'Friday the 13th...in 2020': Origins of why the day is considered unlucky
In the strangest of years, today marks the last Friday the 13th of 2020. The first occurred in March, and the next won’t come until August 2021.
The day has long evoked a range of emotions for those who are superstitious. Similar to walking under a ladder or breaking a mirror, many believe that Friday the 13th brings bad luck — to the point of inspiring a horror movie franchise and even a late 19th-century secret society.
Why is Friday the 13th considered unlucky?
It remains unclear when negative superstitions began swirling around Friday the 13th. But while the number 12 has generally been associated with completeness — 12 months of the year, 12 days of Christmas, 12 zodiac signs — the number 13, specifically, has long been associated with bad luck.
The ancient Code of Hammurabi, one of the earliest and most complete written legal codes, reportedly omitted a 13th law from its list of legal rules, according to History.com. Though this was likely a clerical error, superstitious people sometimes point to this as proof of the number’s negative associations.
In Western lore, experts believe the fear over 13 started in the Bible. Thirteen guests attended the Last Supper, including Jesus and his 12 apostles — one of whom, Judas, betrayed him. The next day was Good Friday, the day of Jesus’ crucifixion. The Last Supper seating arrangement is believed to have created a Christian superstition that having 13 guests at a table was a bad omen, according to the site.
Regarding the day of Friday, the negative connotation may also have roots in Christianity, History.com explains. Jesus was crucified on a Friday. Some believe Friday was the day Eve gave Adam the forbidden fruit from the Tree of Knowledge and the day that Cain killed his brother, Abel.
Fear of Friday the 13th
Some who fears Friday the 13th suffers from friggatriskaidekaphobia — described as having a “morbid, intense, excessive and irrational fear” of the day, according to allaboutcounseling.com, a site providing information on counseling and social issues.
The Stress Management Center and Phobia Institute estimates that between 17 to 21 million Americans suffer from this phobia.
The exclusive Thirteen Club
In the late-19th century, a New Yorker named Captain William Fowler sought to remove the stigma surrounding the number 13 by founding an exclusive society called the Thirteen Club, according to the History Channel.
The group dined on the 13th day of the month in room 13 of the Knickerbocker Cottage, which he owned and later sold on Friday, April 13, 1883. According to History.com, several former U.S. presidents — Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison and Theodore Roosevelt — were members at one point or another.
Skipping the number 13
Many people also suffer from triskaidekaphobia, defined as the irrational fear of the number 13. Airlines such as Air France often don’t have a 13th row, and many buildings in the U.S. don’t have a 13th floor.
Experts say that it’s an economic decision — as customers would not spend money on something they thought was cursed.
The number 13 around the world
In Asia, 13 is just another number. And in China, it’s the number 4 that provokes the most fear. The phenomenon, known technically as “tetraphobia,” exists because of linguistic reasons.
“In Chinese the number 4 sounds much like the word for ‘death,’” Patrick Alexander, a social anthropology lecturer at Oxford University, told the Associated Press. “As a result, the number 4 is often omitted in elevators and other public contexts.”
The number 8 is particularly lucky in China and Japan because it sounds similar to “prosperity” or “wealth.”
In Greece, Mexico and Spain, Tuesday the 13th is thought to be cursed.
Friday the 13th in the year of 2020
On the first Friday the 13 in 2020, the U.S. declared a national emergency concerning COVID-19. Many users noted the supposed unlucky day occurring again in a year that has been rocked by the global coronavirus pandemic.
“Tomorrow is Friday the 13th...in 2020. Don’t be surprised if murder hornets team up with COVID to start wild fires. This year cannot be over soon enough,” one user wrote on Twitter.
This story was reported from Cincinnati. The Associated Press contributed.