The 364-day-calendar-year identifies ancient
religious aspects regarding the Antediluvian Calendar of the
Holy Bible. Ethiopic 364-day-calendar-years and Mayan practices
share mutual traits visible for the Patriarch ages of Adam and
Seth. Jewish 50-year Jubilee Cycles and 52-year Calendar Rounds
reference sacred texts and spiritual angels in our distant past.
364-Day
Calendar Year
The ages listed for the
Holy
Bible Antediluvian Patriarchs spawned 4 major calendar
threads or whole calendar systems in later history. The Egyptian
Calendar, Mesoamerican Calendars and the Jewish Calendar branched
to share certain lunar/solar calendar tools described in
Ages_of_Adam and
Holy_of_Holies. Another
variation on the solar calendar theme occurs for the
364-day-calendar-year. The 364-day-calendar-year was the source
for Antediluvian Calendar ages and likely, the original system
ordained to Moses.
The 364-day-calendar-year or
364-day-Ethiopic-year
entails the solar-side of the l/s calendar. The last
5-Ethiopic-years in the primary age of Seth equal 1,820-days
using
364-day-Ethiopic-years (Eqn. 1). Moreover, Seth’s
last 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in the secondary 807-year age are
equivalent to 1,820-days (Eqn. 2).
The
364-day-Ethiopic-year depends upon measuring 10-days
of l/s separation time between the
354-day-lunar-year
and a
364-day-solar-year. Lunar operations develop
continuing Sabbath 7-day-weeks. Two schools of thought exist in
Judaism. A series of weeks and on a greater scale, a series of
Sabbath 7-year-weeks build through the canonical
50-year
Jubilee Cycle (Leviticus 25:10). Time is effectively
multiplied upon itself or squared to create 7-weeks of
7-year-weeks, or 49-years. Matching
X-number of days with
X-number of years was a followed calendar practice in
antiquity. Jewish Calendar Jubilee Cycles extending
50-Ethiopic-Years were the result of multiplying 7-years in
weekly cycles by 7 times. The last Jubilee fiftieth year was
added with 49-years. Solar-side calendar methods include the
364-day-calendar-year and the 365-day-solar-year. The final day
at the end of the year is the impetus that gives rise to
recurring ideas of numerical matching. The
364-day-Ethiopic-year
is the solar-side counterpart to lunar-based Jewish calendar
science. Persistent use of 364-days created perhaps the least
popular and most misunderstood branch of Judaism. Analyses of
Seth’s ages show whole number, integer benefits gained by
reckoning. A definite 364-day tie exists for the later
Antediluvian Patriarch character ages.
An impressive list of religious texts provide evidence the
364-day-Ethiopic-year combines with more elaborate
49-year
Jubilee Cycles or
50-year Jubilee Cycles.
Leviticus stands alone in
counting a
50-year Jubilee Cycles. The other texts below
count multiples of
49-year Jubilee Cycles for Patriarch
ages. Sacred Jewish writing refers to spiritual angels in
heavenly metaphors. We can trace the
364-day-Ethiopic-year
references to at least four ancient manuscripts:
•
Holy Bible, Genesis 5:6-7
Primary 105-year age of Seth
Secondary 807-year age of Seth
• Book of Jubilees, Ch. 6:32
“And command thou the children of Israel that they observe the
years according to this reckoning- three hundred and sixty-four
days, and (these) will constitute a complete year, and they will
not disturb its time from its days and from its feasts; …”
• Ethiopic Book of Enoch I, Ch. 74:4
“And the harmony of the world becomes complete every three
hundred and sixty-fourth state of it. … ”
• Dead Sea Scrolls, 4Q321 (Mishmarot Ba)
Parchment fragment from Qumran Cave 4 and the archive catalog
file number assigned, or the alternative name: Calendrical
Document
Jubilee Cycles determine reckoning in the less
famous Testimony of Twelve Patriarchs book. Original estimates
place the writing after the second century AD. This short work
mixes Apocryphal style regarding the Book of Jubilees with the
testimony manner seen for the biblical Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
Hebrew customs encouraged giving a "testimony" to children. The
Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs is the testimonies of
Jacob's twelve sons to their children. Discovery of the Dead Sea
Scrolls also found fragments of this work. An older origin
combining the 364-day-Ethiopic-year and 49-year or
50-year Jubilee Cycle is certain.
364-Day
Calendar Year identifies
ancient religious aspects regarding the Antediluvian Calendar of
the
Holy Bible.
Ethiopic 364-day-calendar-years
and Mayan practices share mutual traits visible for the
Patriarch ages of Adam and Seth.
Jewish 50-year Jubilee
Cycles and 52-year Calendar Rounds reference sacred texts
and spiritual angels in our distant past.
364DCY 229 kb - 0.99
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Equations 1-4
1.
Uses a 365-year-solar-cycle with 364-day-Ethiopic-years
5 Years
x 364-day-Ethiopic-Year
= 1,820-days extra in 5-Ethiopic-years of 364-days
2. 5-Ethiopic-years equal
7-Tzolken-sacred-years
7-Tzolken-sacred-years
x 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years
= 1820-days extra in 7-Tzolken-sacred-years of 260-days
3. Mayan Units count 360-day-Tun-year
18 Uinals
x 20-days per Uinal
= 360-day-Tun-year
4. Zodiac is a circle that describes one
360-day-Tun-year or 360-degrees
360-day-Tun-year
÷ 72 divide
= 5-days
Solar-side 364-day-Ethiopic-years set apart the last
4-days beyond a regular 360-day midpoint length of year. Both
Egyptian and Mayan calendars celebrated a special 5-day feast
period at the end of the year. Exactly where and when the Jewish
Calendar branched with respect to 364-days is unsure.
Calculations for a 364-day-Ethiopic-year deeply trace
remote Antediluvian Calendar ages. Ethiopian Enoch I may prove
to be the necessary bridge joining the Egyptian and early Jewish
calendar systems.
Enoch I perpetuates views concerning cosmology
by dividing 10-days l/s separation time between the 354-day-lunar-year
and the 364-day-Ethiopic-year. The lunar-side is less
than 360-days. Enoch I allocates 6-days to the 354-day-lunar-year
for the lunar-side of l/s operations. The solar-side assigns
4-days to the sun and stars beyond a midpoint 360-day
length of year. Nightly observers divided the Zodiac into 72
parts, with one Royal day-star wielding influence over each of
four quarters. Quadrant partition themes suit the Mayan Calendar
combination of 18 Uinals multiplying by 20-days in the 360-day-Tun-year
(Eqn. 3). Every 1/72 of the Zodiac represents 5-days or
5-degrees in a 360-degree circle (Eqn. 4). Advancements note the
circular 360-year-Tun-cycle Zodiac also divides into
five 72-Tzolken-sacred-year portions. For the case of Adam
units reverse, and a Lunar/Solar
260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle divides into five 52-year
Calendar Rounds. The 52-year Calendar Round was
the Mayan version of the Jewish 49-year or 50-year Jubilee
Cycle.
The Slavonic Book of Enoch II mixes lunar/solar calendar
references in a most unusual way. The 19-year lunar/solar
calendar reveals the lunar course in chapter 16:8. Seven
intercalary months of 30-days each insert 210-days of l/s
separation time. Babylonian influences on Jewish Calendar
monthly names resulted in adoption of 19-year-l/s-cycles within
the framework of Metonic style 19-lunar/solar-year patterns.
Another reference in chapter 16:3 cites the 365 and one-quarter
day solar year. A sense of the later Roman Julian calendar was
in effect. Most scholars label the Slavonic Book of Enoch II as
a product of the second century BCE. The origins of Enoch II are
obscure. Such is the case with many other ancient manuscripts.
Mayans may have implemented the 364-day-calendar-year with
similar provision as the Ethiopians. The Mayan Calendar is
principally a solar calendar. After every 360-day-Tun-year,
a special 5-day Wayeb festival period completed the 365-day-Haab-solar-year.
Four days were spiritual Year-Bearers that held
significance for Mesoamerican culture imbued with calendar
worship. Their base 20 numbering system set aside 4-days
as windows to the New Year, which universally divide everything
into four respective quadrants. One last final day landed on New
Year’s Day to increment the next 360-day-Tun-year.
Diverse Mesoamerican groups sometimes treated the final day as a
0-day and up to twenty yearly endings were possible. Wayeb days
rotated in single file order that ultimately measure five
different 4-Tun-year-cycles. Like our modern 4-year-Leap-Cycle
results in 5-Leap-Days spanning 20-years, the Mayan method
accounts for one Katun 20-year-l/s-cycle without any
fractions. The prefix “Ka” attaches to the 360-day-Tun-year
to indicate one Katun 20-year-l/s-cycle.
The 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year shifts by 5-days in the
cycle of day-names. Angels and gods were prominent calendar
figures in the Mesoamerican pantheon.
Most Mayan groups place their New Year’s Day on
the vernal equinox in a pattern reminiscent of early Ethiopian
Judaism. However, there are at least three different Year Bearer
sequences and possible variations approach twenty. Different
cultural groups followed different 365-day-Haab-solar-year
placements so that New Year's Day occurs at different times.
Mayan 365-day-Haab-solar-years omit Leap Day
calculations. New Year's Day would recess backward around the
Gregorian calendar at the rate of one day every four years.
Mayan O Pop was really the last day of an old 365-day-Haab-solar-year
or the starting day of a new 365-day-Haab-solar-year and
always there were only 4-Year-Bearer-days. The 364-day-Ethiopic-calendar-year
includes four days added to 360-days.
Enoch I sums the 364-day-Ethiopic-year
concisely.
Chapter 74:4
"And the harmony of
the world of the world becomes complete every
three hundred and sixty-fourth state of it. For the
signs,"
Chapter 74:5
"The seasons,"
Chapter 74:6
"The years,"
Chapter 74:7
"And the days, Uriel
showed me; the angel whom the Lord of Glory appointed over all
the luminaries."
One last day every year reserves the practice
that numerically matches
X-days with X-years for the
biblical
Enoch and the Mayan Calendar.
Enoch’s
lifetime age capped the Antediluvian Calendar
5200-year
Great Cycle by adding the final, thirteenth
400-year
Baktun Cycle 13 to the
secondary age category total. In the lifetime
365-year-solar-cycle
age of
Enoch, the last day following a
364-day-Ethiopic-year
walks through an entire circuit (
Genesis 5:23). The Mayans went on to divide the
260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year into four quadrant partitions
having
65-days each. Numerical matching follows suit for
the
260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle. The
primary
65-Tun-year age of Enoch specifies one-quadrant involving
the
260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle (Genesis
5:21). A remarkable system of
260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years,
360-day-Tun-years and 365-day-Haab-solar-years
enabled the Mayans to project calculations some 52,000-years or
more into the future.
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Ancient lunar/solar calendars like the Jewish and Mayan
calendars provide the background to understanding early time.
Ancient calendars of the
Holy
Bible use differences between the moon and sun,
numerical matching and a 364-day calendar year to describe
X-number of days that match with X-number of years.
Ages_of_Adam is a free read
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tags 364-day, calendar, year, ancient, religious, Antediluvian,
Holy Bible, Ethiopic, Mayan, Patriarch, Adam, Seth, Jewish,
Jubilee, Cycles, Calendar Round, reference, sacred texts,
spiritual, angels
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