the Jewish calender had 12 months 30 days each
2007-12-05 05:53:39
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answer #1
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answered by jesussaves 7
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"king_badger" is slightly off. It takes the Earth 365.242 days to orbit the solar. which ability we want 24 bounce years in line with century, not 25, so in 2100 they gained't be a bounce year, nor replaced into there in 1900. The .002 ability each and every 4 hundred years (2000) we *do* want a bounce year regardless of if that's a century. As for 365 days, the calendar (or "calends" from Latin, the comparable beginning because of the fact the be conscious "calculate") replaced into how day have been counted. In Roman cases, there have been purely ten months, not 12, subsequently why the names September (sept=7), October (octo=8), November (nova=9) and December (deca=10). July and August have been extra early interior the essential era, CE (that's 2006CE), to "honour" the main regularly occurring caesars, Julius and Augustus. different month names consult from Roman myths (eg. Janus replaced right into a minor god with 2 faces looking forward and backward). .
2016-12-10 13:28:38
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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They use the lunar calendar based on 29 days per month. So periodically they had to add a 13th month to their calendar to take up the extra days.
The calendar was modified in Julian times (Julius Caesar), then by Pope Gregory (our modern Gregorian calendar) which is based on 365 days of earth's solar year.
Jesus died on Nisan 14, the date of Jewish Passover. Nisan was the first month of their year and corresponds to mid March to mid April on our calendar. Jesus was born in the 6th month....I think called Chislev, but can't remember the name for sure.
The Jewish months are listed in the Hebrew scriptures. I'm at the library so will have to check for chapter and verse later.
Debbie
2007-12-05 06:05:56
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answer #3
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answered by debbiepittman 7
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Almost every calender we know about was built on the same principle: The movement of the sun and the moon and the changing of the seasons. (Some calenders extend this to the stars and the planets.)
Where there are differences, they could arguably be considered details.
2007-12-05 05:56:14
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answer #4
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answered by 5th Watcher 4
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Not until after the Roman rule did our modern day calender.
Before that , dates were kept by seasons and days were measured from sundown to sun up.
This is why there is no month that Jesus was born in, just that he was born after the harvest.
2007-12-05 05:57:34
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answer #5
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answered by cindy 6
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Yes.
New moon to new moon and from Sabath to sabath. In prophecy it can be 360 days, or it can be weeks of years, as it is just a math method.
2007-12-05 06:04:47
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answer #6
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answered by jeni 7
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they used the magical calender that makes everything work out time wise.
2007-12-05 05:56:55
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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when the earth gets pushed out of orbit we'll have 564565465465 days a year ;)
2007-12-05 05:54:55
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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no they worked in astral sign and signal and worked with the equinox and solstice
2007-12-05 05:54:17
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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they also had days that started and ended at noon.
2007-12-05 05:55:33
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answer #10
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answered by bandaidsrcool 2
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