symbolipoint said:
I already explained. You simply confirmed it. Roman Calendar was more or less first. I did not know this. Roman started with the prefixes corresponding. Julian Calendar changed the positions, so no longer corresponding. All the other and associated details are confusing.
Well good luck in figuring it all out, as you will be wading through legend, scant historical records, personal opinions and interpretations of historians, past and present,
Was there even was a Roman calendar before Pompilius ( Romulus may have just followed local tradition of watching the moon and the seasons, and the coming of the spring following the winter ).
Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome added the 2 months January, February to the Roman calendar, so people could have 'dates' to follow during the otherwise monthless winter. March, I would suspect to still be the beginning of the year, budding of trees and planting crops and all that stuff happening in the spring, based on lunar cycles rather than the annual, plus some religious aspects which one doesn't want to mess with and upset the people, thrown in there.
How and when January became the time of the new year to screw up the month counting is a good question. That happened definitely before Julius, who formalized a better solar calendar that had less being out of step with the seasons as the years went by than previous calendar results, which was still based on the lunar. The change from March to January as the beginning of the new year is Consul related, or vice-versa, so something to look into.
Btw the fifth and sixth months of the old Roman calendar ( our 7th and 8th month Gregorian calendar months ) are named after Julius and Augustin.