13 Facts About Friday the 13th -yahoo.news

AllardChardon

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13 Facts About Friday the 13th

livescience.com – Thu Feb 12, 10:30 pm ET

If you fear Friday the 13th, then batten down the hatches. This week's unlucky day is the first of three this year.

The next Friday the 13th comes in March, followed by Nov. 13. Such a triple whammy comes around only every 11 years, said Thomas Fernsler, a math specialist at the University of Delaware who has studied the number 13 for more than 20 years.

By the numbers

Here are 13 more facts about the infamous day, courtesy of Fernsler and some of our own research:

1. The British Navy built a ship named Friday the 13th. On its maiden voyage, the vessel left dock on a Friday the 13th, and was never heard from again.

2. The ill-fated Apollo 13 launched at 13:13 CST on Apr. 11, 1970. The sum of the date's digits (4-11-70) is 13 (as in 4+1+1+7+0 = 13). And the explosion that crippled the spacecraft occurred on April 13 (not a Friday). The crew did make it back to Earth safely, however.

3. Many hospitals have no room 13, while some tall buildings skip the 13th floor.

4. Fear of Friday the 13th - one of the most popular myths in science - is called paraskavedekatriaphobia as well as friggatriskaidekaphobia. Triskaidekaphobia is fear of the number 13.

5. Quarterback Dan Marino wore No. 13 throughout his career with the Miami Dolphins. Despite being a superb quarterback (some call him one of the best ever), he got to the Super Bowl just once, in 1985, and was trounced 38-16 by the San Francisco 49ers and Joe Montana (who wore No. 16 and won all four Super Bowls he played in).

6. Butch Cassidy, notorious American train and bank robber, was born on Friday, April 13, 1866.

7. Fidel Castro was born on Friday, Aug. 13, 1926.

8. President Franklin D. Roosevelt would not travel on the 13th day of any month and would never host 13 guests at a meal. Napoleon and Herbert Hoover were also triskaidekaphobic, with an abnormal fear of the number 13.

9. Superstitious diners in Paris can hire a quatorzieme, or professional 14th guest.

10. Mark Twain once was the 13th guest at a dinner party. A friend warned him not to go. "It was bad luck," Twain later told the friend. "They only had food for 12."

11. Woodrow Wilson considered 13 his lucky number, though his experience didn't support such faith. He arrived in Normandy, France on Friday, Dec. 13, 1918, for peace talks, only to return with a treaty he couldn't get Congress to sign. (The ship's crew wanted to dock the next day due to superstitions, Fernsler said.) He toured the United States to rally support for the treaty, and while traveling, suffered a near-fatal stroke.

12. The number 13 suffers from its position after 12, according to numerologists who consider the latter to be a complete number - 12 months in a year, 12 signs of the zodiac, 12 gods of Olympus, 12 labors of Hercules, 12 tribes of Israel, 12 apostles of Jesus, 12 days of Christmas and 12 eggs in a dozen.

13. The seals on the back of a dollar bill include 13 steps on the pyramid, 13 stars above the eagle's head, 13 war arrows in the eagle's claw and 13 leaves on the olive branch. So far there's been no evidence tying these long-ago design decisions to the present economic situation.

Origins of Friday the 13th

Where's all this superstition come from? Nobody knows for sure. But it may date back to Biblical times (the 13th guest at the Last Supper betrayed Jesus). By the Middle Ages, both Friday and 13 were considered bearers of bad fortune.

Meanwhile the belief that numbers are connected to life and physical things - called numerology - has a long history.

"You can trace it all the way from the followers of Pythagoras, whose maxim to describe the universe was 'all is number,'" says Mario Livio, an astrophysicist and author of "The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved" (Simon & Schuster, 2005). Thinkers who studied under the famous Greek mathematician combined numbers in different ways to explain everything around them, Livio said.

In modern times, numerology has become a type of para-science, much like the meaningless predictions of astrology, scientists say.

"People are subconsciously drawn towards specific numbers because they know that they need the experiences, attributes or lessons, associated with them, that are contained within their potential," says professional numerologist Sonia Ducie. "Numerology can 'make sense' of an individual's life (health, career, relationships, situations and issues) by recognizing which number cycle they are in, and by giving them clarity."

Mathematicians dismiss numerology as having no scientific merit, however.

"I don't endorse this at all," Livio said, when asked to comment on the popularity of commercial numerology for a story prior to the date 06/06/06. Seemingly coincidental connections between numbers will always appear if you look hard enough, he said.

***Hope you all have a safe Friday the 13th.
 
11. Woodrow Wilson considered 13 his lucky number, though his experience didn't support such faith. He arrived in Normandy, France on Friday, Dec. 13, 1918, for peace talks, only to return with a treaty he couldn't get Congress to sign. (The ship's crew wanted to dock the next day due to superstitions, Fernsler said.) He toured the United States to rally support for the treaty, and while traveling, suffered a near-fatal stroke.
Kinda picking and choosing here, aren't we? Wilson won the election, and the U.S. won WWI AND Wilson, on his arrival in France on Friday the 13th led to successful Peace Talks. It was only when he returned home, on, we presume, a different day that he ran into trouble. So wouldn't that make him right about "lucky #13"? :rolleyes:

It's all in how you spin the info.
 
My favorite Friday the thirteenth fact-find of the day?

Black Sabbath's debut album was released in the UK on Fri. Feb 13, 1970.

Happy 39th anniversary to Ozzy, Tony, Geezer and Bill.
 
Any time you have a Friday the 13th in a non leap year February, you also have a Friday the 13th in the following March.

I also find it interesting that no one has yet brought up the matter of Jason.
 
Any time you have a Friday the 13th in a non leap year February, you also have a Friday the 13th in the following March.

I also find it interesting that no one has yet brought up the matter of Jason.
Well, Friday the 13th was certainly luck for that movie franchise :devil: We'll see if they can do it a second time around. I do wonder if, with the economy as it is, people want to see horror movies. Historically speaking, horror films tend to do better in an up economy rather than down. Spikes in horror film popularity were during the economic boom time of the 50's and 80's.
 
Well, today is a good day to avoid black cats that might cross your path as well as walking under ladders. "You can't be too careful!" my grandmother used to say.

My black cat hasn't been home in three days, since the last big snow dump. I sure wish he would come home and jump on my lap, without crossing in front of me, of course.
 
The Friday The 13th movie people will be getting some of my money tonight. I have four kids who are dying to see it. I'll reserve judgment until I've seen it.
 
No such ship - sorry!

The British Navy never had a ship called Friday the 13th, nor Friday.

HMS Friday

They did have a disastrous ship called HMS Captain but never HMS Friday.

Og
 
My brother was born on Friday the 13th. To this day he still scares me.
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by AllardChardon
11. Woodrow Wilson considered 13 his lucky number, though his experience didn't support such faith. He arrived in Normandy, France on Friday, Dec. 13, 1918, for peace talks, only to return with a treaty he couldn't get Congress to sign. (The ship's crew wanted to dock the next day due to superstitions, Fernsler said.) He toured the United States to rally support for the treaty, and while traveling, suffered a near-fatal stroke.


Kinda picking and choosing here, aren't we? Wilson won the election, and the U.S. won WWI AND Wilson, on his arrival in France on Friday the 13th led to successful Peace Talks. It was only when he returned home, on, we presume, a different day that he ran into trouble. So wouldn't that make him right about "lucky #13"? :rolleyes:

It's all in how you spin the info.

Besides that, he became president in 1913.:eek:
 
Beware the virus named Friday the 13th!

It will recalibrate your refrigerator's coolness setting so all your ice cream goes melty.

It will demagnetize the strips on all your credit cards, screw up the tracking on your television and use subspace field harmonics to scratch any CDs you try to play.

It will give your ex-girlfriend your new phone number.

It will mix Kool-aid into your fishtank.

It will drink all your beer and leave dirty socks on the coffee table when company comes over.

It will put a dead aardvark in the back pocket of your good suit pants and hide your car keys when you are late for work.

Friday 13th Virus will make you fall in love with a penguin.

It will give you nightmares about circus midgets.

It will pour sugar in your gas tank and shave off both your eyebrows while dating your girlfriend behind your back and billing the dinner and hotel room to your Discover card.

It moves your car randomly around parking lots so you can't find it.

It will leave libidinous messages on your boss's voice mail in your voice!

It is insidious and subtle. It is dangerous and terrifying to behold. It is also a rather interesting shade of mauve.

Friday 13th Virus will give you Dutch Elm disease.

It will leave the toilet seat up.

It will leave bacon cooking on the stove while it goes out to chase gradeschoolers with your new snowblower.

Friday 13th Virus will cause your cakes to fall and your blood pressure to rise.

It will increase the ability of your radio to pick up reactionary talk stations at the expense of others.

It causes scurvy, but it gives you mega garlic breath as it does so, which makes the net results negative.

It cheats at Scrabble.

It can forge your signature.

It plays the bagpipes in your basement.

It shaves over your bathroom sink and then leaves the hair to clog your drain.

It does bad celebrity impersonations in front of your friends.
 
My husband was born on July 13, 1955 and we were married on December 13, 1980. The marriage did not work out well. But I have nothing against the number 13, per se. After all, in high school, it was my favorite number because of its secret meaning to pot smokers. M is the 13th letter of the alphabet and that is how we talked about pot around grown-ups. "I did the number 13 all the time."
 
My brother was born on Friday the 13th. To this day he still scares me.

His name wouldn't be Jason, would it? :eek:

And speaking of Jason and the mention of the new movie, I wonder how many sequels we'll see this time around? I mean, technically, this would be the 11th sequel to the original (12 movies total so far)
 
Today is my little guy's 5th birthday... yes he was born on Friday the 13th. 13 has always been a good number for me.:rose:
 
Really, 13 iwas a very powerful number for conjurers in the old days, I seem to remember. The thirteenth full moon of the year had a certain significance and power which was taken away from the average person with the 12 month calendar. Now that moon is called a blue moon, instead.
 
13 was always a good number for me. Every year I wore 13 in baseball I led the league in home runs.

Saw the new movie last night. I really liked it. Up until the end. Extrememly well done slasher flick. Jason is human, not some superhuman zombie. It's a lot of stuff that could feasibly happen. It's not a sequel, but a complete retelling. However, the ending ruined it for me. They had done so well up to that point. Very disappointing.
 
Friday 13th

I have good reason to remember that date, my son was born on Friday 13 March at 13.29.pm, I was in labour for 13 and a half hours and we came home from hospital on the 13th day - spooky or what?
desiteratauk
 
Really, 13 iwas a very powerful number for conjurers in the old days, I seem to remember. The thirteenth full moon of the year had a certain significance and power which was taken away from the average person with the 12 month calendar. Now that moon is called a blue moon, instead.

7 is the most powerful number for most religions.
 
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