March
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2017 |
March is the third month of the year in both the Julian and Gregorian calendars. It is the second month to have a length of 31 days. In the Northern Hemisphere, the meteorological beginning of spring occurs on the first day of March. The March equinox on the 20th or 21st marks the astronomical beginning of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and the beginning of autumn in the Southern Hemisphere, where September is the seasonal equivalent of the Northern Hemisphere's March.
Origin
The name of March comes from Latin Martius, the first month of the earliest Roman calendar. It was named after Mars, the Roman god of war, who was also regarded as a guardian of agriculture and an ancestor of the Roman people through his sons Romulus and Remus. His month Martius was the beginning of the season for both farming and warfare,[1] and the festivals held in his honor during the month were mirrored by others in October, when the season for these activities came to a close.[2] Martius remained the first month of the Roman calendar year perhaps as late as 153 BC,[3] and several religious observances in the first half of the month were originally new year's celebrations.[4] Even in late antiquity, Roman mosaics picturing the months sometimes still placed March first.[5]
March 1 began the numbered year in Russia until the end of the 15th century. Great Britain and its colonies continued to use March 25 until 1752, when they finally adopted the Gregorian calendar (the fiscal year in the UK continues to begin on the 6th April, initially identical to 25 March in the former Julian calendar). Many other cultures and religions still celebrate the beginning of the New Year in March.
March is the first month of spring in the Northern Hemisphere (North America, Europe, Asia and part of Africa) and the first month of fall or autumn in the Southern Hemisphere (South America, part of Africa, and Oceania).
Ancient Roman observances celebrated in March include Agonium Martiale, celebrated on March 1, March 14, and March 17, Matronalia, celebrated on March 1, Junonalia, celebrated on March 7, Equirria, celebrated on March 14, Mamuralia, celebrated on either March 14 or March 15, Hilaria on March 15 and then through March 22-28, Argei, celebrated on March 16–17, Liberalia and Bacchanalia, celebrated March 17, Quinquatria, celebrated March 19–23, and Tubilustrium, celebrated March 23. These dates do not correspond to the modern Gregorian calendar.
Other names
In Finnish, the month is called maaliskuu, which is believed to originate from maallinen kuu, during March, earth finally becomes visible under the snow (other etymological theories have however been put forward). In Ukrainian, the month is called березень/berezenʹ, meaning birch tree, and březen in Czech. Historical names for March include the Saxon Lentmonat, named after the March equinox and gradual lengthening of days, and the eventual namesake of Lent. Saxons also called March Rhed-monat or Hreth-monath (deriving from their goddess Rhedam/Hreth), and Angles called it Hyld-monath.
In Slovene, the traditional name is sušec, meaning the month when the earth becomes dry enough so that it is possible to cultivate it. The name was first written in 1466 in the Škofja Loka manuscript. Other names were used too, for example brezen and breznik, "the month of birches".[6] The Turkish word Mart is given after the name of Mars the god.
March symbols
- March's birthstones are aquamarine and bloodstone. These stones symbolize courage.
- Its birth flower is the daffodil.[7]
- The zodiac signs for the month of March are Pisces (until March 20) and Aries (March 21 onwards).
March observances
This list does not necessarily imply either official status nor general observance.
Month-long observances
- In Catholic tradition, March is the Month of Saint Joseph.
- Endometriosis Awareness Month (International observance)
- National Nutrition Month (Canada)
- Season for Nonviolence: January 30-April 4 (International observance)
- Women's History Month (Australia, United Kingdom, United States)
United States
- Cerebral Palsy Awareness Month[8]
- National Nutrition Month
- Irish-American Heritage Month
- Multiple Sclerosis Awareness Month
- Music in our Schools Month
- National Athletic Training Month
- National Bleeding Disorders Awareness Month
- National Celery Month
- National Frozen Food Month
- National Kidney Month
- National Professional Social Work Month
- National Reading Awareness Month
- Youth Art Month
Non-Gregorian observances, 2017
(Please note that all Baha'i, Islamic, and Jewish observances begin on sundown prior to the date listed, and end on the sundown of the date in question unless otherwise noted.)
- March 2: Martyrdom of Fatima (Islamic calendar, public holiday in Iran)
- March 5: Seventh of Adar (Jewish calendar)
- March 8: Amalaka Ekadashi (Hinduism)
- March 9: Fast of Esther (Jewish calendar, starts at dawn)
- March 11: Shabbat Zachor (Jewish calendar)
- March 12: Purim (Jewish calendar)
- March 12: Shia day of Remembrance: Death of Umm ul-Banin (Islamic calendar, Shia sect)
- March 13: Shushan Purim (Jewish calendar)
- March 19: Shia day of Celebration: Birth of Janab-e-Fatima-az-Zahra (Islamic calendar, Shia sect)
- March 19: Mother's Day in Iran (Islamic calendar)
- March 20: Bahá'í Naw-Rúz/Feast of Baha (Splendour) [9]
- March 25: Shabbat HaChodesh (Jewish calendar)
- March 25: Shia day of Mourning: Martyrdom of Imam Ali Naqi (Islamic calendar, Shia sect)
- March 27: Yom Kippur Katan (Jewish calendar, optional)
- March 28: Amavasya (Hinduism) [10]
- March 28: Rosh Chodesh of Nisan (Jewish calendar)
Movable observances - 2017
- National Corndog Day (United States): March 18 [11]
- Earth Hour (International observance): March 25
School day closest to March 2: March 2
First Thursday: March 2
First Friday: March 3
First Sunday: March 5
Second week: March 5–11
First Monday: March 6
Monday closest to March 9, unless March 9 falls on a Saturday: March 6
First Tuesday: March 7
Second Wednesday: March 8
Week of March 8: March 5–11
Second Thursday: March 9
Third week in March: 19-25
Second Tuesday: March 14
Third Wednesday: March 15
Friday of the second full week of March: March 17
March equinox - March 20
- Chunfen (East Asia)
- Dísablót (some Asatru groups)
- Earth Equinox Day
- Equinox of the Gods/New Year (Thelema)
- Higan (Japan)
- International Astrology Day
- Mabon (Southern Hemisphere) (Neo-paganism)
- Nowruz (Persian, Gilaki, Kurdish, Zoroastrians, and other Iranian people and countries with an Iranian influence)
- Ostara (Northern hemisphere) (Neo-paganism)
- Shunbun no Hi (Japan)
- Sigrblót (The Troth)
- Summer Finding (Asatru Free Assembly)
- Sun-Earth Day (United States)
- Vernal Equinox Day/Kōreisai (Japan)
- World Storytelling Day
Third Monday: March 20
Fourth Saturday: March 25
Fourth Monday: March 27
Last Monday - March 27
Fourth Tuesday: March 28
Movable Western Christian Observances - 2017 dates
- Ash Wednesday/Lent begins - March 1
- National No Smoking Day (Ireland)
- People's Sunday (Żabbar, Malta) - March 5
- Quadragesima Sunday - March 5
- Laetare Sunday/Mothering Sunday - March 26
- Pretzel Sunday (Luxembourg) - March 26
Movable Eastern Christian Observances - 2017 dates
- Theodore Saturday March 4
- Feast of Orthodoxy March 5
- Saturday of Souls March 11
- Sunday of St. Gregory Palamas March 12
- Saturday of Souls – March 18
- Sunday of the Holy Cross – March 19
- Saturday of Souls – March 25
- Sunday of St. John Climacus – March 26
Fixed observances
- March 1
- Baba Marta (Bulgaria),
- Beer Day (Iceland)
- Commemoration of Mustafa Barzani's Death (Iraqi Kurdistan)
- Heroes' Day (Paraguay)
- Independence Day (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
- Mărțișor (Romania and Moldavia)
- National Peanut Butter Day (United States)
- National Pig Day (United States)
- Remembrance Day (Marshall Islands)
- Saint David's Day (Wales)
- Samiljeol (South Korea)
- Self-injury Awareness Day (International observance)
- World Civil Defence Day
- March 2
- March 3
- March 4
- March 5
- March 6
- March 7
- March 8
- March 9
- March 10
- Harriet Tubman Day (United States of America)
- Holocaust Remembrance Day (Bulgaria)
- Hote Matsuri (Shiogama, Japan)
- National Blueberry Popover Day Day (United States)
- National Mario Day (United States)
- National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (United States)
- Tibetan Uprising Day (Tibetan independence movement)
- March 11
- March 12
- March 13
- March 14
- March 15
- March 16
- March 17
- March 18
- March 19
- Kashubian Unity Day (Poland)
- Minna Canth's Birthday (Finland)
- Saint Joseph's Day (Roman Catholicism and Anglican Communion) related observances:
- Father's Day (Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy, Honduras, and Bolivia)
- Las Fallas, celebrated on the week leading to March 19. (Valencia)
- "Return of the Swallow", annual observance of the swallows' return to Mission San Juan Capistrano in California.
- March 20
- Extraterrestrial Abduction Day
- Feast of the Supreme Ritual (Thelema)
- Great American Meatout (United States)
- International Day of Happiness (United Nations)
- Independence Day (Tunisia)
- International Francophonie Day (Organisation internationale de la Francophonie), and its related observance:
- Liberation of Kirkuk City (Iraqi Kurdistan)
- National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (United States)
- World Sparrow Day
- March 21
- Arbor Day (Portugal)
- Birth of Benito Juárez, a Fiestas Patrias (Mexico)
- Harmony Day (Australia)
- Human Rights Day (South Africa)
- Independence Day (Namibia)
- International Colour Day (International observance)
- International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (International observance)
- International Day of Forests (International observance)
- Mother's Day (most of the Arab world)
- National Tree Planting Day (Lesotho)
- Truant's Day (Poland, Faroe Islands)
- World Down Syndrome Day (International observance)
- World Poetry Day (International observance)
- World Puppetry Day (International observance)
- Youth Day (Tunisia)
- March 22
- March 23
- March 24
- Commonwealth Covenant Day (Northern Mariana Islands, United States)
- Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice (Argentina)
- Day of National Revolution (Kyrgyzstan)
- International Day for the Right to the Truth Concerning Gross Human Rights Violations and for the Dignity of Victims (United Nations)
- National Tree Planting Day (Uganda)
- Student Day (Scientology)
- World Tuberculosis Day
- March 25
- Anniversary of the Arengo and the Feast of the Militants (San Marino)
- Cultural Workers Day (Russia)
- Empress Menen's Birthday (Rastafari)
- EU Talent Day (European Union)
- Feast of the Annunciation (Christianity), and its related observances:
- Lady Day (United Kingdom) (see Quarter Days)
- International Day of the Unborn Child (Knights of Columbus)
- Mother's Day (Slovenia)
- Waffle Day (Sweden)
- Freedom Day (Belarus)
- International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade
- International Day of Solidarity with Detained and Missing Staff Members (United Nations General Assembly)
- Maryland Day (Maryland, United States)
- Revolution Day (Greece)
- Struggle for Human Rights Day (Slovakia)
- Tolkien Reading Day (Tolkien fandom)
- March 26
- March 27
- March 28
- Commemoration of Sen no Rikyū (Schools of Japanese tea ceremony)
- Serfs Emancipation Day (Tibet)
- Teachers' Day (Czech Republic and Slovakia)
- March 29
- March 30
- March 31
- César Chávez Day (United States)
- Culture Day (Public holidays in the Federated States of Micronesia)
- Day of Genocide of Azerbaijanis (Azerbaijan)
- Freedom Day (Malta)
- International Transgender Day of Visibility
- King Nangklao Memorial Day (Thailand)
- National Backup Day (United States)
- National Clams on the Half Shell Day (United States)
- Thomas Mundy Peterson Day (New Jersey, United States)
- Transfer Day (US Virgin Islands)
References
- ↑ Mary Beard, John North, and Simon Price, Religions of Rome (Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 47–48 and 53.
- ↑ Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), p. 37. The views of Georg Wissowa on the festivals of Mars framing the military campaigning season are summarized by C. Bennett Pascal, "October Horse," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 (1981), p. 264, with bibliography.
- ↑ H.H. Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic (Cornell University Press, 1981), p. 84; Gary Forsythe, Time in Roman Religion: One Thousand Years of Religious History (Routledge, 2012), p. 14 (on the uncertainty of when the change occurred).
- ↑ Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic, p. 85ff.
- ↑ Aïcha Ben Abed, Tunisian Mosaics: Treasures from Roman Africa (Getty Publications, 2006), p. 113.
- ↑ "Koledar prireditev v letu 2007 in druge informacije občine Dobrova–Polhov Gradec" [The Calendar of Events and Other Information of the Municipality of Dobrova–Polhov Gradec] (PDF) (in Slovenian). Municipality of Dobrova-Polhov Gradec. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-02.
- ↑ "March Birth Flower : Flower Meaning".
- ↑ http://ucp.org/tag/national-cerebral-palsy-awareness-month/
- ↑ http://bahaiblog.net/site/bahai-calendar/
- ↑ http://www.hindu-blog.com/2009/01/amavasi-days-in-2009-amavasya-no-moon.html
- ↑ http://corndogday.com/
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2016-03-27.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: March |
Look up March in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article about March. |