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Difference between revisions of "Chisleu"

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== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72149" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72149" /> ==
<p> '''Chis'leu.''' See '''Month''' . </p>
<p> '''Chis'leu.''' ''See '' '''Month''' ''.'' </p>
          
          
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_59078" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_59078" /> ==
<p> CHISLEU, n. The ninth month of the Jewish year, answering to a part of November and a part of December, in the modern division of the year. </p>
<p> [[Chisleu,]] n. The ninth month of the Jewish year, answering to a part of November and a part of December, in the modern division of the year. </p>
          
          
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_39337" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_39337" /> ==
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== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65421" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65421" /> ==
<p> See MONTHS. </p>
<p> See [[Months.]] </p>
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_32156" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_32156" /> ==
<p> (Hebrews Kislev´, כַּסְלֵו, according to some, from Arabic, l. q. lethargic; according to others [Benfey, Mozatsnamen,. Berl. 1836], of Persic origin; and as it appears on the Palmyrene [[Inscription]] [ed. Swinton, Philos. Transactions, 48, tab. 29] in the form כסלול, i. c. Kislul, it probably represents the name of the third of the [[Amshaspands]] or celestial genii [Bournouf, Commnenaire sur le Yasna, p. 146, 151, 174]; Sept. Χασελεῦ, Anglicized "Casleu" in &nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 1:54; &nbsp;1 Maccabees 4:59; [[Chaldee]] כִּסְלֵיו, Targ. on &nbsp;Ecclesiastes 11:3; [[Josephus]] Χασλεῦ or Χασλέβ , Ant. 3:5, 4; 7, 6), the name adopted from the Babylonians, after the Captivity, by the Jews for the third civil or ninth ecclesiastical month (&nbsp;Nehemiah 1:1; &nbsp;Zechariah 7:1), corresponding to the [[Macedonian]] month Apellaeus (Ἀπελλαῖος; see Spanheim in Havercamp's Josephus, 2:407), and answering mainly to the moon of November. (See [[Month]]). The following were the days specially memorable for religions exercises: On the 3d, a feast in memory of the idols which the [[Asmonaeans]] cast out of the Temple; on the 7th, a fast instituted because king [[Jehoiakim]] burned the prophecy of Jeremiah, which [[Baruch]] had written (&nbsp;Jeremiah 36:23). Scaliger believes that it was instituted on account of Zedekiah's having his eyes put out, after his children had been slain in his sight. This fast Prideaux places on the 29th of the month; but Calmet, with the modern Jews, makes it the 6th, and places on the 7th a festival in memory of the death of [[Herod]] the Great, the son of Antipater. There is also some dispute whether this fast was not observed on the 28th of the month. It is an argument in favor of the earlier day that the other would fall in the middle of the eight days' [[Festival]] of the Dedication. </p> <p> On the 25th, the Chanuca, or feast of [[Dedication]] (q.v.), so called (&nbsp;John 10:22), and kept as a minor festival in commemoration of the dedication of the altar after the cleansing of the [[Temple]] from the pollution of [[Antiochus]] by [[Judas]] Maccabaeus, by whom it was ordered to be observed (&nbsp;1 Maccabees 4:59). This feast lasted eight days. A prayer for the world in general is offered up on the eighth day of the feast. In this month the winter prayer for rain commences; the precise day is sixty days after the autumnal equinox, by the calculations of [[Rab]] Samuel, which varies from the 2d to the 6th, but is generally on the 4th of December. (See [[Calendar]]). </p>
<p> (Hebrews Kislev´, כַּסְלֵו, according to some, from Arabic, l. q. ''lethargic;'' according to others [Benfey, ''Mozatsnamen,.'' Berl. 1836], of Persic origin; and as it appears on the Palmyrene [[Inscription]] [ed. Swinton, ''Philos. Transactions,'' 48, tab. 29] in the form כסלול, i. c. ''Kislul,'' it probably represents the name of the third of the [[Amshaspands]] or celestial genii [Bournouf, ''Commnenaire sur le Yasna,'' p. 146, 151, 174]; Sept. Χασελεῦ, Anglicized "Casleu" in &nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 1:54; &nbsp;1 Maccabees 4:59; [[Chaldee]] כִּסְלֵיו, Targ. on &nbsp;Ecclesiastes 11:3; [[Josephus]] Χασλεῦ or Χασλέβ '', Ant.'' 3:5, 4; 7, 6), the name adopted from the Babylonians, after the Captivity, by the [[Jews]] for the third civil or ninth ecclesiastical month (&nbsp;Nehemiah 1:1; &nbsp;Zechariah 7:1), corresponding to the [[Macedonian]] month Apellaeus (Ἀπελλαῖος; see Spanheim in Havercamp's ''Josephus,'' 2:407), and answering mainly to the moon of November. (See [[Month]]). The following were the days specially memorable for religions exercises: On the 3d, a feast in memory of the idols which the [[Asmonaeans]] cast out of the Temple; on the 7th, a fast instituted because king [[Jehoiakim]] burned the prophecy of Jeremiah, which [[Baruch]] had written (&nbsp;Jeremiah 36:23). Scaliger believes that it was instituted on account of Zedekiah's having his eyes put out, after his children had been slain in his sight. This fast Prideaux places on the 29th of the month; but Calmet, with the modern Jews, makes it the 6th, and places on the 7th a festival in memory of the death of Herod the Great, the son of Antipater. There is also some dispute whether this fast was not observed on the 28th of the month. It is an argument in favor of the earlier day that the other would fall in the middle of the eight days' [[Festival]] of the Dedication. </p> <p> On the 25th, the Chanuca, or feast of [[Dedication]] (q.v.), so called (&nbsp;John 10:22), and kept as a minor festival in commemoration of the dedication of the altar after the cleansing of the [[Temple]] from the pollution of [[Antiochus]] by [[Judas]] Maccabaeus, by whom it was ordered to be observed (&nbsp;1 Maccabees 4:59). This feast lasted eight days. [[A]] prayer for the world in general is offered up on the eighth day of the feast. In this month the winter prayer for rain commences; the precise day is sixty days after the autumnal equinox, by the calculations of [[Rab]] Samuel, which varies from the 2d to the 6th, but is generally on the 4th of December. (See [[Calendar]]). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==