“Fair” comes from feria, which, in Latin, means “day of rest”. The term began to be used in the year 563, after a council of the Catholic Church in the Portuguese city of Braga – hence the explanation for the presence of the term only in the Portuguese language. On that occasion, Bishop Martinho de Braga decided that the names of the days of the week used until then, in honor of pagan gods, should change. But wait a minute: if feria is a rest day, why is “fair” only used on weekdays?
This happens because, in the beginning, the bishop’s order was valid only for the days of Holy Week (the one before Easter Sunday), in which every good Christian should rest. Then it ended up being adopted for the whole year, but only by the Portuguese – in Spanish, French and Italian, the gods continue to knock the clock day after day. The only exceptions assumed by our mustachioed brothers – and later incorporated into the Portuguese colonies – were Saturday and Sunday (Prima Feria, in Holy Week), which derive, respectively, from the Hebrew shabbat, the day of rest of the Jews, and from the Latin Dies Dominicus , the «Day of the Lord».
Since 321 Western calendars have started the week on Sunday. The rule was imposed that year by the Roman emperor, Constantine, who, moreover, definitively established that the weeks would have seven days. The order was not random: although at the time the Romans adopted weeks of eight days, the Bible already said that God had created the Earth in six days and rested on the seventh and, as it seems, the Babylonians also already divided the year into sets of seven days.
It’s fair day
In other languages, the most common is to honor gods or stars on the days of the week.
Language, day of the week – Spanish
Sunday – Sunday / Lord’s Day
Monday – Lunes / Moon Day
Tuesday – Mars / Mars Day
Wednesday – Miércoles / Mercury Day
Thursday – Jueves / Jupiter Day
Friday – Viernes / Venus Day
Saturday – Saturday / Shabbat Day
Language, day of the week – Swedish
Sunday – Söndag / Day of the Sun
Monday – Måndag / Moon Day
Tuesday – Tisdag / Day of Tyr, Norse god of war
Wednesday – Onsdag / Day of Woden or Odin, supreme god of the Norse and father of Tyr
Thursday – Torsdag / Day of Thor, Norse god of thunder
Friday – Fredag / Day of Freyja, wife of Woden and goddess of beauty
Saturday – Lördag / Bath Day
Language, day of the week – German
Sunday – Sonntag / Day of the Sun
Monday – Montag / Moon Day
Tuesday – Dienstag / Tyr’s Day
Wednesday – Mittwoch / Average week
Thursday – Donnerstag / Day of Thunder
Friday – Freitag / Freyja’s Day
Saturday – Samstag / Shabbat Day
Language, day of the week – English
Domingo – Sunday / Day of the Sun
Monday – Monday / Moon Day
Tuesday – Tuesday / Tyr’s Day
Wednesday – Wednesday / Woden’s Day
Thursday – Thursday / Thor’s Day
Friday – Friday / Freyja’s Day
Saturday – Saturday / Saturn Day