Counting from the
new moon, the Babylonians celebrated every seventh day as a "holy-day", also called an "evil-day" (meaning "unsuitable" for prohibited activities). On these days officials were prohibited from various activities and common men were forbidden to "make a wish", and at least the 28th was known as a "rest-day". On each of them, offerings were made to a different god and goddess, apparently at nightfall to avoid the prohibitions:
Marduk and
Ishtar on the 7th,
Ninlil and
Nergal on the 14th,
Sin and
Shamash on the 21st, and
Enki and
Mah on the 28th. Tablets from the sixth-century BC reigns of
Cyrus the Great and
Cambyses II indicate these dates were sometimes approximate. The
lunation of 29 or 30 days basically contained three
seven-day weeks, and a final week of eight or nine days inclusive, breaking the continuous seven-day cycle. that
Shabbat originally arose from the
lunar cycle, containing four weeks ending in Sabbath, plus one or two additional unreckoned days per month. The difficulties of this theory include reconciling the differences between an unbroken week and a lunar week, and explaining the absence of texts naming the lunar week as
Shabbat in any language. The rarely attested
Sapattum or
Sabattum as the
full moon is cognate or merged with Hebrew
Shabbat, but is monthly rather than weekly; it is regarded as a form of Sumerian
sa-bat ("mid-rest"), attested in Akkadian as
um nuh libbi ("day of mid-repose"). According to
Marcello Craveri, Sabbath "was almost certainly derived from the Babylonian
Shabattu, the festival of the full moon, but, all trace of any such origin having been lost, the Hebrews ascribed it to Biblical legend." This conclusion is a contextual restoration of the damaged
Enûma Eliš creation account, which is read as: "[Sa]bbath shalt thou then encounter, mid[month]ly." == Impact ==