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Days of the Week and Holidays

Godsday, Crownsday, Hearthday, Kinsday, Holdsday, Goldsday, and Bloodsday

The days of the week are as follows: Godsday, Crownsday, Hearthday, Kinsday, Holdsday, Goldsday,
and Bloodsday.

This was also a development of the early Beyrenian people who would start off their week honoring
their god (hence Godsday) and spend the middle days of the week reflecting on and giving thanks for
the various blessings that they were joyful to have been provided with. Those blessings and their
corresponding days are as follows: Crownsday (government), Hearthday (immediate family), Kinsday
(extended family, friends, and countrymen), Holdsday (possesions and land), and Goldsday (wealth).
Goldsday also happens to be the day of the week in which laborers are paid for their work.

Then, following a week of giving thanks, the Beyrenian people would then make their individual
household sacrifices on the week's end, hence the name Bloodsday.

This weekday organizational system affects most holidays across all nations and peoples as they tend
to be held on the day of the week that is most fitting for the nature of the Holiday. For example,
government centric holidays tend to be held on Crownsday, religious holidays on Godsday, familial
holidays on Hearthday, ect.

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