22 (Tue):

In the ancient Greek and Roman calendars, this is the feast day of Apollo, god of the Sun, and also of light, intellect, classical beauty, prophecy and the lyre. Thousands of years ago, before the day of the Sun's entry into Aquarius moved to where it is now, on Jan. 19, this day marked the Sun's transition from the darkness and heaviness of Capricorn to the light and activity of Aquarius, the month in which the annual mid-winter festival of early February celebrated the passing of the Great Cold and the approach of the new Spring.

 

Apollo's day was later Christianized as the feast of St. Vincent, a shadowy figure who may not have lived, but who was likely invented, as his name means Wine in the Romance languages. St. Vincent is the patron of vintners and of those who just like to drink wine. The placement of his day is perfect, as it falls right at the top of the month when the Sun is in Aquarius, the sign which rules the 11th house of Friendship, and thus favors all happy activities that bring friends together. St. Vincent's Day is also a major weather marker in Europe, for it was -- and still is -- said that fair weather on this day heralds an abundant grape harvest and a good vintage:  "Take care on St. Vincent's Day, / For if on this day you see / That the sun is bright and clear, / We'll have more wine than water."

 

Please help support the Universal Festival Calendar and Hermes 3.

If you like reading this site and it has value for you,

will you kindly help the author and send a contribution? Many thanks.

The UFC is available in a convenient monthly e-mail Newsletter for $25 a year, $50 for 3 years. A lifetime subscription is $100, and you can order gift subscriptions too.

Click here to subscribe, or contribute to the work of Hermes 3 by Donation.

    

 Copyright 2007 Dan Furst. All Rights Reserved.