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Author Topic: History of the Maya... What about 2012? Calendars through out history.  (Read 489 times)
KarenCharin0
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« on: September, 20, 2007, 05, 03:29 AM »

http://berclo.net/page01/01en-hist-maya.html

snip.....

The Maya nation is an homogeneous group of people who have occupied roughly the same territory for thousands of years. They speak some thirty languages that are so similar that linguists believe that they all have the same origin, a proto Mayan language that could be as much as 7000 years old! They will will explain how geographical isolation made the original language evolve towards an eastern branch subdivided into proto-K'iche and Mam and a western branch subdivided into proto-Q'anjob and proto-Tzeltal and how the further division of these sub branches gave rise to the 30 languages spoken today.


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http://mayaportal.lucita.net/

They tried to look far into the future. They used many different calendars depending on what they were using it for. This site has a lot of information on the Maya, they way they lived and how they looked at life.


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http://www.geocities.com/astrologyages/maya2012.htm

snip...

Maya Galactic Alignment 2012 [21 Dec 2012]

Definition: [Astrological Ages] The idea that the current 'age' of the Mayan 'Long Count' calendar was designed by them to end on 21-Dec-2012 because that is the date of a Winter Solstice alignment of the Sun and the Galaxy. This idea was first promoted by John Major Jenkins in his book Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 [published in 1998]. The steps of the argument appear to be as follows:

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http://webexhibits.org/calendars/calendar-mayan.html

snip...

The Mayan Calendar

Among their other accomplishments, the ancient Mayas invented a calendar of remarkable accuracy and complexity. At right is the ancient Mayan Pyramid Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico. The Pyramid of Kukulkan at Chichén Itzá, constructed circa 1050 was built during the late Mayan period, when Toltecs from Tula became politically powerful. The pyramid was used as a calendar: four stairways, each with 91 steps and a platform at the top, making a total of 365, equivalent to the number of days in a calendar year.

In ancient times, the Mayans had a tradition of a 360-day year. But by the 4th century B.C.E. they took a different approach than either Europeans or Asians. They maintained three different calendars at the same time. In one of them, they divided a 365-day year into eighteen 20-day months followed by a five-day period that was part of no month. The five-day period was considered to be unlucky.

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http://webexhibits.org/calendars/

Calendars through the Ages, the history of the Calendars from the sky.

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KarenCharin0
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« Reply #1 on: September, 20, 2007, 05, 26:29 AM »

http://www.direct.ca/trinity/360vs365.html

snip......

360 vs. 365
By Guy Cramer
360 Day Years - Fact or Fiction

Did the earth have a 360-day year with a 30-day lunar month within the last 3,000 years?

Our year is actually 365.2422 days and our lunar month (from new moon to new moon) is 29.531 days.

So why did early civilizations around the world use calendars with months of 30 days and years of 360 days? These calendars seemed to function well until sometime in the 8th century BC when suddenly it became necessary to change them. Most civilizations around the world began to modify their calendars to allow for 5 extra days for the year and 6 fewer days for a lunar year. A lunar year is 12 full months; a modern lunar year is 354 days (12 months x 29.5 days).

Were these early civilizations incapable of accurately measuring the astronomical cycles that governed their calendars prior to the 8th century?

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