New Year Traditions
Civilizations around the world have been celebrating the
start of each new year for at least four millennia. Today, most New Year’s
festivities begin on December 31 (New Year’s Eve), the last day of the
Gregorian calendar, and continue into the early hours of January 1 (New Year’s
Day). Common traditions include attending parties, eating special New Year’s
foods, making resolutions for the new year and watching fireworks displays.
Early New Year’s Celebrations
The earliest recorded festivities in honor of a new year’s
arrival date back some 4,000 years to ancient Babylon. For the Babylonians, the
first new moon following the vernal equinox—the day in late March with an equal
amount of sunlight and darkness—heralded the start of a new year. They marked
the occasion with a massive religious festival called Akitu (derived from the
Sumerian word for barley, which was cut in the spring) that involved a
different ritual on each of its 11 days. In addition to the new year, Atiku
celebrated the mythical victory of the Babylonian sky god Marduk over the evil
sea goddess Tiamat and served an important political purpose: It was during
this time that a new king was crowned or that the current ruler’s divine
mandate was symbolically renewed.
Did You Know? In
order to realign the Roman calendar with the sun, Julius Caesar had to add 90
extra days to the year 46 B.C. when he introduced his new Julian calendar.
Throughout antiquity, civilizations around the world
developed increasingly sophisticated calendars, typically pinning the first day
of the year to an agricultural or astronomical event. In Egypt, for instance,
the year began with the annual flooding of the Nile, which coincided with the
rising of the star Sirius. The first day of the Chinese new year, meanwhile,
occurred with the second new moon after the winter solstice.
January 1 Becomes New Year’s Day
The early Roman calendar consisted of 10 months and 304
days, with each new year beginning at the vernal equinox; according to
tradition, it was created by Romulus, the founder of Rome, in the eighth
century B.C. A later king, Numa Pompilius, is credited with adding the months
of Januarius and Februarius. Over the centuries, the calendar fell out of sync
with the sun, and in 46 B.C. the emperor Julius Caesar decided to solve the
problem by consulting with the most prominent astronomers and mathematicians of
his time. He introduced the Julian calendar, which closely resembles the more
modern Gregorian calendar that most countries around the world use today.
As part of his reform, Caesar instituted January 1 as the
first day of the year, partly to honor the month’s namesake: Janus, the Roman
god of beginnings, whose two faces allowed him to look back into the past and
forward into the future. Romans celebrated by offering sacrifices to Janus,
exchanging gifts with one another, decorating their homes with laurel branches
and attending raucous parties. In medieval Europe, Christian leaders
temporarily replaced January 1 as the first of the year with days carrying more
religious significance, such as December 25 (the anniversary of Jesus’ birth)
and March 25 (the Feast of the Annunciation); Pope Gregory XIII reestablished
January 1 as New Year’s Day in 1582.
New Year’s Traditions
In many countries, New Year’s celebrations begin on the
evening of December 31—New Year’s Eve—and continue into the early hours of
January 1. Revelers often enjoy meals and snacks thought to bestow good luck
for the coming year. In Spain and several other Spanish-speaking countries,
people bolt down a dozen grapes-symbolizing their hopes for the months
ahead-right before midnight. In many parts of the world, traditional New Year’s
dishes feature legumes, which are thought to resemble coins and herald future
financial success; examples include lentils in Italy and black-eyed peas in the
southern United States. Because pigs represent progress and prosperity in some
cultures, pork appears on the New Year’s Eve table in Cuba, Austria, Hungary,
Portugal and other countries. Ring-shaped cakes and pastries, a sign that the
year has come full circle, round out the feast in the Netherlands, Mexico,
Greece and elsewhere. In Sweden and Norway, meanwhile, rice pudding with an
almond hidden inside is served on New Year’s Eve; it is said that whoever finds
the nut can expect 12 months of good fortune.
Other customs that are common worldwide include watching
fireworks and singing songs to welcome the new year, including the ever-popular
“Auld Lang Syne” in many English-speaking countries. The practice of making
resolutions for the new year is thought to have first caught on among the
ancient Babylonians, who made promises in order to earn the favor of the gods
and start the year off on the right foot. (They would reportedly vow to pay off
debts and return borrowed farm equipment.)
In the United States, the most iconic New Year’s tradition
is the dropping of a giant ball in New York City’s Times Square at the stroke
of midnight. Millions of people around the world watch the event, which has
taken place almost every year since 1907. Over time, the ball itself has
ballooned from a 700-pound iron-and-wood orb to a brightly patterned sphere 12
feet in diameter and weighing in at nearly 12,000 pounds. Various towns and
cities across America have developed their own versions of the Times Square
ritual, organizing public drops of items ranging from pickles (Dillsburg,
Pennsylvania) to possums (Tallapoosa, Georgia) at midnight on New Year’s Eve.
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