The fear of this single date is called paraskevidekatriaphobia.
Why is Friday 13th considered unlucky and how many are there in 2020?
Today is Friday 13th, also dubbed the ‘unluckiest day of the year.’
And let’s face it, there could be some truth in that claim, with today falling at the end of a particularly tumultuous week where the coronavirus situation has acutely escalated leading to an emergency government meeting.
But the history of the meaning behind today goes much further back than this year. In fact, it goes hundreds of years back.
Top articles1/5READ MOREHow the UK’s response to Coronavirus compares to the US and Europe
Why is Friday 13th considered unlucky?
As a result, Friday and the number 13 were perceived as unlucky but they weren’t paired until the 19th century.
He wrote: ‘He [Rossini] was surrounded to the last by admiring friends; and if it be true that, like so many Italians, he regarded Fridays as an unlucky day and thirteen as an unlucky number, it is remarkable that on Friday 13th of November he passed away.’
In 1907, the fated date also appeared in a novel by Thomas W. Lawson which was appropriately named ‘Friday, the Thirteenth.’
Some also believe the day found its origins in 1307 when King Philip IV of France tortured and burned alive hundreds of Templar Knights.
Truthfully, no-one knows, but one thing is clear: there does seem to be a lot of bad luck floating around on this date.
How many Friday 13th will there be in 2020?
Unluckily for some, the 13th day of the month will fall on two Fridays this year – Friday 13 March and again on Friday 13 November.