B
Brandon_Cal
Guest
There are a host of Catholic websites out there that explain (very briefly) the history of the Liturgy of the Hours. Many of these tell us that from the Middle Ages until the invention of the clock, the hours were based on daylight hours rather than discreetly measured hours as we understand them today. This was done on the Roman system of accounting for time: There are 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night. It stands to reason then that there would only be two days out of the year for which there were 12 actual hours of daylight and 12 actualhours of night. During the winter daylight hours would be shorter than night hours and the opposite would be true during the summer (at least here in the Northern Hemisphere).
This is all fine and dandy except when these same websites go on to tell us the usual time for the praying of particular hours. Lauds is prayed at dawn (and completed before sunrise). Vespers is completed before sunset. Sounds about right. Prime, however is said to start at “6:00AM”; Terce, “9:00AM”; Sext at “12:00PM”, etc. For an example of such a website refer to “Fish Eaters: Canonical Hours”.
I have two questions:
So how exactly did the Church determine when to pray which hour? I suspect it was a simple as looking at the position of the sun relative to its meridian: The sun just rose over the horizon? It’s Prime. The sun is halfway between the horizon and the meridian? It’s Terce. The sun is directly overhead at its meridian? It’s Sext. etc. Is this understanding correct?
This is all fine and dandy except when these same websites go on to tell us the usual time for the praying of particular hours. Lauds is prayed at dawn (and completed before sunrise). Vespers is completed before sunset. Sounds about right. Prime, however is said to start at “6:00AM”; Terce, “9:00AM”; Sext at “12:00PM”, etc. For an example of such a website refer to “Fish Eaters: Canonical Hours”.
I have two questions:
- If the “First Hour”, “Third Hour”, “Sixth Hour”, etc. are reckoned based on their relative position in the total duration of daylight hours how can such websites as Fish Eaters equate the canonical hours to the static 60-minute-interval hours that we’re so accustomed to?
So how exactly did the Church determine when to pray which hour? I suspect it was a simple as looking at the position of the sun relative to its meridian: The sun just rose over the horizon? It’s Prime. The sun is halfway between the horizon and the meridian? It’s Terce. The sun is directly overhead at its meridian? It’s Sext. etc. Is this understanding correct?
- Where does this leave folks who were praying the Divine Office at the northern latitudes, where daylight hours can get as short as 4 hours!? For example: On the winter solstice the sun rises on Trondheim, Norway at 10:02AM and sets at 2:32PM! Did Norwegian Christians actually pray Prime at 10AM? Vespers at 2:30PM? I did the math quickly and this leaves enough time for all minor hours assuming you pray them roughly one actual hour apart. How did monks, nuns, and priests ever have enough time during the daylight to get anything done assuming they were nearly constantly praying?