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The way a calendar is organized is very dependent on celestial events. A month is about the length of time the moon revolves around the earth and a year is the time the earth revolves around the sun. January 1st doesn't seem to have any sort of significance with any celestial phenomena. I would assume that a day like the spring/fall equinox or summer/winter solstice would be used as an anchor for the beginning of the year but this is not the case.

Why does January 1st not fall on the day of a celestial event such as a solstice?

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    I assume you are referring to the Gregorian calendar - some calendars, such as the lunisolar calendar of East Asia, starts each year at the transition from winter to spring.
    – Semaphore
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 13:10
  • I'm not sure that the calendar is dependent on celestial events; celestial events have very few votes. I think most calendars are organized around political events. I also think that "calendar drift" will render the association between celestial events and calendar dates as irrelevant rather quickly. January 1 may have been the equinox in the year when it was proposed. Remember that the Roman calendar was months off, and then they inserted two new months to honor Caesar. Calendars do not correlate with the stars reliably.
    – MCW
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 14:57
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    @Mark C. Wallace: Well, quite trivially a calendar marks one revolution of the Earth around the sun - a celestial event! - and the length of a month derives from one revolution of the Moon around the Earth.
    – jamesqf
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 17:47
  • Is that so? The moon's revolution around the earth alternates between 30 and 31 days? And the solar year doesn't match the lunar year, and neither of them address the core problem - none of the dates are special - the selection of 1 January is arbitrary. (for a very interesting alternative, examine the Hebrew year, which begins on the sixth month!)
    – MCW
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 17:48
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    @Mark C. Wallace: A month is pretty close to one lunar cycle, no? And could be closer, if not for the human insistance on trying to fit an integral number of months into a year of 365 and a fraction days. If the calendar wasn't rooted in celestial events, why not decimal 'years' of 100 or 1000 days, and 'months' of 10 or 100? FTM, isn't the day itself tied to a celestial event?
    – jamesqf
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 20:33

3 Answers 3

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The Roman calendar (on which the Gregorian calendar was based) was synchronized with a celestial event: the lunar cycle.

Originally, each Roman month began on the first day of the new moon. However, it was timed according to the full moon, which fell on the ides. The reason for this is that the full moon occurs on only a single day, but a new moon can last several days. Therefore, originally the key event was the full moon, because it was unambiguous. Between the new moon and a full moon are a little over 14 days. Therefore, originally the Romans made the Ides fall on the full moon and the Kalends (the first day of the month) fall either 13 days or 15 days before in a schedule designed to average out correctly.

In the reign of Numa Pompilius the calendar was regularized so that this synchronism was no longer kept.

The Roman ritual New Year occurred on the Kalends of March because March is the month in which the Spring solstice occurs. The civil year was switched to begin on the Kalends of January in 153 BC for political reasons: the Senate wanted the new consul Quintus Fulvius Nobilior to attack the city of Segeda during the Celtiberian Wars immediately. Therefore, they moved up the day of the appointment from the Kalends of March to the Kalends of January.

So, to summarize, the short answer to your question is that the months were originally aligned to the day of the full moon, but when the calendar was fixed to the solar year, this synchronization was lost. The reason why the solar calendar was not aligned with the solar event (solstice) was that Numa Pompilius kept the sequence of days roughly as they had been under the lunar calendar. If he had changed the Kalends of March to fall on the solstice, then things might be synchronized in the way you suggest, but he probably did not want to disrupt the flow of days as it then existed.

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It is not that simple. According to this page,

http://www.webexhibits.org/calendars/year-history.html

it has nothing to do with Gregorian calendar and was actually decided by Iulius Caesar. Later in various countries we see many various dates when the year starts. March 1 was also a very common date and was used in ancient Rome. Starting a year from some astronomical event (like an equinox) is inconvenient because the true year contains non-integer number of days, so the date of the equinox is always sligthly floating.

The first time the new year was celebrated on January 1st was in Rome in 153 B.C. (In fact, the month of January did not even exist until around 700 B.C., when the second king of Rome, Numa Pontilius, added the months of January and February.) The new year was moved from March to January because that was the beginning of the civil year, the month that the two newly elected Roman consuls—the highest officials in the Roman republic—began their one-year tenure. But this new year date was not always strictly and widely observed, and the new year was still sometimes celebrated on March 1.

http://www.infoplease.com/spot/newyearhistory.html

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January 1st doesn't seem to have any sort of significance with any celestial phenomena.

Not in general, but the first January 1st of the Julian calendar (i.e., January 1st, 45 BC) was indeed synchronized with the first new moon following the previous year's winter solstice :

It was probably the original intention of Caesar to commence the year with the shortest day. The winter solstice at Rome, in the year 46 B.C., occurred on the 24th of December of the Julian calendar. His motive for delaying the commencement for seven days longer, instead of taking the following day, was probably the desire to gratify the superstition of the Romans, by causing the first year of the reformed calendar to fall on the day of the new moon. Accordingly, it is found that the mean new moon occurred at Rome on the 1st of January, 45 B.C., at 6h. 16′ P. M. In this way alone can be explained the phrase used by Macrobius: Annum civilem Caesar, habitis ad lunam dimensionibus constitutum, edicto palam proposito publicavit. This edict is also mentioned by Plutarch where he gives the anecdote of Cicero, who, on being told by some one that the constellation Lyra would rise the next morning, observed, Yes, no doubt, in obedience to the edict.

William Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, page 231, John Murray, London, 1875.

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    @LangLangC: Yes, I've read your comment when you posted it, before deletion. (I obviously wasn't proposing an initial date of AD 70, since that would imply that First Maccabees was also emended at around that time, which would be highly unlikely. I also posted it as a question on Hermeneutics.SE).
    – Lucian
    Commented Jul 30, 2019 at 20:10

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