Having no telescopes they would not have observed the planet Uranus. I'm not even sure they used days of the week. I'm sure i would remember being punished in school for not remembering them.
They seemed to date things as the number of days before the 3 named days of the month ie the Kalendae, Nonae and Idus.
Kalends - 1st day of the month.
Nones - 5th day except in March, May, July and October when it is the 7th
Ides - 13th day except in March, May, July and October when it is the 15th
Hope this helps.
The Romans named their days of the week after their gods and celestial bodies visible to the naked eye. Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto were not discovered until modern times with the aid of telescopes, so they were not known in Roman times.
That is it. The international name for the planet is Uranus.
The name uranium is derived from the name of the Uranus planet.
The planet just beyond Saturn is Uranus.
URANUS' NAME AND SYMBOLThis is the symbol of the planet Uranus.This planet was originally named in 1781 by the British astronomer William Herschel - he called it Georgium Sidus (meaning "the Georgian planet") to honor the King George III of England. The name was later changed to Uranus, the ancient mythological god of the sky, Ouranos. The name Uranus was suggested by the German astronomer Johann Elert Bode.
Uranium was the first name from 1789; the name is derived from the name of the planet Uranus.
The name of the natural radioactive chemical element uranium is derived from the name of the planet Uranus. Uranium was discovered (as an oxide) by Martin Heinrich Klaproth in 1789.
It is named after the planet ' Uranus'. The planet Uranus, together with Saturn , Jupiter et. al are from Classical Greece. From Classical Greek Mythology, Uranus, was the personification of the 'Sky', and was one of Greek primordial deities.
From the Sun, the seventh planet is Uranus.
Uranus.
From the planet Uranus.
yes