Thirty Days Hath September
"Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November" is a traditional English mnemonic rhyme designed to aid in recalling the number of days in each month of the Gregorian calendar.[1] The verse states that these four months have thirty days each, while all the others have thirty-one, with the exception of February, which has twenty-eight days in a common year and twenty-nine days in a leap year.[2] This simple structure has made it a staple in education for generations, particularly for children learning calendar basics.[1] The rhyme's origins trace back to medieval Europe, with the earliest known precursor appearing in a 13th-century French poem that similarly enumerated the days in months.[2] An early English version is recorded in a 1425 manuscript containing information on saints' days, marking one of the oldest surviving instances of the mnemonic in English.[1] By 1562, it appeared in print for the first time,[1] and a variant was referenced by chronicler William Harrison in 1577, beginning with "Thirty days hath November" before evolving into the more familiar form starting with September for better rhythmic flow.[2] Over time, the language modernized from "hath" to "has," though the traditional phrasing persists in many recitations.[1] Similar mnemonics exist in other languages, reflecting a broader European tradition of using verse for memory aids in the pre-modern era.[2] For instance, a French variant reads, "En avril, en juing, en septembre / A .xxx. jours et en novembre," while an Italian one notes, "Trenta giorni ha novembre con aprile, giugno e settembre."[2] These parallels suggest the English rhyme adapted from continental sources, likely influenced by the need to navigate the Julian and later Gregorian calendars, which standardized month lengths after 1752 in Britain.[1] Despite its antiquity, the rhyme remains relevant today, often taught in schools and invoked in popular culture to demystify the irregular calendar.[1]The Mnemonic Rhyme
Text and Structure
The traditional English mnemonic rhyme is:Thirty days hath September,This structure uses rhyme and rhythm to list the four months with 30 days (September, April, June, November), assigns 31 days to the others by default, and specifies February's length, including the leap year exception. The verse simplifies recall by grouping exceptions and leveraging auditory patterns for memory retention.[4]
April, June, and November;
All the rest have thirty-one,
Save February alone,
Which has twenty-eight days clear,
And twenty-nine in each leap year.[3]