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MARCH , the third See also: month of the See also: modern See also: calendar, containing See also: thirty-one days
.
It was the See also: Romans' first month until the adoption of the Julian calendar, 46 B.C., and it continued to be the beginning of the legal See also: year in See also: England until the 18th century
.
In See also: France it was reckoned the first month of the year until 1564, when, by an edict of See also: Charles IX.,
See also: January was decreed to be thenceforth the first month
.
Scotland followed the example of France in 1599; but in England the change did not take place before 1752
.
The Romans called the month Martius, a name supposed to have been conferred on it by See also: Romulus in honour of his putative See also: father, See also: Mars, the See also: god of war; but Ovid declares the month to have existed before the See also: time of Romulus, though in a different position in the calendar
.
The Anglo-See also: Saxons called March Hlyd-monath, "loud or stormy month," or Lencten-monath, " lengthening month," in allusion to the fact that the days then rapidly become longer
.
There is an old saying, See also: common to both England and Scotland—which has its See also: equivalent among the See also: Basques and many See also: European peoples—representing March as borrowing three days from See also: April; the last three days of March being called the " borrowing " or the " borrowed days." As See also: late as the end of the 18th century the first three days of March were known in Devonshire as " See also: Blind Days," and were deemed so unlucky that no See also: farmer would sow seed then
.
The chief festival days of March are the 1st, St See also: David; the 12th, St See also: Gregory; the 17th, St Patrick; and the 25th, Lady See also: Day, one of the quarter days in England
.
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