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2007-04-13 00:49:25 · 11 answers · asked by Crackhead 1 in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

11 answers

Its the day the Jason kills all those randy camp counselors at Crystal Lake.

Run for your life --- I T ' S . . . . J A S O N ! ! ! ! ! !

2007-04-13 00:57:51 · answer #1 · answered by Christmas Light Guy 7 · 0 2

Before the 19th century, though the number 13 was considered unlucky, and Friday was considered unlucky, there was no link between them. The first documented mention of a "Friday the 13th" is generally listed as occurring in the early 1900s.[1][2]

However, documentation aside, many popular stories exist about the origin of the concept:

* The Last Supper, with stories that Judas was the thirteenth guest, and that the Crucifixion of Jesus occurred Friday.
* That the biblical Eve offered the fruit to Adam on a Friday, and that the slaying of Abel happened on a Friday (though the Bible does not identify the days of the week when these events occurred). [3]
* That it started on Friday, October 13, 1307, the date that many Knights Templar were simultaneously arrested in France, by agents of King Philip IV.

However, historically, there is no true date that the Friday the 13th superstition can be linked to.

In the case of Greece, Tuesday, April 13, 1204 was the date that Constantinople was sacked by the crusaders of the fourth crusade. The first ever fall of the richest then Christian city, and the looting that followed, allegedly gave Tuesday 13 its bad meaning. Ironically enough, Constantinople fell for the second time in its history on Tuesday, May 29, 1453, to the Ottoman Turks, a date that puts an end to the Byzantine empire, and to Greek sovereignty for several centuries, and therefore reinforcing Tuesday as an unlucky day in the Greek world.


Many modern stories (including The Da Vinci Code) claim that when King Philip IV had many Templars simultaneously arrested on October 13, 1307, that started the legend of the unlucky Friday the 13th. However, closer examination shows that though the number 13 was indeed considered historically unlucky, the actual association of Friday and 13 seems to be an invention from the early 1900s.[4][5]

2007-04-13 08:04:48 · answer #2 · answered by thumberlina 6 · 0 0

Mostly, it's just made up. See the source for more info.

The first documented mention of a "Friday the 13th" is generally listed as occurring in the early 1900s.

However, documentation aside, many popular stories exist about the origin of the concept:

The Last Supper, with stories that Judas was the thirteenth guest, and that the Crucifixion of Jesus occurred Friday.
That the biblical Eve offered the fruit to Adam on a Friday, and that the slaying of Abel happened on a Friday (though the Bible does not identify the days of the week when these events occurred).

That it started on Friday, October 13, 1307, the date that many Knights Templar were simultaneously arrested in France, by agents of King Philip IV. However, historically, there is no true date that the Friday the 13th superstition can be linked to.

In the case of Greece, Tuesday, April 13, 1204 was the date that Constantinople was sacked by the crusaders of the fourth crusade. The first ever fall of the then richest Christian city, and the looting that followed, allegedly gave Tuesday 13 its bad meaning. Ironically enough, Constantinople fell for the second time in its history on Tuesday, May 29, 1453, to the Ottoman Turks, a date that puts an end to the Byzantine empire, and to Greek sovereignty for several centuries, and therefore reinforcing Tuesday as an unlucky day in the Greek world.

Many modern stories (including The Da Vinci Code) claim that when King Philip IV had many Templars simultaneously arrested on October 13, 1307, that started the legend of the unlucky Friday the 13th. However, closer examination shows that though the number 13 was indeed considered historically unlucky, the actual association of Friday and 13 seems to be an invention from the early 1900s.

Good luck!!

2007-04-13 07:55:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

History of Friday the 13th
Before the 19th century, though the number 13 was considered unlucky, and Friday was considered unlucky, there was no link between them. The first documented mention of a "Friday the 13th" is generally listed as occurring in the early 1900s.[1][2]

However, documentation aside, many popular stories exist about the origin of the concept:

The Last Supper, with stories that Judas was the thirteenth guest, and that the Crucifixion of Jesus occurred Friday.
That the biblical Eve offered the fruit to Adam on a Friday, and that the slaying of Abel happened on a Friday (though the Bible does not identify the days of the week when these events occurred). [3]
That it started on Friday, October 13, 1307, the date that many Knights Templar were simultaneously arrested in France, by agents of King Philip IV.
However, historically, there is no true date that the Friday the 13th superstition can be linked to.

In the case of Greece, Tuesday, April 13, 1204 was the date that Constantinople was sacked by the crusaders of the fourth crusade. The first ever fall of the then richest Christian city, and the looting that followed, allegedly gave Tuesday 13 its bad meaning. Ironically enough, Constantinople fell for the second time in its history on Tuesday, May 29, 1453, to the Ottoman Turks, a date that puts an end to the Byzantine empire, and to Greek sovereignty for several centuries, and therefore reinforcing Tuesday as an unlucky day in the Greek world.

Many modern stories (including The Da Vinci Code) claim that when King Philip IV had many Templars simultaneously arrested on October 13, 1307, that started the legend of the unlucky Friday the 13th. However, closer examination shows that though the number 13 was indeed considered historically unlucky, the actual association of Friday and 13 seems to be an invention from the early 1900s.[4][5]

2007-04-13 07:54:02 · answer #4 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

13 is actually a Power number. With the 12 Disciples
and Christ there were 13.
Fires used to break out unexpectedly on 13th floors. Because they are higher up and closer to Higher realities. Which is why many buildings use to not use 13th floors.
That doesn't happen today. As all the noise pollution and electromagnetic fields have dulled human beings spiritual senses. And they are not in sync with Creation like they should be.

2007-04-13 07:56:36 · answer #5 · answered by Hermes Trismegistus 2 · 0 0

Short answer this one - its all down to religion

There were 13 people at the last supper - hence 13's association with bad luck.

Good Friday - the day Jesus was crucified was a Friday, and thats where its assiociation that Friday is unlucky.

Put the 2 together and you get double bad luck, and a more unlucky friday than normal.

2007-04-13 08:05:45 · answer #6 · answered by whycantigetagoodnickname 7 · 0 0

Friday 13th was the date when the discovered members of the knights templar were burnt at the stake

2007-04-13 08:08:06 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

See / read the Da Vinci Code....who really knows if it's true or not.

2007-04-13 07:53:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anchor Cranker 4 · 0 0

go to howthingswork.com they have a feature about this up on the home page

2007-04-13 07:53:00 · answer #9 · answered by yo-han 5 · 0 0

I don't believe in that, as there is no such thing!
religious fanatics are to blame for its popularity...

2007-04-13 08:05:45 · answer #10 · answered by randomX1 3 · 0 0

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