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01-22-2009, 02:15 PM | #31 |
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Andrew, why have you written the seven day cycle amongst the Jews when the Babylonians were using it far earlier?
I am not referring to Cyrus! http://www.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/ash/amps/iraq-navel/map.htm |
01-22-2009, 05:48 PM | #32 |
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New Zealand did the same - few problems. Perhaps we're smarter than the Pommies.
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01-23-2009, 06:37 AM | #33 | |
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I've seen other sources that suggest a much later date, such as the first exile or 6th century BCE which is consistent with Babylon. I wasn't able to see the relationship of your link to the week. Also Andrew's link wasn't clear to me either (so it's probably just me) although I found this thing on Amazon. The Seven Day Circle: The History and Meaning of the Week (or via: amazon.co.uk) The online excerpts suggest an Assyrian origin of 700 BCE, more or less explicitly saying that it is not of Israelite/Jewish origin. Unfortunately it is selling for list price, which is a violation of my religious principles. |
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01-24-2009, 01:41 AM | #34 | |
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The continuous seven day cycle may ultimately go back to Babylonia in both its original forms. However our earliest solid evidence is the two apparently independent cycles I mentioned. The Jewish week being almost certainly older than the astrological week. FWIW The names of the days in the English week derive from the astrological week not the Jewish week. Andrew Criddle ETA Just to clarify; what I mean by a continuous seven day cycle is one where we perpetually repeat the seven day cycle without any intercalation. In the Babylonian system the seven day cycle had to be corrected at the end of each lunar month to keep it in line with the phases of the moon. The continuous seven day cycle ignores the lunar month. |
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01-24-2009, 06:00 AM | #35 | ||
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Thanks |
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01-24-2009, 06:25 AM | #36 | |
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http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/47575/Babylon
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And researching further the seven day week, but the lecturer I started the OP with was very clear she was talking about the original Babylon not the neo- Babylonians! (and please, is it not accepted that Abraham is mythological?) |
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01-24-2009, 06:38 AM | #37 | ||
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01-24-2009, 06:41 AM | #38 |
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And this term continuous is fascinating.
A resetting calendar - restarting from each new moon - also was used. |
01-24-2009, 06:43 AM | #39 | |||
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IMHO the continuous 7 day week is very ancient in Israel ie (very) late 2nd millennium BCE. However I don't think this can be proved in the present state of the evidence. However, on normal dating of the Hebrew Bible, the origin of the Jewish 7 day week and the sabbath must be at least as old as the time of Ezra in the late Persian period (usually given a fifth century BCE date, sometimes an early fourth century BCE date.) When the Pentateuch had taken something like its present form. (I'm not really interested in discussing on this thread radical redatings of the Hebrew Bible.) This is, I emphasize, the latest possible date for the origin of the Jewish week and I would be surprised if it is not considerably older. The astrological week, however, assumes hellenistic astrological/astronomical ideas and can hardly be earlier than the 2nd century BCE. Hence it is later than the Jewish week. Andrew Criddle |
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01-24-2009, 07:43 AM | #40 | |
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Author of above seems not to have read Bible Unearthed, and it is not a radical redating to note we are looking at indiginous tribes with funny rituals like not eating pork who had a couple of local warlords who only just hit the radar, who were exiled by the local empire and in exile created a back story of Abraham and Moses and David and Solomon. It was Ezra wot dun it! (Strange co-incidence that the conquerors were monotheistic and the classic Judaic rituals look so Persian....) |
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