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New Year's Day Wasn't Always January 1st (duplicated)

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Created January 5, 2026

About this video

Learn the history of New Year's Day and why the date moved from March to January. See how Julius Caesar and ancient traditions shaped our modern calendar.

https://www.revid.ai/view/new-years-day-wasnt-always-january-1st-nmVn5joSCQrP4PljYgDL

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Video Transcript

Full text from the video

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Attention. New Year's Day wasn't always on January first. For thousands of

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years, civilizations celebrated the new year at completely different times.

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The ancient Babylonians kicked off their year in late March during the spring equinox.

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Makes sense, right? New crops, new beginnings. The Romans originally

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started their calendar in March too, which is why September means seventh month even though it's

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the ninth. October means eighth. You get it. Then Julius Caesar got involved and

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moved everything to January first in 46 BC. But even after that, many European countries

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celebrated New Year's in March or December for centuries. England didn't officially switch to January

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