Karl, Cc sirs: >Wikipedia article about the Hebrew Calendar 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_calendar >>.....In my mail to Irv of Tue 
1/29/13 5:01 PM, I
wrote:                                                                          
                                                                             
>>“In response to Irv's
sub-distribution of the second into 1080 parts, I presented that THIS WAS THE
SAME like the 5*216 =1080;                              >>and that
240000 x216 :: 86400 : 600 having links with ancient India's
time-subunits! To me it appears that 240000 decimal seconds day/night  >>was 
more
practical AND conducive to current move on Reform of the Gregorian calendar in
use for International use by ALL nations.” 
I pointed that if a division of the HOUR into smaller parts were to be 
considerted, now, it would be approperiate to have smaller divisions of the 
24-hour day into 24-hours; each hour of 100 minutes decimal (md); and each 
decimal minute into 100 seconds decimal (sd). Also, please see: 
http://www.brijvij.com/bb_deci-sec-nu-mtr.pdf.THIS division of the HOUR-Angle 
in relation to current division of Earth for Nautical Mile could provide us a 
DIRECT 'definition for Nautical Kilometre', please see: 
http://www.brijvij.com/bbv_shelving-NMile.pdf as an attampted direction to 
SHELVE NAUTICAL MILE, as historic tool!Regards,Brij Bhushan Vij 
Tuesday, 2013 April 02H15:44(decimal)EST
Aa Nau Bhadra Kritvo Yantu Vishwatah -Rg Veda 
The Astronomical Poem (revised number of days in any month)
"30 days has July,September, 
April, June, November and December 
all the rest have 31 except February which has 29 
except on years divisible evenly by 4; 
except when YEAR divisible by 128 and 3200 -
as long as you remember that 
"October (meaning 8) is the 10th month; and 
December (meaning 10) is the 12th BUT has 30 days & ONE 
OUTSIDE of calendar-format"
Jan:31; Feb:29; Mar:31; Apr:30; May:31; Jun:30 
Jul:30; Aug:31; Sep:30; Oct:31; Nov:30; Dec:30 
(365th day of Year is World Day)
******As per Kali V-GRhymeCalendaar***** 
"Koi bhi cheshtha vayarth nahin hoti, purshaarth karne mein hai"
My Profile - http://www.brijvij.com/bbv_2col-vipBrief.pdf
Author had NO interaction with The World Calendar Association
except via Media & Organisations to who I contributed for A 
Possible World Calendar, since 1971. 
HOME PAGE: http://www.brijvij.com/ 
Contact via E-mail: [email protected] OR

"GAYATRI LOK"  Flat # 3013/3rd Floor

NH-58, Kankhal Bypass, Dev-Bhoomi, HARIDWAR-249408 (Uttrakhand - INDIA)

 Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2013 15:33:44 +0000
From: [email protected]
Subject: Hebrew Calendar Year Placing
To: [email protected]









Dear Calendar People
 
I found in the Wikipedia article about the Hebrew Calendar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_calendar :
 
“When the 19-year intercalary cycle was finalised in the 4th century, the 
earliest Passover (in year 16 of the cycle) coincided with the northward 
equinox, which means that Passover fell near the
first full moon after the northward equinox, or that the northward equinox 
landed within one lunation before 16 days after the
molad of Nisan. This is still the case in about 80% of years, but in about 20% 
of years Passover is a month late by these criteria (as it was in AM 5765 and 
5768, the 8th and 11th years of the 19-year cycle = Gregorian 2005 and 2008 
CE). Presently
 this occurs after the "premature" insertion of a leap month in years 8, 11, 
and 19 of each 19-year cycle, which causes the northward equinox to land on 
exceptionally early Hebrew dates in such years.”
 
This tells why the leap months are placed as they are in the 19-year cycle and 
suggests they would have been reckoned differently in years before the 4th 
century. In particular around 1 AD, the 16th instead of the
 17th year of the 19-year cycle would normally be a leap year. It also suggests 
that if the 19-year cycle were corrected, the leap years would now be the 1st, 
3rd, 6th, 9th, 12th, 14th
 and 17th years of the 19-year cycle.
 
I expect Aristeo would be interested in this.
 
Karl
 
13(07(22



-- 

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