fbpx
Wikipedia

Dog days

The dog days or dog days of summer are the hot, sultry days of summer. They were historically the period following the heliacal rising of the star system Sirius (known colloquially as the "Dog Star"), which Hellenistic astrology connected with heat, drought, sudden thunderstorms, lethargy, fever, mad dogs, and bad luck. They are now taken to be the hottest, most uncomfortable part of summer in the Northern Hemisphere.

Etymology

 
In addition to following Orion into the night sky, the Dog Star Sirius can be easily located in the heavens by following the line created by the prominent asterism Orion's Belt.

The English name is a calque of the Latin dies caniculares (lit. "the puppy days"), itself a calque of the ancient Greek κυνάδες ἡμέραι kynádes hēmérai.[1] The Greeks knew the star α Canis Majoris by several names, including Sirius "Scorcher" (Σείριος, Seírios), Sothis (Σῶθις, Sôthis, a transcription of Egyptian Spdt), and the Dog Star (Κῠ́ων, Kúōn).[2] The last name reflects the way Sirius follows the constellation Orion into the night sky.[3]

History

Sirius is by far the brightest proper star in the night sky, which caused ancient astronomers to take note of it around the world. In Egypt, its return to the night sky became known as a precursor to the annual flooding of the Nile and was worshipped as the goddess Sopdet. In Greece, it became known as the precursor of the unpleasantly hot phase of the summer. Greek poets even recorded the belief that the return of the bright star was responsible for bringing heat and fever with it;[4] it was also associated with sudden thunderstorms.[5] In Homer's Iliad, probably composed in the 8th century BC but representing an earlier tradition,[6] Achilles's approach toward Troy, where he will slay Hector, is illustrated through an extended metaphor about the baleful effects attending the return of Sirius:

The rising of Sirius during this period has been calculated as 19 July (Julian).[8] Writing about the same time,[9] Hesiod, however, considered the worst and hottest part of the summer to be the days before Sirius returned to the night sky. During this period, Sirius was invisible from the earth but it was apparently understood to still be in the sky, augmenting the power of the sun:

 
Trees and grass on Crete dried out by the August heat

This effect of the combination of Sirius' light with the Sun's was understood to have an effect on plants, animals, and women, as well as men:

About a century later, Alcaeus repeated the theme, advising his listeners to "steep your lungs in wine" before the arrival of the star since "women are at their foulest but men are weak since they are parched in head and knees".[12] In the 3rd century, Aratus' Phenomena describes the time as Sirius blighting the bark of trees with its heat during the time it rises and sets with the sun.[13]

The Kean priests of Zeus as Rainmaker and Lord of Moisture[14] observed annual sacrifices before the rise of Sirius to prevent scorching drought.[15][16] This practice was credited to the culture hero Aristaeus.[15][17][18][19] Aristotle mentions the proverbial heat of the dog days as part of his argument against an early formulation of evolution in his Physics.[20]

 
A 9th-century astronomical manuscript, including an illustration of the constellation "Sirius"[21]

The Romans continued to blame Sirius for the heat of the season and attendant lethargy and diseases.[5] In his Georgics, Vergil notes vintners' efforts to protect their work during the time "when the Dog-star cleaves the thirsty Ground".[22] Seneca's Oedipus complains of "the scorching dog-star's fires".[23] Pliny's Natural History notes an increase in attacks by dogs during July and August, and advises feeding them chicken manure to curb the tendency.[5] In the early 20th century, historians still noted the "discouraging heat" and "oppression" of the dog days of the Roman summer.[24]

The period has long featured in western medicine. The 1564 English Hope of Health counseled that purging (bloodletting and induced vomiting) should be avoided during the "Dogge daies" of summer because "the Sunne is in Leo" and "then is nature burnt vp & made weake".[25] The 1729 British Husbandman's Practice claimed that "The Heat of the Sun is so violent that Men's bodies at Midnight sweat as at Midday: and if they be hurt, they be more sick than at any other time, yea very near Dead". It therefore advised men to "abstain all this time from women" and to "take heed of feeding violently".[5] In the 1813 Clavis Calendria, the dog days are a time wherein "the Sea boiled, the Wine turned sour, Dogs grew mad, Quinto raged with anger, and all other creatures became languid; causing to man, among other diseases, burning fevers, hysterics, and phrensies".[26]

 
"Some Popular Alleviations of the Dog Days in Hotter New-York" in 1904, including children piled into a public fountain "when the 'cop' is not looking".[27]

Even after astrology and its influence on health and agriculture waned in importance, the "dog days" continues to be vaguely applied to the hottest days of the summer, with its attendant effects on nature and society. In North America, it became proverbial among farmers that a dry growing season through the dog days was preferable to the trouble of a wet one:

Dog days bright and clear
Indicate a good year;
But when accompanied by rain,
We hope for better times in vain.[29]

Because "July is typically one of the quietest months of the year for stock trading", the term is sometimes used for the lethargic summer markets.[5][30]

Span

Various computations of the dog days have placed their start anywhere from 3 July to 15 August and lasting for anywhere from 30 to 61 days.[1] They may begin or end with the cosmical rising or heliacal rising of either Sirius in Canis Major or Procyon (the "Little Dog Star") in Canis Minor and vary by latitude, not even being visible throughout much of the Southern Hemisphere.[1] Sirius observes a period of almost exactly 365¼ days between risings, keeping it largely consistent with the Julian but not the Gregorian calendar; nonetheless, its dates occur somewhat later in the year over a span of millennia.[1]

In antiquity, the dog days were usually reckoned from the appearance of Sirius[2] around 19 July (Julian)[8] to relieving rains and cool winds, although Hesiod seems to have counted the worst of summer as the days leading up to Sirius's reappearance.[10]

In Anglo-Saxon England, the dog days ran from various dates in mid-July to early or mid-September.[31] Canonical "dog daies" were observed from July 7 to September 5 in the 16th-century English liturgies.[32][33] They were removed from the prayer books at the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and their term shortened to the time between July 19 and August 20.[34] During the British adoption of the Gregorian calendar in 1752, they were shifted to July 30 to September 7.[34]

Many modern sources in the English-speaking world move this still earlier, from July 3 to August 11,[1][34][35][5] ending rather than beginning with or centering on the reappearance of Sirius to the night sky.

Scientific basis

 
Orion (right) and Sirius (bottom), as seen from the Hubble Space Telescope

Although Sirius is the brightest proper star in the night sky, it is 8.7 light-years (8.23×1013 km) away from Earth and has no effect whatsoever on the planet's weather or temperature.[5][36] Although the star continues to return to the night sky in late summer, its position continues to gradually shift relative to the Sun and will rise in the middle of winter in about 10,000 years.[5]

The effects of summer heat and rainfall patterns are real, but vary by latitude and location according to many factors. For example, London, UK, is slightly farther north than Calgary, Canada, but has a milder climate from the presence of the sea and the warm Gulf Stream current. A medical institution has reported a connection between Finland's dog days and increased risk of infection in deep surgery wounds,[37][38] although that research remains unverified.

In popular culture

 
Harry Clarke's 1917 illustration of Synge's poem

It is possible that Saint Roch, the legendary medieval patron saint of dogs celebrated by the Catholic Church on 16 August, owes some of his legacy to the dog days.[5] From the period of his self-proclaimed protectorate over the island, the Danish adventurer Jørgen Jørgensen is remembered in Iceland as Jørgen the Dog-Day King (Icelandic: Jörundur hundadagakonungur).[39]

In western literature, apart from the Greek and Roman works mentioned above, the dog days appear in John Webster's 1613 play The Duchess of Malfi,[a] Charles Dickens' 1843 novella A Christmas Carol,[b] R.H. Davis's 1903 short story "The Bar Sinister",[c] J.M. Synge's 1909 poem "Queens",[d] and Richard Adams's 1972 novel Watership Down.[e] They feature in the children's novels Tuck Everlasting (1973),[f] and Dog Days (2009) from the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series.[46]

Dog Days is also the title of a Japanese anime series that premiered in 2011. The story revolves around a boy named Shinku Izumi, who is summoned to an alternate world where the inhabitants have animal ears and tails.

In film, Dog Day Afternoon (1975) and Hundstage (German for "Dog Days"; 2001) evoke their oppressive seasonal settings.[47][48]

In music, there are Head of David's "Dog Day Sunrise", covered by Fear Factory in 1995; Florence and the Machine's 2009 "Dog Days Are Over";[49] and Within Temptation's 2013 "Dog Days"; as well as the album Dog Days by the US southern rock band Atlanta Rhythm Section.

Dog Days is also the title of a 2012 opera by composer David T. Little and librettist Royce Vavrek, based on the short story by Judy Budnitz.

"Dog-day" promotions are also a common feature in baseball, used by American ballparks to boost ticket sales during mid-afternoon games.[5]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bosola states that "blackbirds fatten best in hard weather: why not I in these dog days?"[40]
  2. ^ Ebenezer Scrooge is described as "carr[ying] his own low temperature always about with him" to the point where "he iced his office in the dog-days".[41]
  3. ^ The main character, a street dog, opines that "when the hot days come... they might remember that those are the dog days, and leave a little water outside… like they do for the horses".[42]
  4. ^ The poem opens:

    Seven dog-days we let pass
    Naming Queens in Glenmacnass...[43]

  5. ^ Describing the English summer, Adams writes "Now came the dog days—day after day of hot, still summer, when for hours at a time light seemed the only thing that moved; the sky-sun, clouds and breeze-awake above the drowsing downs.[44]
  6. ^ Describing the book's setting in the first week of August, the prologue speaks of "strange and breathless days, the dog days, when people are led to do things they are sure to be sorry for after".[45]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "dog day, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ a b "Dog Star, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ McHugh (2004), p. 43.
  4. ^ Holberg (2007), pp. 15–6.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kelly & al. (2009), p. 59.
  6. ^ For details, see the Homeric Question.
  7. ^ Lombardo (1997), Bk. XXII, ll. 33–37.
  8. ^ a b Edwards (2004), pp. 152–153.
  9. ^ For details, see Hesiod § Dating.
  10. ^ a b Evelyn-White (1914), ll. 414–422.
  11. ^ Evelyn-White (1914), ll. 582–588.
  12. ^ Miller (1996), Frag. 357.
  13. ^ Aratus, Phenomena, ll. 328 ff.
  14. ^ Atsma, Aaron J., "Seirios", The Theoi Project.
  15. ^ a b Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica, Bk. II, ll. 518 ff.
  16. ^ Callimachus, Aetia, fragment on Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 7.
  17. ^ Diodorus of Sicily, Bibliotheca Historica, Bk. IV, §81.
  18. ^ Pseudo-Hyginus, De Astronomica, Bk. II, §4.
  19. ^ Nonnus of Panopolis, Dionysiaca, Bk. XIII, ll. 253 ff.
  20. ^ Hardie & al. (1930), Bk. II, Pt. 8.
  21. ^ BL Harley MS 647, f. 8 v.
  22. ^ Dryden (1697), p. 85.
  23. ^ Miller (1917), ll. 37 ff.
  24. ^ Carter (1911), p. 247.
  25. ^ Moore (1564), f. 58 v..
  26. ^ Brady (1813), p. 84.
  27. ^ "Some Popular Alleviations of the Dog Days in Hotter New-York", New-York Tribune, New York, 7 August 1904.
  28. ^ Dunwoody (1883), p. 98.
  29. ^ Recorded in 1883 by Dunwoody.[28]
  30. ^ Strumpf, Dan (1 August 2014), "Markets: Dog Days of Summer for Stock Trading", The Wall Street Journal.
  31. ^ Chardonnens (2007), p. 289.
  32. ^ "The Table and Kalendar...", The Boke of Common Prayer…, London: Edward Whytchurche, 1552.
  33. ^ "The Table and Kalendar...", The Boke of Common Praier…, London: Richard Grafton, 1559.
  34. ^ a b c Townsend (1862), "Dog-days".
  35. ^ OFA (2017), "The Dog Days Begin".
  36. ^ For details, see Astrology.
  37. ^ Tukiainen, E.; et al. (March 2009), "'Dog Days' Surgical Site Infections in a Finnish Trauma Hospital during 2002–2005", The Journal of Hospital Infection, 71 (3): 290–1, doi:10.1016/j.jhin.2008.11.010, PMID 19157647.
  38. ^ Tukiainen, E.; et al. (March 2009), "Surgical site infections at Töölö hospital and the dog days myth. Infektiot Yleisempiä Mätäkuussa [Infections Common in the 'Rotten Month']", Duodecim; Laaketieteellinen Aikakauskirja (in Finnish), 125 (13): 1415–20, PMID 19678497. See also this abstract in Finnish and English.
  39. ^ "Hver Var Jörundur Hundadagakonungur og Hvað Var Hann að Gera á Íslandi?", Vísindavefurinn, retrieved 2 December 2015. (in Icelandic)
  40. ^ Webster (1613), Act I, Sc. i, l. 34.
  41. ^ Dickens (1843), p. 2.
  42. ^ Staudohar (2007), p. 187.
  43. ^ Synge (1909).
  44. ^ Adams (1972), p. 53.
  45. ^ Babbitt (1975), p. 3.
  46. ^ Kinney (2009).
  47. ^ Hoberman, J. (15 October 2015). "Lumet's 'Dog Day Afternoon': Hot Crime, Summer in the City". The New York Times..
  48. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (17 November 2001), "Dog Days", The Guardian.
  49. ^ Barrett, Pete (9 December 2008), Florence and the Machine—Dog Days Are Over Single Review, Contact Music.

Bibliography

  • Adams, Richard (1972), Watership Down, ISBN 978-0-901720-31-3.
  • Alcaeus of Mytilene (1996), Miller, A.M. (ed.), Greek Lyric: An Anthology in Translation, Indianapolis: Hackett, pp. 38–50.
  • Aristotle (1930), Hardie, R.P.; et al. (eds.), Physica, The Works of Aristotle, Vol. II, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Babbitt, Natalie (1975), Tuck Everlasting, New York: Scholastic, ISBN 9780374480127.
  • Brady, John (1813), Clavis Calendaria, Vol. II, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown.
  • Carter, Jesse Benedict (1911), The Religious Life of Ancient Rome, New York: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Chardonnens, László Sándor (2007), Anglo-Saxon Prognostics, 900–1100, Leiden: Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-15829-0.
  • Dickens, Charles (1843), A Christmas Carol, London: Chapman & Hall.
  • Dunwoody, Henry Harrison Chase (1883), "Proverbs Relating to Months, Weeks, and Days", Weather Proverbs, Signal Service Notes, No. IX, Washington: Government Printing Office.
  • Edwards, Anthony (2004), Hesiod's Ascra, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 9780520236585.
  • Harris, Paul; et al. (eds.), Old Farmer's Almanac, Dublin: Yankee Publishing.
  • Hesiod (1914), Evelyn-White, Hugh G. (ed.), The Homeric Hymns and Homerica, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Holberg, Jay B. (2007), Sirius: Brightest Diamond in the Night Sky, Berlin: Springer Praxis Books, ISBN 978-0387489421.
  • Homer (1997), Lombardo, Stanley (ed.), The Iliad, Indianapolis: Hackett, ISBN 9780872203525.
  • Kelly, Bethanne; et al. (2009), An Uncommon History of Common Things, Washington: National Geographic Books, ISBN 978-1426204203.
  • Kinney, Jeff (2009), Dog Days, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Bk. 2, New York: Amulet Books, ISBN 978-0-8109-8391-5.
  • McHugh, Susan (2004), Dog, London: Reaktion, ISBN 9781861894885.
  • Moore, Philip (1564), The Hope of Health, London: Ihon Kyngston.
  • Seneca, Lucius Annaeus (1917), Miller, Frank Justus (ed.), Oedipus, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Staudohar, Paul D. (2007), The Best Dog Stories, Chicago: Chicago Review Press, ISBN 978-1-55652-667-1.
  • Synge, Edmund John Millington (1909), Poems and Translations, Dublin: Dundrum, excerpted by the University of Toronto Library.
  • Townsend, George H. (1862), The Manual of Dates, London: Cox & Wyman for Routledge, Warne, & Routledge.
  • Vergilius Maro, Publius (1697), "Georgics, Bk II", in Dryden, John (ed.), The Works of Virgil, London: Jacob Tonson.
  • Webster, John (1613), , archived from the original on 2015-09-05, reprinted in 1914 as Vol. XLVII, Pt. 4, of the Harvard Classics series.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of dog days at Wiktionary

days, this, article, about, weather, related, phrase, other, uses, days, disambiguation, days, days, summer, sultry, days, summer, they, were, historically, period, following, heliacal, rising, star, system, sirius, known, colloquially, star, which, hellenisti. This article is about the weather related phrase For other uses see Dog Days disambiguation The dog days or dog days of summer are the hot sultry days of summer They were historically the period following the heliacal rising of the star system Sirius known colloquially as the Dog Star which Hellenistic astrology connected with heat drought sudden thunderstorms lethargy fever mad dogs and bad luck They are now taken to be the hottest most uncomfortable part of summer in the Northern Hemisphere Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Span 4 Scientific basis 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology Edit In addition to following Orion into the night sky the Dog Star Sirius can be easily located in the heavens by following the line created by the prominent asterism Orion s Belt The English name is a calque of the Latin dies caniculares lit the puppy days itself a calque of the ancient Greek kynades ἡmerai kynades hemerai 1 The Greeks knew the star a Canis Majoris by several names including Sirius Scorcher Seirios Seirios Sothis Sῶ8is Sothis a transcription of Egyptian Spdt and the Dog Star Kῠ wn Kuōn 2 The last name reflects the way Sirius follows the constellation Orion into the night sky 3 History EditSirius is by far the brightest proper star in the night sky which caused ancient astronomers to take note of it around the world In Egypt its return to the night sky became known as a precursor to the annual flooding of the Nile and was worshipped as the goddess Sopdet In Greece it became known as the precursor of the unpleasantly hot phase of the summer Greek poets even recorded the belief that the return of the bright star was responsible for bringing heat and fever with it 4 it was also associated with sudden thunderstorms 5 In Homer s Iliad probably composed in the 8th century BC but representing an earlier tradition 6 Achilles s approach toward Troy where he will slay Hector is illustrated through an extended metaphor about the baleful effects attending the return of Sirius tὸn d ὃ gerwn Priamos prῶtos ἴden ὀf8almoῖsi pamfainon8 ὥs t ἀster ἐpessymenon pedioio ὅs ῥa t ὀpwrhs eἶsin ἀrizhloi de oἱ aὐgaὶ fainontai polloῖsi met ἀstrasi nyktὸs ἀmolgῷ ὅn te kyn Ὠriwnos ἐpiklhsin kaleoysi lamprotatos mὲn ὅ g ἐsti kakὸn de te sῆma tetyktai kai te ferei pollὸn pyretὸn deiloῖsi brotoῖsin ὣs toῦ xalkὸs ἔlampe perὶ sth8essi 8eontos Priam saw him first with his old man s eyes A single point of light on Troy s dusty plain Sirius rises late in the dark liquid skyOn summer nights star of stars Orion s Dog they call it brightestOf all but an evil portent bringing heatAnd fevers to suffering humanity Achilles bronze gleamed like this as he ran 7 The rising of Sirius during this period has been calculated as 19 July Julian 8 Writing about the same time 9 Hesiod however considered the worst and hottest part of the summer to be the days before Sirius returned to the night sky During this period Sirius was invisible from the earth but it was apparently understood to still be in the sky augmenting the power of the sun Trees and grass on Crete dried out by the August heat ἦmos dὴ lhgei menos ὀ3eos ἠelioio kaymatos ἰdalimoy metopwrinὸn ὀmbrhsantosZhnὸs ἐris8eneos metὰ dὲ trepetai broteos xrὼs pollὸn ἐlafroteros dὴ gὰr tote Seirios ἀstὴr baiὸn ὑpὲr kefalῆs khritrefewn ἀn8rwpwn ἔrxetai ἠmatios pleῖon de te nyktὸs ἐpayreῖ tῆmos ἀdhktotath peletai tmh8eῖsa sidhrῳ ὕlh fylla d ἔraze xeei ptor8oio te lhgei tῆmos ἄr ὑlotomeῖn memnhmenos ὥria ἔrga When the piercing power and sultry heat of the sun abate and almighty Zeus sends the autumn rains and men s flesh comes to feel far easier for then the star Sirius passes over the heads of men who are born to misery only a little while by day and takes greater share of night then when it showers its leaves to the ground and stops sprouting the wood you cut with your axe is least liable to worm 10 This effect of the combination of Sirius light with the Sun s was understood to have an effect on plants animals and women as well as men ἦmos dὲ skolymos t ἀn8eῖ kaὶ ἠxeta tetti3 dendreῳ ἐfezomenos ligyrὴn kataxeyet ἀoidὴn pyknὸn ὑpὸ pterygwn 8ereos kamatwdeos ὥrῃ tῆmos piotatai t aἶges kaὶ oἶnos ἄristos maxlotatai dὲ gynaῖkes ἀfayrotatoi de toi ἄndres eἰsin ἐpeὶ kefalὴn kaὶ goynata Seirios ἄzei aὐaleos de te xrὼs ὑpὸ kaymatos But when the artichoke flowers i e June and the chirping grass hopper sits in a tree and pours down his shrill song continually from under his wings in the season of wearisome heat then goats are plumpest and wine sweetest women are most wanton but men are feeblest because Sirius parches head and knees and the skin is dry through heat 11 About a century later Alcaeus repeated the theme advising his listeners to steep your lungs in wine before the arrival of the star since women are at their foulest but men are weak since they are parched in head and knees 12 In the 3rd century Aratus Phenomena describes the time as Sirius blighting the bark of trees with its heat during the time it rises and sets with the sun 13 The Kean priests of Zeus as Rainmaker and Lord of Moisture 14 observed annual sacrifices before the rise of Sirius to prevent scorching drought 15 16 This practice was credited to the culture hero Aristaeus 15 17 18 19 Aristotle mentions the proverbial heat of the dog days as part of his argument against an early formulation of evolution in his Physics 20 A 9th century astronomical manuscript including an illustration of the constellation Sirius 21 The Romans continued to blame Sirius for the heat of the season and attendant lethargy and diseases 5 In his Georgics Vergil notes vintners efforts to protect their work during the time when the Dog star cleaves the thirsty Ground 22 Seneca s Oedipus complains of the scorching dog star s fires 23 Pliny s Natural History notes an increase in attacks by dogs during July and August and advises feeding them chicken manure to curb the tendency 5 In the early 20th century historians still noted the discouraging heat and oppression of the dog days of the Roman summer 24 The period has long featured in western medicine The 1564 English Hope of Health counseled that purging bloodletting and induced vomiting should be avoided during the Dogge daies of summer because the Sunne is in Leo and then is nature burnt vp amp made weake 25 The 1729 British Husbandman s Practice claimed that The Heat of the Sun is so violent that Men s bodies at Midnight sweat as at Midday and if they be hurt they be more sick than at any other time yea very near Dead It therefore advised men to abstain all this time from women and to take heed of feeding violently 5 In the 1813 Clavis Calendria the dog days are a time wherein the Sea boiled the Wine turned sour Dogs grew mad Quinto raged with anger and all other creatures became languid causing to man among other diseases burning fevers hysterics and phrensies 26 Some Popular Alleviations of the Dog Days in Hotter New York in 1904 including children piled into a public fountain when the cop is not looking 27 Even after astrology and its influence on health and agriculture waned in importance the dog days continues to be vaguely applied to the hottest days of the summer with its attendant effects on nature and society In North America it became proverbial among farmers that a dry growing season through the dog days was preferable to the trouble of a wet one Dog days bright and clearIndicate a good year But when accompanied by rain We hope for better times in vain 29 Because July is typically one of the quietest months of the year for stock trading the term is sometimes used for the lethargic summer markets 5 30 Span EditVarious computations of the dog days have placed their start anywhere from 3 July to 15 August and lasting for anywhere from 30 to 61 days 1 They may begin or end with the cosmical rising or heliacal rising of either Sirius in Canis Major or Procyon the Little Dog Star in Canis Minor and vary by latitude not even being visible throughout much of the Southern Hemisphere 1 Sirius observes a period of almost exactly 365 days between risings keeping it largely consistent with the Julian but not the Gregorian calendar nonetheless its dates occur somewhat later in the year over a span of millennia 1 In antiquity the dog days were usually reckoned from the appearance of Sirius 2 around 19 July Julian 8 to relieving rains and cool winds although Hesiod seems to have counted the worst of summer as the days leading up to Sirius s reappearance 10 In Anglo Saxon England the dog days ran from various dates in mid July to early or mid September 31 Canonical dog daies were observed from July 7 to September 5 in the 16th century English liturgies 32 33 They were removed from the prayer books at the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and their term shortened to the time between July 19 and August 20 34 During the British adoption of the Gregorian calendar in 1752 they were shifted to July 30 to September 7 34 Many modern sources in the English speaking world move this still earlier from July 3 to August 11 1 34 35 5 ending rather than beginning with or centering on the reappearance of Sirius to the night sky Scientific basis Edit Orion right and Sirius bottom as seen from the Hubble Space Telescope Although Sirius is the brightest proper star in the night sky it is 8 7 light years 8 23 1013 km away from Earth and has no effect whatsoever on the planet s weather or temperature 5 36 Although the star continues to return to the night sky in late summer its position continues to gradually shift relative to the Sun and will rise in the middle of winter in about 10 000 years 5 The effects of summer heat and rainfall patterns are real but vary by latitude and location according to many factors For example London UK is slightly farther north than Calgary Canada but has a milder climate from the presence of the sea and the warm Gulf Stream current A medical institution has reported a connection between Finland s dog days and increased risk of infection in deep surgery wounds 37 38 although that research remains unverified In popular culture Edit Harry Clarke s 1917 illustration of Synge s poem It is possible that Saint Roch the legendary medieval patron saint of dogs celebrated by the Catholic Church on 16 August owes some of his legacy to the dog days 5 From the period of his self proclaimed protectorate over the island the Danish adventurer Jorgen Jorgensen is remembered in Iceland as Jorgen the Dog Day King Icelandic Jorundur hundadagakonungur 39 In western literature apart from the Greek and Roman works mentioned above the dog days appear in John Webster s 1613 play The Duchess of Malfi a Charles Dickens 1843 novella A Christmas Carol b R H Davis s 1903 short story The Bar Sinister c J M Synge s 1909 poem Queens d and Richard Adams s 1972 novel Watership Down e They feature in the children s novels Tuck Everlasting 1973 f and Dog Days 2009 from the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series 46 Dog Days is also the title of a Japanese anime series that premiered in 2011 The story revolves around a boy named Shinku Izumi who is summoned to an alternate world where the inhabitants have animal ears and tails In film Dog Day Afternoon 1975 and Hundstage German for Dog Days 2001 evoke their oppressive seasonal settings 47 48 In music there are Head of David s Dog Day Sunrise covered by Fear Factory in 1995 Florence and the Machine s 2009 Dog Days Are Over 49 and Within Temptation s 2013 Dog Days as well as the album Dog Days by the US southern rock band Atlanta Rhythm Section Dog Days is also the title of a 2012 opera by composer David T Little and librettist Royce Vavrek based on the short story by Judy Budnitz Dog day promotions are also a common feature in baseball used by American ballparks to boost ticket sales during mid afternoon games 5 See also EditSilly season Star loreNotes Edit Bosola states that blackbirds fatten best in hard weather why not I in these dog days 40 Ebenezer Scrooge is described as carr ying his own low temperature always about with him to the point where he iced his office in the dog days 41 The main character a street dog opines that when the hot days come they might remember that those are the dog days and leave a little water outside like they do for the horses 42 The poem opens Seven dog days we let pass Naming Queens in Glenmacnass 43 Describing the English summer Adams writes Now came the dog days day after day of hot still summer when for hours at a time light seemed the only thing that moved the sky sun clouds and breeze awake above the drowsing downs 44 Describing the book s setting in the first week of August the prologue speaks of strange and breathless days the dog days when people are led to do things they are sure to be sorry for after 45 References Edit a b c d e dog day n Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press a b Dog Star n Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press McHugh 2004 p 43 Holberg 2007 pp 15 6 a b c d e f g h i j Kelly amp al 2009 p 59 For details see the Homeric Question Lombardo 1997 Bk XXII ll 33 37 a b Edwards 2004 pp 152 153 For details see Hesiod Dating a b Evelyn White 1914 ll 414 422 Evelyn White 1914 ll 582 588 Miller 1996 Frag 357 Aratus Phenomena ll 328 ff Atsma Aaron J Seirios The Theoi Project a b Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica Bk II ll 518 ff Callimachus Aetia fragment on Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 7 Diodorus of Sicily Bibliotheca Historica Bk IV 81 Pseudo Hyginus De Astronomica Bk II 4 Nonnus of Panopolis Dionysiaca Bk XIII ll 253 ff Hardie amp al 1930 Bk II Pt 8 BL Harley MS 647 f 8 v Dryden 1697 p 85 Miller 1917 ll 37 ff Carter 1911 p 247 Moore 1564 f 58 v Brady 1813 p 84 Some Popular Alleviations of the Dog Days in Hotter New York New York Tribune New York 7 August 1904 Dunwoody 1883 p 98 Recorded in 1883 by Dunwoody 28 Strumpf Dan 1 August 2014 Markets Dog Days of Summer for Stock Trading The Wall Street Journal Chardonnens 2007 p 289 The Table and Kalendar The Boke of Common Prayer London Edward Whytchurche 1552 The Table and Kalendar The Boke of Common Praier London Richard Grafton 1559 a b c Townsend 1862 Dog days OFA 2017 The Dog Days Begin For details see Astrology Tukiainen E et al March 2009 Dog Days Surgical Site Infections in a Finnish Trauma Hospital during 2002 2005 The Journal of Hospital Infection 71 3 290 1 doi 10 1016 j jhin 2008 11 010 PMID 19157647 Tukiainen E et al March 2009 Surgical site infections at Toolo hospital and the dog days myth Infektiot Yleisempia Matakuussa Infections Common in the Rotten Month Duodecim Laaketieteellinen Aikakauskirja in Finnish 125 13 1415 20 PMID 19678497 See also this abstract in Finnish and English Hver Var Jorundur Hundadagakonungur og Hvad Var Hann ad Gera a Islandi Visindavefurinn retrieved 2 December 2015 in Icelandic Webster 1613 Act I Sc i l 34 Dickens 1843 p 2 Staudohar 2007 p 187 Synge 1909 Adams 1972 p 53 Babbitt 1975 p 3 Kinney 2009 Hoberman J 15 October 2015 Lumet s Dog Day Afternoon Hot Crime Summer in the City The New York Times Bradshaw Peter 17 November 2001 Dog Days The Guardian Barrett Pete 9 December 2008 Florence and the Machine Dog Days Are Over Single Review Contact Music Bibliography EditAdams Richard 1972 Watership Down ISBN 978 0 901720 31 3 Alcaeus of Mytilene 1996 Miller A M ed Greek Lyric An Anthology in Translation Indianapolis Hackett pp 38 50 Aristotle 1930 Hardie R P et al eds Physica The Works of Aristotle Vol II Oxford Clarendon Press Babbitt Natalie 1975 Tuck Everlasting New York Scholastic ISBN 9780374480127 Brady John 1813 Clavis Calendaria Vol II London Longman Hurst Rees Orme amp Brown Carter Jesse Benedict 1911 The Religious Life of Ancient Rome New York Houghton Mifflin Chardonnens Laszlo Sandor 2007 Anglo Saxon Prognostics 900 1100 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15829 0 Dickens Charles 1843 A Christmas Carol London Chapman amp Hall Dunwoody Henry Harrison Chase 1883 Proverbs Relating to Months Weeks and Days Weather Proverbs Signal Service Notes No IX Washington Government Printing Office Edwards Anthony 2004 Hesiod s Ascra Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520236585 Harris Paul et al eds Old Farmer s Almanac Dublin Yankee Publishing Hesiod 1914 Evelyn White Hugh G ed The Homeric Hymns and Homerica Cambridge Harvard University Press Holberg Jay B 2007 Sirius Brightest Diamond in the Night Sky Berlin Springer Praxis Books ISBN 978 0387489421 Homer 1997 Lombardo Stanley ed The Iliad Indianapolis Hackett ISBN 9780872203525 Kelly Bethanne et al 2009 An Uncommon History of Common Things Washington National Geographic Books ISBN 978 1426204203 Kinney Jeff 2009 Dog Days Diary of a Wimpy Kid Bk 2 New York Amulet Books ISBN 978 0 8109 8391 5 McHugh Susan 2004 Dog London Reaktion ISBN 9781861894885 Moore Philip 1564 The Hope of Health London Ihon Kyngston Seneca Lucius Annaeus 1917 Miller Frank Justus ed Oedipus Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Harvard University Press Staudohar Paul D 2007 The Best Dog Stories Chicago Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 55652 667 1 Synge Edmund John Millington 1909 Poems and Translations Dublin Dundrum excerpted by the University of Toronto Library Townsend George H 1862 The Manual of Dates London Cox amp Wyman for Routledge Warne amp Routledge Vergilius Maro Publius 1697 Georgics Bk II in Dryden John ed The Works of Virgil London Jacob Tonson Webster John 1613 The Duchess of Malfi archived from the original on 2015 09 05 reprinted in 1914 as Vol XLVII Pt 4 of the Harvard Classics series External links Edit The dictionary definition of dog days at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dog days amp oldid 1123744339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.