Jewish Date
Today's date in the Jewish Calendar is:
Names of the Months and Important Holidays
1. Tishri
1-2 Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year)
10 Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement)
15-23 Succoth (Feast of Tabernacles)
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7. Nisan
15-22 Pesach (Passover)
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| 2. Heshvan |
8. Iyar |
3. Kislev
25 Hanukkah.
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9. Sivan |
| 4. Tevet |
10. Tammuz |
| 5. Shevat |
11. Av |
6. Adar
14 Purim.
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12. Elul |
The Jewish year count dates from a traditional date for
the creation of the world.
The Jewish calendar is based both on solar and lunar cycles, with
the lunar influence predominating.
Each month in the Jewish calendar is 29 or 30 days long, which approximates
the lunar month.
Twelve of these lunar months total 354 days, about 11 days short of
the solar year.
This leads to a substantial drift from year to year of specific
dates relative to the solar year (although all holidays
occur on a fixed Jewish calendar date).
To correct for this, an additional month (Adar II) is added during leap years
which occur roughly every third year.
In addition, other changes are made every 19th year.
After correction, the length of the solar year as defined by the Jewish calendar
is short by about four minutes a year, which means it is about four and
a half days off per millenia.
The Jewish calendar originally depended on the actual
time of observation of the new moon, much like the current Islamic calendar.
All decisions about the calendar were made by a committee
of the Sanhedrin (the Supreme Court in Jerusalem), the Sod Haibbur.
This committee calculated the dates of the beginnings of the months and
the seasons based on astronomical observations
and calculations, as well as meterological
and agricultural considerations.
They determined when the intercalations would
occur, that is inserting periods of time into the
calendar to meet religious requirements and to keep it in synchronization
with the solar year.
After the destruction of the second Temple in 70 C.E., the maintenance
of the calendar gradually passed to local synagogues.
The decision-making process was decentralized, which led to
the possibility of holidays being celebrated at different times
in different localities.
This led to the practice of extending some of the holidays
to ensure that all Jews could celebrate them at the same time, for
instance, adding an eighth day to Passover.
For this reason, in the fourth century C.E.,
the Patriarch Hillel II decided to
codify the rules for computing the calendar, which fixed the
method of computing the calendar to the current algorithm.
The only day of the week with a name is the seventh day, the Sabbath.
The rest are numbered rather than named.
The day is divided into 24 hours of equal duration.
Each hour is divided into 1,080 helek (plural, halakim).
Each helek is divided into 76 rega (plural, regaim).
The day begins and ends at sunset for religious purposes.
By this reckoning, midnight is hour 6 and noon is hour 18.
For calendrical purposes the day begins at 6 p.m. Jerusalem time.
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