HUNGARIAN CALENDAR
Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli in 1686 found an wooden staff with incisions in the Old Hungarian script, which he identified as "the language of the descendants of the Scyths".
His copy of the inscription is preserved in University Library of Bologna as MSS.MARSILI MS.54. The staff measured 1.5 m in length with a diameter of 2.5 cm. The inscription consists of 671 signs. It is a calendar of Name Days of the Székelys, in all probability dating to the 13th century.
The Hungarian Calendar hypothesis is a theory developed by Hunnivári, which suggests that in the Middle Ages between 880-1080 CE, 200 years never occurred. According to Hunnivári, the Julian Calendar was introduced in 153 CE by Julius Caesar, and took force in 154 CE, contrary to 45 BCE. This means an error of exactly 198 years in historical chronology. The 2004 English edition states that the Hungarian edition was not "deemed worthy of serious criticism".
Zoltán Hunnivári, Hungár Naptár (The Hungarian Calendar), Budapest (2002), English: Cyprus (2004), ISBN 9632021037.
★ Phantom time hypothesis
★ the Marsigli calendar
★ The Hungarian Calendar
His copy of the inscription is preserved in University Library of Bologna as MSS.MARSILI MS.54. The staff measured 1.5 m in length with a diameter of 2.5 cm. The inscription consists of 671 signs. It is a calendar of Name Days of the Székelys, in all probability dating to the 13th century.
| Contents |
| Phantom time hypothesis |
| See also |
| External links |
Phantom time hypothesis
The Hungarian Calendar hypothesis is a theory developed by Hunnivári, which suggests that in the Middle Ages between 880-1080 CE, 200 years never occurred. According to Hunnivári, the Julian Calendar was introduced in 153 CE by Julius Caesar, and took force in 154 CE, contrary to 45 BCE. This means an error of exactly 198 years in historical chronology. The 2004 English edition states that the Hungarian edition was not "deemed worthy of serious criticism".
Zoltán Hunnivári, Hungár Naptár (The Hungarian Calendar), Budapest (2002), English: Cyprus (2004), ISBN 9632021037.
See also
★ Phantom time hypothesis
External links
★ the Marsigli calendar
★ The Hungarian Calendar
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