The following calendar screenshots are from the Torah Calendar website: https://torahcalendar.com/

This calendar information is the best online, at this time; however, it does have some things incorrect—for example, it does not use the V+2 (occasionally V+3) new moon system, in the first century (https://7grails.world/7-symbolic/chr/bcd/).  Nevertheless, this Torah Calendar website does have the following great information: #1 accurate moon potential visibility (go to that website, and click the “1” at the top left corner of any new moon day); #2 accurate Roman calendar dates (proleptic Julian dates for BC, clear up to Gregorian dates in our time); #3 accurate days of the week (listed by name and number, near the top of each month); #4 accurate lunar and solar eclipses (for example, click the circled black “T” on May 2, 1105 BC); #5 some of the Jewish festival dates are correct, and some are not.


Hebrew Month 12
Jephthah vowed on Monday, March 9;
then he spent 10 days, conquering 20 cities.
He returned home on Sabbath, March 21.
NOTE: in 2026 (the year this truth was first published),
the days of the week line up—just like in 1105 BC
(for example: March 9 is a Monday,
both in 1105 BC and in AD 2026).

Hebrew Month 1
Tirzah went to the mountains near Shechem
(modern Nablus) on Sunday, March 22;
this was the Hebrew New Year’s Day,
and also the beginning of EXACTLY “two months”
(going up and down, on the mountains).
Monday, April 6, was her 18th birthday
(on the Hebrew calendar, aka Omer).

Hebrew Month 2
Sabbath, April 25, was her 18th birthday
(on the Julian calendar).
One week later, she got married;
this was 42 days into her two months.
Then she had two weeks and two days,
(out of her two months),
to spend with her new Groom;
the beginning and end is marked by eclipses.
She returned home on Tuesday, May 19.

Hebrew Month 3
The first four days, of this month,
are the basis for Tirzah being remembered
“four days in a year” (Judges 11:40).
May 20, 21 were traveling days;
May 22 was arrival, in Jerusalem,
and preparation for the sacrifice.
May 23 was a Sabbath,
and one final precious day with her father;
then she was sacrificed, at sunset (7:27 pm).
The next day (Sunday, May 24),
Jephthah traveled to Shiloh, for Pentecost.

Astronomy alignment, for May 23, 1105 BC


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Astronomy screenshot from free Stellarium program: https://stellarium.org/
Constellation artwork by Johan Mueris: https://artlibre.org/licence/lal/en/



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