As midnight strikes on 1 January each year, cities from São Paulo to Shanghai erupt in fireworks, music and celebration. The choice of that date, however, is not arbitrary. The modern New Year’s Day reaches back to ancient Roman religion, imperial calendar reform and later papal adjustment in the 16th century.

Why the year starts on 1 January
The Roman origin is central to why the year begins on 1 January. The month is named after Janus, a deity represented with two faces who looks both backward and forward. For Romans, Janus was the god of beginnings, transitions and doorways, so the start of the civil year fittingly honoured him.
When Rome’s political structures strengthened, the calendar used in the city spread across the empire. In 45 BC, Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar to bring greater accuracy and consistency to the year. That reform fixed 1 January as the start of the civil year in official Roman practice, partly because consuls — the chief magistrates of the Republic — began their one-year terms on that date.
Following the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Europe’s calendar practices became more varied. In some Christian regions, 1 January was seen as too connected to pagan rites. Alternative dates gained favour, notably 25 March, the Feast of the Annunciation, which many believed marked the moment the Christian story began and therefore made sense as a start of the year.
In 1582 Pope Gregory XIII established the Gregorian calendar to correct the drift that had accumulated under the Julian system. The papal reform restored 1 January as New Year’s Day in Catholic countries and adjusted leap-year rules to keep the calendar in line with the seasons. Adoption was gradual; Protestant and Orthodox countries accepted the new calendar later. England, for example, continued to mark the year from 25 March until Parliament adopted the Gregorian system in 1752.
Today the Gregorian calendar is the global civil standard, which explains why fireworks and festivities now coincide worldwide on 1 January. The date combines ancient ritual, imperial reform and religious politics; it endured because the system it anchors became internationally dominant for trade, administration and diplomacy.
While other calendar systems remain important for cultural and religious observance — such as the Chinese, Islamic and Hindu calendars — 1 January endures as the practical and symbolic start of the year for most of the world.
Key Takeaways:
- The focus keyword: why the year starts on 1 January — the date traces back to Roman tradition and calendar reforms.
- Ancient Romans dedicated January to Janus, the two-faced god of beginnings and endings.
- Julius Caesar’s Julian calendar fixed the New Year on 1 January; Pope Gregory XIII’s 16th-century reform restored it across Catholic countries.
- England adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1752, and the date is now globally observed with celebrations on 1 January.

















