Disclaimer: Like my other Quick Guide this is not meant as a comprehensive guide, but a tool to add details in roleplay and stories. I'll try to update often, covering different topics about life in Byzantium.
Time
Hours of the day:
The day is divided in two 12-hour cycles fixed by the rising and the setting of the sun. The first hour of the day (hemera) came at dawn. The third hour marked midmorning, the sixth hour was noon and the ninth hour was midafternoon. Evening (hespera) began at the 11th hour and with sunset came the first hour of the night (apodeipnon). The interval between sunset and sunrise (nyx) was similarly divided into 12 hours. The lenght of these hours varied through the year. Daylight hours of about 45 minutes were observed around the winter solstice, lenghtening to nearly 75 minutes by the summer solstice. The biannual equinox, the only day with an hour of exactly 60 minutes offered the only possibility of calibrating correctly timekeeping devices, like water clocks. The sun was the most reliable means of marking time and most people used portable sundials.
Activities took place mainly during the daylight hours, taking advantage of the clarity and safety of the daytime. Meals were prepared before sunset even if the evening meal was served after dusk. Taverns in Constantinople were not supposed to open their doors before the second hour of the day on Sundays, nor to stay open after the second hour of the night. Safety concerns and limited interior lighting contributed to the lack of nightlife. The main streets of the capital were lit by torches, although one rarely went out unaccompanied in the dark. Palaces, houses and churches might be adequately illuminated by candles and lamps made of terra-cotta and glass, but a great many lamps were needed to give enough light for entertainement or work. The candles and lamps used in most homes were better suited to solitary reading.
Days of the week:
Each day was devoted to remebering one or more martyrs or saints, whose observed feast days gradually eclipsed traditional festivals. Kyriake was seen as both the first and eight day of the week, in the same way that Christ was the alpha and omega or the cosmos, existing both before and after time. The second day of the week recognized angel. John the Baptist, the forerunner (Prodomos) of Christ, was honored on the third day. Both the second and third days were viewed as occasions for penitence. The fourth and sixth days were dedicated to the Cross with holy songs sung in rememberance of the Crucifixion. The Virgin Mary was honored on the fifth day of the week, while the seventh day was set aside for the martyrs of the church.
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