Explanations

Chronology versus time reckoning

Chronology is the schedule of historical events, and its essence is the relative order of events. The chronology can be expressed by the time distance of the events, too, without dates, without giving the calendar years according to any time reckoning. For example: ‘The thirty-year-old emperor attacked our country, but our king, who was 15 years older in the twentieth year of his reign, defeated the emperor in a duel”. From this description, a sequence of events can be constructed.

Time reckoning is the system of time calculation beginning from a known or imagined historical or astronomical event.

A given chronology can be expressed correctly in different time reckoning systems. For example, the sequence of the events of a given decade of our AD system is the same in an old Chinese or in a younger Islamic time reckoning system. Only the dates belonging to the events become different in another time reckoning system.

Gregory’s dilemma: (as described by the blogger)

If our calendar were correct, Pope Gregory XIII could not have corrected the Julian calendar by deleting ten days when he introduced the Gregorian calendar in AD 1582. He would have had to omit 13 days. The vernal equinox (short VEQ; see Abbreviations) moves back one day every 128 years in the Julian calendar. The backwards shift would have been 13 days in 1626 years (45BC-AD1582), while the deleted ten calendar days correspond to only 1280 elapsed years.

Conjunction:

When two planets, as seen from Earth, appear to be so close that they “overlap” (super conjunction), or at least appear very close, the difference in their hour angle or longitudinal ecliptic coordinates is/are within 1 degree. Conjunction (astronomy) – Wikipedia

Metonic cycle (lunar cycle):

This cycle means that a particular lunar phase, e.g., the new moon, falls only after 19 years on the same day of the year, concerning a fixed point of the year, such as the astronomical VEQ-day. The Metonic cycle was the basis of the solar year correction of some lunar calendars in ancient times. Metonic cycle – Wikipedia

Solar cycle: (as a calendar cycle)

The period of 28 years after which, in the Julian calendar, the weekdays of a 366-day leap year return to the same date. After 28 years, the leap year calendars are identical to each other. The 365-day standard years are more often similar. Solar cycle (calendar) – Wikipedia

Nisan: (also called Nissan)

Nisan is the first month in the “religious” Jewish calendar. It lasts 30 days. The beginning of the month of Nisan falls in the period from mid-March to mid-April, as the Jewish calendar is lunisolar. Nisan – Wikipedia

Roman Era

753BC (founding year of Rome) – AD476 (fall of the Western Roman Empire) or 533BCE – 696CE, according to this study. Consequently, the last period of the Roman Era is the Western Roman Empire (27BC – AD476 or AD194 – 696CE, according to this study).

Middle-Ages:

AD476 – AD1492 (discovery of America by Christopher Columbus) or 696CE – 1492CE, according to this study.

Dark Middle Ages: about the first 300 years of the Middle Ages.

Note: The period of the Middle Ages or the Dark Ages is a subject of discussion among historians and might change country by country, depending on the history of the given land.

Parthia or Parthian Empire: (also named as Arsacid Empire)

247BC – AD228 as accepted today, or 27BCE – 448CE according to this study. The Parthian Empire defeated the Seleucids and often the Romans and occupied today’s Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Galilea.

Seleucids, Seleucid Empire:

312BC- 63BC as accepted today, or BC312 – 158CE according to this study. The Seleucid Empire was one of the Hellenistic successor states formed after the death of Alexander the Great. The empire initially included Bactria, Persia, Mesopotamia, Media, Babylonia, Asia Minor, Syria, and Palestine.

Abbreviations

AD:

Anno Domini (year of the Lord; in the year of the Lord). Applied in many languages for time reckoning beginning with the year of birth of Jesus Christus. Anno Domini – Wikipedia

BC:

Before Christ, used to denote the years before the birth of Jesus. There is no “year zero” in the AD-BC system; 1BC is the year immediately preceding AD1.

But in astronomy, the year numbering has no abbreviations, and year zero exists, too. For example: AD1 = 1; although 1BC = 0; so 9BC = -8.

AD-BC System, or AD System for shorter.

Synonyms of the AD-BC or AD time reckoning, short AD-Time.

CE:

Common Era, international designation, an equivalent of AD. For example: AD2017 = 2017CE

BCE:

Before Common Era, international designation, equivalent of BC. 45BC = 45BCE.

In the current hypothesis, we remain in the AD-BC system. For distinction purposes, the CE and BCE abbreviations are applied in this hypothesis to mark our proposed new years of some historical events (instead of the equivalent AD and BC). Common Era – Wikipedia

AUC: Ab urbe condita; since the foundation of the city (Rome).

The year AUC1 corresponds to the year 753BC. The year AD1 corresponds to the year AUC754. According to some experts, AD1 = AUC 753; others say AUC755. Even the ancient Roman historians were unsure how many years earlier Rome was founded. The AUC year designation was not used in practice, and it was applied only by a few ancient historians to determine the year of critical old events. Later historians also used it to date events in Roman history, but AD-BC superseded its use. Ab urbe condita – Wikipedia

UR: indication of the years of the Parthian UR time reckoning.

UR1 = 247BC, AD1 = UR248 as accepted today.

UR1 = 27BC = 27BCE, according to this hypothesis.

AJ: Anno Jesu:

The year of Jesus’ birth according to the present hypothesis. The abbreviation AJ is introduced in the current hypothesis.

AJ1 = 7BC+220 = AD1+213 = AD214 = 214CE.

AJE: Anno Jesu by Exiguus:

The year of Jesus’ birth, by Exiguus according to this hypothesis. It is introduced in the present description.

AJE1 = AJ1+7 = AD214+7 = AD1+220 = AD221 = 221CE

AC: Abbreviation for the Coptic time reckoning.

AC1 = AD284; The year accepted today and accepted by the present hypothesis, too.

ADio: Anno Diocletian

This notation for the years of Emperor Diocletian is introduced in the present hypothesis. ADio1 = AD284 as accepted today.

ADio1 = AD504 = 504CE according to the present hypothesis:

ADR: Anno Domini Recounted.

The year, calculated backwards from the current year of the AD time reckoning with our proposed new chronology, in other words: AD with omitted fictitious years. The abbreviation ADR is introduced in the present hypothesis.  ADR aka CE                            

UTC: Universal Time Coordinated, Universal Coordinated Time

The successor of the well-known GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) https://www.timeanddate.com/time/aboututc.html

UT: Universal Time.

Conventional Universal Time, the average time defined by the Earth’s non-uniform rotation, is measured relative to distant stars. Today the version UT1 is used. For “everyday use”, it corresponds well to UTC (Universal Time Coordinated) and to the older GMT, too. Universal Time – Wikipedia

TT: Terrestrial Time.

Modern astronomical time standard. Ideal, theoretical, uniformly elapsing time approximated by atomic clock time with high accuracy. Terrestrial Time – Wikipedia

LMST: (Local Mean Solar Time) Also called LMT (Local Mean Time).

The LMST, as an average, corrects for the variations in apparent local time (the Local True Solar Time (LTST), sundial time) caused by the uneven rotation of the Earth. 

The sky simulator program Stellarium shows Local Mean Solar Time (LMST) by default since local time and time zones are new terms unknown in ancient times.

In Stellarium: LMST = UTC + Longitude Offset.

The longitude offset of 1° from the conventionally assigned 0° at Greenwich results in a 4-minute offset of the LMST value.

Not to be confused with the artificial local time (clock time) and zone time.

(Another interpretation of LMST is Local Mean Sidereal Time, which is not used in this document.) Solar time – Wikipedia; Difference Between Local Time and Solar Time (With Table) (askanydifference.com); Local to solar time calculator – Koch TCM (koch-tcm.ch)

ΔT or Delta T; formally: ΔT = TT – UT                                                                

In precise timekeeping and counting, ΔT is the measure of the cumulative effect of the time by which the Earth’s rotation period deviates from the average length of day. https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEhelp/deltat2004.html

VEQ: Vernal Equinox; March Equinox; Spring Equinox.

The VEQ point is the celestial location on the ecliptic where VEQ occurs. The VEQ day is the day on the calendar when VEQ occurs. When VEQ itself is used, its meaning is given in context. The term “vernal equinox” refers to both the celestial point and the calendar day of the vernal equinox or the exact time of the vernal equinox. Equinox – Wikipedia

AEQ: Autumnal Equinox; September Equinox; Fall Equinox.

On the ecliptic, the AEQ point is approximately opposite the VEQ point. Its interpretation is otherwise analogous to that of the VEQ. Equinox – Wikipedia

WIS: Winter Solstice.

It is the shortest day and the longest night of the year for the Northern Hemisphere. Winter solstice – Wikipedia