360 days per year: The Ancient
Standard
As a result of modern day astronomical observations it is well established
that the current earth year is about 365.2421897 days in length. This fact of
the modern age noted however, from the study of many civilizations from the
distant past, it has come to light that there was once a widely held belief that
in some very remote age, the earth possessed a yearly orbit of precisely 360
days. Indeed, many such past cultures widely separated from one another actively
established calendar systems based upon a 360-day year, including the ancient
Egyptians, the Maya, and the Babylonians to name but a few.
And yet, they did this even though their astronomers were well able to
determine that the earth did not in fact possess 360 days per year. Their own
measurements were accurate enough to inform them of the fact that it was indeed
about 365 ¼ days. Even so, they still used 360 alongside the observed period.
Both years were thus recognized and acknowledged, almost suggesting a willful
desire to retain the memory of what was once an ‘ideal’ earth orbital period.
For to their minds truly, the earth had indeed at some point in the past made an
actual physical transition from one measure to the other. One of the most well
known examples of the story of the transformation of the earth orbit, encoded in
mythical form and surviving even down to this present day, comes from Egypt; a
tale involving various ‘gods’, whose actions are held directly responsible for
the increase in the length of the year:
A long time ago, Re, who
was god of the sun, ruled the earth. During this time, he heard of a prophecy
that Nut, the sky goddess, would give birth to a son who would depose him.
Therefore Re cast a spell to the effect that Nut could not give birth on any day
of the year, which was then itself composed of precisely 360 days. To help Nut
to counter this spell, the wisdom god Thoth devised a plan. Thoth went to the
Moon god Khonsu and asked that he play a game known as Senet, requesting that
they play for the very light of the moon itself. Feeling confident and that he
would win, Khonsu agreed. However, in the course of playing he lost the game
several times in succession, such that Thoth ended up winning from the moon a
substantial measure of its light, equal to about five days. With this in hand,
Thoth then took this extra time, and gave it to Nut. In doing so this had the
effect of increasing the earth’s number of days per year, allowing Nut to give
birth to a succession of children; one upon each of the extra 5 days that were
added to the original 360. And as for the moon, losing its light had quite an
effect upon it, for it became weaker and smaller in the sky. Being forced to
hide itself periodically to recuperate; it could only show itself fully for a
short period of time before having to disappear to regain its
strength.
As can be seen from the above noted myth, (paraphrased
from various sources) the ancient Egyptians were thoroughly of the mind that an
increase to the earth year by some 5 extra days was an event that had indeed
truly happened at some point in the past. Moreover, this was not something that
was held to be good either, for in fact, the extra days were viewed as
‘unlucky’. A 360-day year was thought harmonious, whilst the current year was in
some strange sense held to be ‘deficient’.
Of course, in the modern age, the very idea that the earth did once truly
possess 360 days to one orbit about the sun is regarded as preposterous and a
nonsense by most scientists. It is dismissed out of hand as being something that
cannot be proven. That is, until now. Indeed, it so transpires that a new proof
has recently come to light that decisively demonstrates that the earth did
indeed once possess a 360-day year. The ancients would seem to have been right,
and modern astronomers wrong.
The Nature of the Proof
The essential nature of the actual proof that the earth once possessed 360
days per year rests upon an apparent connection between the basic units of
angular measure, which include degrees, minutes, and seconds of arc, and the
outward dimensions of the physical form of the earth, including also the orbit
of the moon. There are thus two aspects to the proof as a whole, each of which
combined, are found to strongly support the idea that the earth did indeed once
possess a 360 day orbit. And indeed, as was mentioned in the previous essays
concerning the link, underlying support for the proof itself,
rests upon the work of Johannes Kepler; upon his own unique discovery of the
validity of laws of proportion operative within the universe.
The following links reveal then the decisive proof of a once existent 360-day
year, and should be read each in turn:
An Earth Year of 360
days (Part 1) An increased Earth tropical year and an expansion of the
physical size of the planet.
An Earth
Year of 360 days (Part 2) An increased Earth tropical year and a shift
in the orbit of the Moon.