{"timestamp":"2026-04-01T01:57:30.139Z","events":{"2026-01-05":[],"AM-3388-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Daniel's Prayer & 70 Weeks Prophecy","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2","details":"In the first year of Darius (~538 BC), Daniel understood from Jeremiah's scrolls that Jerusalem's desolation would last 70 years (Jer. 25:11). He set himself to pray with fasting, sackcloth and ashes, confessing Israel's sins at length (Dan. 9:3–19). While he was still praying, the angel Gabriel appeared and gave him the 70-weeks prophecy: seventy weeks of years (490 years) are decreed for your people — to finish transgression, make an end of sin, make atonement, bring in everlasting righteousness, seal vision and prophecy, and anoint the Most Holy (Dan. 9:24). From the decree to rebuild Jerusalem to Messiah the Prince: 7 + 62 = 69 weeks (483 years); then Messiah cut off; then the Temple destroyed; then a final 70th week. This prophecy has generated more detailed scholarly analysis than perhaps any other in the Bible. Daniel 9.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3388,"gregorianDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1767826160332.0369,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466610861.7637,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:03:30.861Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T18:40:10.916Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Cyrus Decree — Exile Ends","time":"","eventDate":"-537-03-20","details":"In his first year as king of Babylon (538 BC), Cyrus issued a decree permitting the Jewish exiles to return to Judah and rebuild the Temple: 'The LORD God of heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the earth; and he hath charged me to build him an house at Jerusalem' (Ezra 1:2). This fulfilled Isaiah's prophecy naming Cyrus (Isa. 44:28) and ended Jeremiah's 70-year exile (Jer. 25:11). The Cyrus Cylinder (discovered 1879, now in the British Museum) confirms Cyrus's policy of restoring displaced peoples to their homelands. Approximately 49,897 exiles returned under Zerubbabel and Joshua the high priest (Ezra 2:64–65). Ezra 1:1–4; Isaiah 44:28–45:1; the Cyrus Cylinder.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3388,"gregorianDate":"-537-03-20","originalDate":"-537-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771365006865.8088,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:50:06.865Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:08:54.303Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Daniel in Lion's Den","time":"","eventDate":"-537-03-20","details":"After Darius the Mede organised the kingdom into 120 satrapies with Daniel as one of three presidents, Daniel so distinguished himself that the king planned to set him over the whole realm (Dan. 6:3). The other officials plotted against him — knowing his faithfulness meant the only trap was his religion. They persuaded Darius to sign an irrevocable decree forbidding prayer to any god or man except the king for 30 days. Daniel prayed toward Jerusalem three times daily as was his custom; they reported him and Darius — deeply distressed — was compelled by the law of the Medes and Persians to cast Daniel into the lion's den. God shut the lions' mouths; Daniel was found unharmed. His accusers were thrown in and destroyed immediately. Darius issued a decree honouring Daniel's God throughout the empire. Daniel 6.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3388,"gregorianDate":"-537-03-20","originalDate":"-537-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466580454.0444,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:03:00.454Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:09:00.532Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3388-Nisan-2"}],"AM-0-Nisan-3":[],"2026-01-13":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-5":[],"AM-2520-Nisan-14":[{"title":"The First Passover in the Promised Land","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-04-01","details":"Month 1, Day 14 — Joshua 5:10\n\"The First Passover in the Promised Land\"\nOn the fourteenth day of the first month Israel observes Passover at Gilgal in the plains of Jericho — the first Passover celebrated in the land of Canaan. The following day they eat from the produce of the land for the first time — unleavened cakes and parched grain. The day after that the manna ceases entirely, never to appear again. After forty years of daily provision in the wilderness, Israel now eats from the fruit of the Promised Land. (Joshua 5:10-12)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":2520,"gregorianDate":"-1405-04-01","originalDate":"-1405-04-01","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2520-Nisan-14","id":1771700212655.8313,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T18:56:52.655Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T20:15:21.020Z"}],"AM-1819-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Serug","time":"","eventDate":"-2106-03-23","details":"Serug (Hebrew: branch/intertwined) was born to Reu at 32. He lived 230 years and begat Nahor at 30. Ancient tradition (Jubilees 11:1–8) records that idolatry began to spread in the days of Serug — the first generation to make and worship carved images. This sets the context for Abraham's call out of idolatry in Ur of the Chaldeans (Josh. 24:2: 'your fathers lived beyond the Euphrates... and they served other gods'). He is the eighth generation after the Flood and great-grandfather of Abraham. Genesis 11:20–23.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1819,"gregorianDate":"-2106-03-23","originalDate":"-2106-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943455528.6895,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943401158.1028,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:43:21.158Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:25:29.196Z","anchorDate":"AM-1819-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1876-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2049}],"AM-1878-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Terah","time":"","eventDate":"-2047-03-20","details":"Terah lived 205 years and begat Abram (Abraham), Nahor and Haran. He initiated the migration from Ur of the Chaldeans toward Canaan, taking Abram, Sarai and his grandson Lot — but stopped and settled in Haran, where he died at 205 (Gen. 11:31–32). Joshua 24:2 records that Terah 'served other gods' — he lived in the context of Mesopotamian polytheism. It is possible that God's initial call to Abraham came while still in Ur (Acts 7:2–4: 'the God of glory appeared to our father Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, before he lived in Haran'). Terah is the father of the Abrahamic line. Genesis 11:24–32.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1878,"gregorianDate":"-2047-03-20","originalDate":"-2047-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770851059385.7236,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943507658.629,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:45:07.658Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:25:51.842Z","anchorDate":"AM-1878-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1842-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2083}],"AM-3375-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Daniel's Vision of Ram & Goat","time":"","eventDate":"-550-03-22","details":"In the third year of Belshazzar (~551 BC) Daniel saw a ram with two horns — one higher than the other — charging westward, northward and southward, and a goat from the west with a conspicuous horn that struck the ram, broke its two horns, and trampled it underfoot; the great horn was then broken and four horns grew in its place; from one of them came a little horn that grew toward the south, east and the beautiful land, and 'cast down the truth to the ground' (Dan. 8:12). The angel Gabriel interpreted explicitly: the ram is Persia, the goat is Greece, the great horn is the first king (Alexander), the four horns are four kingdoms arising from his nation (the Diadochi). The little horn is Antiochus IV Epiphanes. This is one of the most precisely fulfilled prophecies in the Bible. Daniel 8.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3375,"gregorianDate":"-550-03-22","originalDate":"-550-03-22","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466474805.7742,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:01:14.805Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:09:30.379Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3375-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3186-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3328-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Kislev-29":[],"2075-07-16":[],"AM-5873-Iyar-23":[],"2026-01-18":[],"-3925-03-22":[],"-1999-05-25":[],"AM-5873-Iyar-21":[{"title":"Rebirth of Israel ","time":"","eventDate":"AM-5873-Iyar-21","details":"On 14 May 1948, David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the establishment of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv — the first Jewish sovereign state in the land of Israel in nearly 2,000 years, ending the British Mandate at midnight. The United States recognised Israel eleven minutes after the proclamation. The rebirth of Israel is widely regarded as one of the most significant prophetic fulfilments of the modern era — referenced by Isaiah ('who hath heard such a thing? who hath seen such things? Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be born at once?'; Isa. 66:8), Ezekiel 37 (the valley of dry bones), and Zechariah 12. The following day five Arab armies invaded, beginning the War of Independence.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":21,"amYear":5873,"gregorianDate":"AM-5873-Iyar-21","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5873-Iyar-21","id":1769995047078.7466,"createdAt":"2026-01-07T23:02:36.224Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.173Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"originalDate":"AM-5873-Iyar-21","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"AM-5997-Tammuz-29":[],"AM-2697-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Shamgar Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1228-03-24","details":"Shamgar son of Anath delivered Israel by killing 600 Philistines with an oxgoad — a farm implement rather than a weapon (Judges 3:31). His account is a single verse — the briefest judge narrative in the book. The oxgoad (a pointed stick used to drive oxen) becoming an instrument of deliverance is consistent with the pattern of God using unexpected instruments: Jael's tent peg (Judges 4:21), Gideon's trumpets and torches (Judges 7:16), Samson's jawbone of an ass (Judges 15:15). Shamgar may have been a non-Israelite; his father's name ('Anath') is that of a Canaanite war goddess. His period of judging is uncertain. Judges 3:31; 5:6.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2697,"gregorianDate":"-1228-03-24","originalDate":"-1228-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453735696.5952,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453694961.2974,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:28:14.961Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:58:45.060Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2697-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Shevat-12":[],"AM-3295-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Zephaniah prophesies — the Day of the LORD","time":"","eventDate":"-630-03-13","details":"Zephaniah prophesied under Josiah of Judah (Zeph. 1:1; c. 631 BC), making him a contemporary of Jeremiah's early ministry and Josiah's reformation (622 BC). His opening oracle is the most comprehensive vision of the Day of the LORD in the prophets — a cosmic judgment sweeping away humans, animals, birds and fish (1:2–3). He denounces Judah's syncretism and the nations alike. He closes with a celebrated promise of Israel's restoration: 'The LORD thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save, he will rejoice over thee with joy' (3:17). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3295,"gregorianDate":"-630-03-13","originalDate":"-630-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800016000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:16.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:16.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3295-Nisan-1"}],"0977-12-27":[],"AM-5950-Cheshvan-19":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-24":[],"AM-3761-Nisan-1":[],"AM-1656-Tishri-0":[],"2027-03-15":[],"AM-2479-Nisan-1":[{"title":"The Burning Bush — Moses called","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2479-Nisan-1","details":"While keeping Jethro's flock at Mount Horeb (the mountain of God), Moses saw a bush burning that was not consumed (Ex. 3:1–3). God spoke from the bush, commissioned Moses to lead Israel out of Egypt, revealed the divine name 'I AM THAT I AM' (YHWH; Ex. 3:14), and promised signs. Moses raised five objections; God answered each. Aaron was appointed as his spokesman. This event, one year before the Exodus (~1446 BC), is the pivot from 40 years in Midian to the Exodus mission. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2479,"gregorianDate":"AM-2479-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-2479-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800007000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:07.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T19:53:52.203Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2479-Nisan-1"}],"AM-1656-Tishri-18":[],"AM-2890-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Samuel Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2872-Nisan-2","details":"Samuel was the last judge of Israel and the first of the great prophets (Acts 13:20; 3:24). Born in answer to his mother Hannah's prayer and dedicated to the LORD's service at Shiloh (1 Sam. 1:28), he heard God's call as a child under Eli's tutelage (1 Sam. 3). After the Ark was returned from Philistia Samuel called Israel to repentance at Mizpah; God routed the Philistines with thunder and Israel recovered lost territory (1 Sam. 7:3–14). Samuel judged Israel all his life, circuiting Bethel, Gilgal and Mizpah (1 Sam. 7:15–17). When he was old the people demanded a king 'like all the nations' (1 Sam. 8:5); God granted their request over Samuel's warning. He anointed Saul and then David. He stands at the great transition from theocracy to monarchy. 1 Samuel 1–16; Acts 3:24.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2890,"gregorianDate":"AM-2872-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-2872-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771454166773.4976,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454038463.2283,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:33:58.463Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T23:58:27.218Z","endEventDate":"-1031-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2894,"anchorDate":"AM-2890-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5505-Tevet-14":[],"AM-2717-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-27":[],"AM-5950-Av-5":[],"2025-12-04":[],"AM-3373-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Daniel's Vision of Four Beasts","time":"","eventDate":"-552-03-24","details":"In the first year of Belshazzar (~553 BC) Daniel saw four great beasts rising from the sea: a lion with eagle's wings (Babylon), a bear raised on one side with three ribs in its mouth (Persia), a four-headed leopard with four wings (Greece), and a terrible beast with iron teeth and ten horns (Rome) — out of which arose a little horn speaking blasphemies (Dan. 7:3–8). Then Daniel saw the Ancient of Days seated on a throne of fire, and 'one like the Son of Man' coming with the clouds to receive an everlasting kingdom (Dan. 7:9–14). This vision is the apocalyptic counterpart to Nebuchadnezzar's statue (Dan. 2): the same four empires seen from God's perspective as predatory beasts rather than glorious metals. Jesus applies the 'Son of Man' title to himself throughout the Gospels. Daniel 7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3373,"gregorianDate":"-552-03-24","originalDate":"-552-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466452383.8884,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:00:52.383Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:09:47.040Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3373-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3758-Kislev-26":[],"AM-3041-Nisan-9":[{"title":"Omri Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-884-03-31","details":"Omri, founder of the Omride dynasty, reigned 12 years and built the city of Samaria as Israel's new capital, purchasing the hill of Samaria from Shemer for two talents of silver and naming the city after him (1 Kgs 16:24). Though the Bible records him as doing more evil than all before him (16:25), Omri was one of Israel's most capable political kings — the Moabite Mesha Stele calls the northern kingdom 'the house of Omri' a century after his dynasty ended, and Assyrian records referred to Israel as 'the house of Omri' throughout the following generations. His son Ahab's marriage to Jezebel was Omri's foreign policy alliance with Phoenicia — with catastrophic spiritual consequences. 1 Kings 16:21–28.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":9,"amYear":3041,"gregorianDate":"-884-03-31","originalDate":"-884-03-31","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403629430.3357,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403607403.9136,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:33:27.403Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:29:54.051Z","endEventDate":"-873-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3052,"anchorDate":"AM-3041-Nisan-9"}],"AM-2199-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Joseph","time":"","eventDate":"-1726-03-20","details":"Joseph, the eleventh son of Jacob, born of Rachel (Gen. 30:24), was the object of his father's special love and his brothers' jealousy. Sold into Egypt by his brothers for 20 pieces of silver (Gen. 37:28), he was falsely accused by Potiphar's wife and imprisoned. Through God-given dream interpretation he rose from prison to become Pharaoh's second-in-command at age 30 (Gen. 41:46). He saved Egypt and the surrounding nations from seven years of famine, and ultimately his own family — revealing himself to his brothers with the declaration: 'You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good' (Gen. 50:20). He is one of the most explicit 'types of Christ' in the Old Testament: beloved son, sold for silver, falsely accused, exalted from humiliation to rule, the saviour of both Jew and Gentile. He died at 110. Genesis 37–50.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2199,"gregorianDate":"-1726-03-20","originalDate":"-1726-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2199-Nisan-2","id":1770914829014.733,"createdAt":"2026-02-12T16:47:09.014Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.173Z","endEventDate":"-1616-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2309}],"-586-07-30":[],"AM-3921-Tammuz-8":[],"2025-06-17":[],"AM-1656-Tishri-14":[],"AM-1926-Sivan-20":[],"AM-3935-Nisan-14":[{"title":"Jesus at the Temple, Age Twelve","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3935-Nisan-14","details":"Luke 2:42 And when he was twelve years old, they went up to Jerusalem after the custom of the feast. When Jesus was twelve years old, he accompanied his parents to Jerusalem for the Passover — as was their annual custom. After the feast, Mary and Joseph departed with the caravan, assuming Jesus was among the company of relatives and acquaintances. After a day's journey they sought him and, not finding him, returned to Jerusalem. On the third day they found him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening and asking questions — and all who heard him were astonished at his understanding and his answers. When his mother pressed him, he replied that he must be about his Father's business. He then returned with them to Nazareth and was subject to them. Luke 2:41–52.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":3935,"gregorianDate":"AM-3935-Nisan-14","originalDate":"AM-3935-Nisan-14","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771531378869.1604,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3935-Nisan-14","id":1774932001268.2688,"createdAt":"2026-03-31T04:40:01.268Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T04:56:05.451Z"}],"AM-3073-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ahaziah Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-852-03-19","details":"Ahaziah son of Ahab reigned two years over Israel in Samaria. He did evil in God's sight, walking in the ways of his father and mother Jezebel and in the sins of Jeroboam. After falling through the lattice of his upper room in Samaria and injuring himself, he sent messengers to enquire of Baal-Zebub the god of Ekron whether he would recover. Elijah intercepted the messengers and sent word that Ahaziah would not recover from his bed but would die — fulfilled shortly after. He died without a son and was succeeded by his brother Joram (2 Kgs 1). Elijah twice called down fire from heaven on companies of 50 soldiers sent to arrest him before a third captain came humbly. 1 Kings 22:51–2 Kings 1:18.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3073,"gregorianDate":"-852-03-19","originalDate":"-852-03-19","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403675848.028,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403652808.5652,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:34:12.808Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:28:30.960Z","endEventDate":"-851-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3074,"anchorDate":"AM-3073-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3957-Nisan-19":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-17":[],"AM-2839-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5902-Kislev-28":[],"AM-5950-Adar-22":[],"AM-2916-Nisan-2":[{"title":"David Anointed King Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-1009-03-25","details":"After Saul and Jonathan died at the Battle of Jezreel (1 Sam. 31), David inquired of God whether to go up to Judah. God directed him to Hebron. There the men of Judah anointed David king over the house of Judah — his second anointing (2 Sam. 2:4). He reigned from Hebron over Judah alone for seven years and six months while Saul's son Ishbosheth held the northern tribes. The civil war between David's house and Saul's house gradually resolved: 'David waxed stronger and stronger, and the house of Saul waxed weaker and weaker' (2 Sam. 3:1). 2 Samuel 2:1–4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2916,"gregorianDate":"-1009-03-25","originalDate":"-1009-03-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454232563.0315,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:37:12.563Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:53:01.425Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2916-Nisan-2"},{"title":"David Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1009-03-25","details":"David reigned 40 years: 7 years and 6 months over Judah in Hebron, then 33 years over all Israel in Jerusalem (2 Sam. 5:4–5; 1 Kgs 2:11). His reign was the golden age of the united Israelite monarchy. He captured Jerusalem from the Jebusites and made it the political and religious capital; brought the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem; defeated the Philistines, Moabites, Syrians, Edomites and Ammonites; established the kingdom from the river of Egypt to the Euphrates. God made the Davidic Covenant with him, promising an eternal dynasty (2 Sam. 7). His great failure was the adultery with Bathsheba and the arranged killing of her husband Uriah (2 Sam. 11); Nathan's confrontation (2 Sam. 12) and Psalm 51 record his repentance. His son Absalom's rebellion was the most painful crisis of his reign (2 Sam. 15–18). 2 Samuel 2–24; 1 Kings 1–2.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2916,"gregorianDate":"-1009-03-25","originalDate":"-1009-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771303081717.4668,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454292929.9282,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:38:12.929Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:53:08.570Z","endEventDate":"-969-03-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2956,"anchorDate":"AM-2916-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2396-Av-1":[],"-1998-04-30":[],"-2268-02-17":[],"2072-07-20":[],"1966-03-20":[],"AM-3340-Nisan-17":[],"AM-235-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5945-Iyar-4":[],"AM-5950-Adar-11":[],"AM-5873-Iyar-22":[{"title":"War of independence Israel","time":"","eventDate":"1948-05-08","details":"The Israeli War of Independence (November 1947 – July 1949; Hebrew: Milchemet HaAtzma'ut) began when the Arab League rejected the UN Partition Plan of November 1947 and Arab irregular forces began attacking Jewish communities. Full-scale war erupted on 15 May 1948 when Egypt, Transjordan, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon invaded the day after Israel's declaration of independence. Despite being heavily outnumbered and under an international arms embargo, Israel successfully defended itself and expanded the territory allocated by the partition plan. Approximately 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled (the Nakba); approximately 850,000 Jews were expelled from Arab countries in subsequent years. Armistice agreements were signed with Egypt (Feb. 1949), Lebanon (March), Jordan (April) and Syria (July). Israel's survival was described by Ben-Gurion as a miracle.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":22,"amYear":5873,"gregorianDate":"1948-05-08","originalDate":"1948-05-08","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5873-Iyar-22","id":1771624588053.4275,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:56:28.053Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:27:44.953Z"}],"AM-3991-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Jewish War begins — Zealot revolt against Rome","time":"","eventDate":"66-03-18","details":"In 66 AD the Jewish Zealots launched a full revolt against Roman rule, overrunning the Roman garrison in Jerusalem and defeating the governor Cestius Gallus at the Battle of Beth Horon. This triggered the Roman military response under Vespasian and then his son Titus. Jesus had predicted the destruction of the Temple and the surrounding of Jerusalem by armies (Luke 21:20–24; Matt. 24:1–2). The war culminated in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 70 AD. Josephus is the primary source (Jewish War). Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3991,"gregorianDate":"66-03-18","originalDate":"66-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800029000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:29.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:29.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3991-Nisan-1"}],"2025-01-08":[],"AM-3523-Nisan-14":[{"title":"Daniel 62 Week Prophecy","time":"","eventDate":"-402-04-01","details":"The second section of Daniel's 70-weeks prophecy (Dan. 9:25–26) specifies 62 weeks (434 years) after the initial 7 weeks, culminating in 'Messiah the Prince' — after which 'Messiah shall be cut off, but not for himself.' From Nehemiah's decree in Nisan 445 BC: 7 + 62 = 69 weeks × 7 prophetic years of 360 days = 173,880 days = AD 32 (Nisan). Sir Robert Anderson's calculation in The Coming Prince (1894) brings this to 6 April AD 32 — the day of Jesus's triumphal entry into Jerusalem, when he was publicly presented as king (Luke 19:38–40). After the 69th week Messiah is cut off (crucified) and the city and sanctuary are destroyed (AD 70). The 70th week remains future. Daniel 9:25–27.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":3523,"gregorianDate":"-402-04-01","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771531378869.1604,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3523-Nisan-14","id":1767848687150.3247,"createdAt":"2026-01-08T00:55:58.361Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.173Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"originalDate":"-402-04-01","endEventDate":"32-04-03","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":17,"endAMYear":3957}],"AM-3186-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Pekah Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-739-03-25","details":"Pekah son of Remaliah reigned 20 years over Israel. During his reign Tiglath-Pileser of Assyria invaded and deported the populations of Galilee and Transjordan to Assyria — the first Assyrian mass deportation of Israelites (2 Kgs 15:29). Pekah allied with Rezin of Syria and attacked Judah in the Syro-Ephraimite War (734 BC), attempting to force Ahaz of Judah into their anti-Assyrian coalition and replace him with 'the son of Tabeel.' Isaiah delivered the Immanuel prophecy to Ahaz in this context (Isa. 7:14). Hoshea son of Elah conspired against Pekah and killed him. 2 Kings 15:27–31; Isaiah 7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3186,"gregorianDate":"-739-03-25","originalDate":"-739-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403948705.5256,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403921886.971,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:38:41.886Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:17:08.634Z","endEventDate":"-731-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3194,"anchorDate":"AM-3186-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2996-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Rehoboam Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-929-03-24","details":"[1Ki 14:21 KJV] 21 And Rehoboam the son of Solomon reigned in Judah. Rehoboam [was] forty and one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned seventeen years in Jerusalem, the city which the LORD did choose out of all the tribes of Israel, to put his name there. And his mother's name [was] Naamah an Ammonitess.\n\nRehoboam Reigns Over Judah\t17 years\t930–913 BC\t2996–3013 AM\t1 Kings 14:21\n","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2996,"gregorianDate":"-929-03-24","originalDate":"-929-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771303604294.0754,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2996-Nisan-2","id":1771303471323.8052,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:44:31.323Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:31:55.604Z","endEventDate":"-912-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3013},{"title":"Jeroboam I Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-929-03-24","details":"Jeroboam I, an Ephraimite overseer under Solomon, was told by the prophet Ahijah that he would receive ten tribes of the divided kingdom (1 Kgs 11:29–39). After Solomon's death the northern tribes rejected Rehoboam and made Jeroboam king. Fearing that if the people went to Jerusalem to worship they would return to the house of David, Jeroboam made two golden calves, placing them at Bethel and Dan: 'These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt' (1 Kgs 12:28) — echoing Aaron's sin at Sinai. He appointed non-Levitical priests and changed the feast dates. A man of God from Judah prophesied against the Bethel altar; Jeroboam's hand withered when he pointed at him and was only restored when he asked the prophet to pray for him. He reigned 22 years. 'The sins of Jeroboam' became the standard indictment for every subsequent northern king. 1 Kings 12–14.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2996,"gregorianDate":"-929-03-24","originalDate":"-929-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403489650.1487,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403432275.6873,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:30:32.275Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:32:05.380Z","endEventDate":"-908-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3017,"anchorDate":"AM-2996-Nisan-2"}],"AM-6000-Iyar-20":[],"AM-2003-Nisan-1":[],"2025-12-05":[],"AM-235-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Enos","time":"","eventDate":"-3690-03-25","details":"Enos (Hebrew: mortal/frail man) was born to Seth at age 90. Genesis 4:26 records that 'at that time people began to call upon the name of the LORD' — the beginning of corporate worship. He lived 905 years and begat Cainan at 90. Enos is the third generation from Adam and part of the Sethite line that leads to Noah. His name reflects the fragility of human life — in contrast to the pride of the Cainite Lamech. Genesis 5:6–11.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":235,"gregorianDate":"-3690-03-25","originalDate":"-3690-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942692197.346,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942646308.311,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:30:46.308Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:22:51.881Z","anchorDate":"AM-235-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2785-03-28","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1140}],"2025-03-19":[],"AM-5950-Kislev-23":[],"2000-02-12":[],"AM-3995-Av-18":[],"AM-6000-Tevet-14":[],"AM-3176-Nisan-3":[],"2025-03-20":[],"2025-03-21":[],"AM-3921-Av-22":[],"AM-5950-Adar-24":[],"AM-1656-Tishri-17":[{"title":"Gen 8:4 And the ark rested in the seventh month, on the seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-17","details":"On the 17th day of the seventh month the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat — the mountainous region of modern eastern Turkey and Armenia. The coming to rest is itself a theological moment: the Hebrew *nuach* ('to rest') shares its root with Noah's own name, and the ark settling on solid ground signals that judgment has run its course and a new world is emerging from the waters. Paul's description of Christ as 'the last Adam' (1 Cor. 15:45) invites a typological reading — just as Noah's ark bore the remnant of creation through death into new life, so Christ's resurrection is the first-fruits of a new creation (1 Cor. 15:4). Genesis 8:4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":17,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-17","originalDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-17","id":1771624163448.872,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:49:23.448Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z"}],"AM-3388-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3052-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3952-Tammuz-13":[],"AM-2923-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1849-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Nahor","time":"","eventDate":"-2076-03-21","details":"Nahor (Hebrew: snoring / the panting one) was born to Serug at 30. He lived 148 years — one of the shorter post-Flood lifespans — and begat Terah at 29. He is the grandfather of Abraham. A second Nahor (Abraham's brother) is named after him (Gen. 11:26–29). The city of Nahor in northwestern Mesopotamia (referenced in Gen. 24:10 and Mari tablets) may be named after him or his grandson. He is the ninth generation after the Flood. Genesis 11:22–25.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1849,"gregorianDate":"-2076-03-21","originalDate":"-2076-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943507658.629,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943455528.6895,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:44:15.528Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:25:40.661Z","anchorDate":"AM-1849-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1928-03-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1997}],"AM-130-Nisan-1":[],"AM-3390-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5951-Adar-29":[],"AM-622-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2397-Nisan-2":[],"AM-5504-Tevet-14":[],"AM-3085-Nisan-4":[],"-1996-03-24":[],"AM-3091-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-20":[],"AM-5944-Adar-24":[{"title":"Covid declared a Pandemic on the 11 of March","time":"","eventDate":"AM-5944-Adar-24","details":"On 11 March 2020 (5944 AM), the World Health Organisation declared COVID-19 a global pandemic — the first pandemic declaration since H1N1 in 2009. The SARS-CoV-2 virus had emerged in Wuhan, China in late 2019 and spread globally through human-to-human transmission. The pandemic resulted in an estimated 7 million confirmed deaths (likely significantly undercounted). Governments worldwide imposed lockdowns, travel restrictions and economic shutdowns of unprecedented scope. Synagogues, churches and mosques were closed globally — in many places for the first time in centuries. The pandemic accelerated the digitisation of religious life and raised eschatological questions about plague, the mark of the beast, and the end times across multiple faith traditions.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":24,"amYear":5944,"gregorianDate":"AM-5944-Adar-24","originalDate":"AM-5944-Adar-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5944-Adar-24","id":1771624861679.2168,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T22:01:01.679Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T04:33:13.481Z"}],"AM-2028-Nisan-15":[],"AM-874-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Lamech","time":"","eventDate":"-3051-03-21","details":"[Gen 5:28-29 KJV] 28 And Lamech lived an hundred eighty and two years, and begat a son: 29 And he called his name Noah, saying, This [same] shall comfort us concerning our work and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the LORD hath cursed.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":874,"gregorianDate":"-3051-03-21","originalDate":"-3051-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942954806.1333,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942915779.9646,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:35:15.779Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:23:43.946Z","anchorDate":"AM-874-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2274-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1651}],"AM-3320-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5424-Tevet-13":[],"AM-3375-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5507-Tishri-10":[],"AM-2845-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3317-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoahaz Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-608-03-23","details":"Jehoahaz (also called Shallum; Jer. 22:11) became king at 23 on the death of his father Josiah at Megiddo (609 BC), where Josiah was killed attempting to block Pharaoh Necho's march north (2 Chr. 35:20–24). He reigned only three months before Pharaoh Necho deposed him at Riblah, imposed tribute of 100 talents of silver and one talent of gold on Judah, and replaced him with his brother Eliakim (renamed Jehoiakim). Jehoahaz was taken to Egypt where he died in captivity (2 Kgs 23:34; Jer. 22:10–12). Jeremiah mourned him with the words 'weep ye not for the dead, neither bemoan him: but weep sore for him that goeth away.' 2 Kings 23:31–34; 2 Chronicles 36:1–4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3317,"gregorianDate":"-608-03-23","originalDate":"-608-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364167254.1648,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364142425.8408,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:35:42.425Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:12:47.958Z","endEventDate":"-608-06-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Tammuz","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3317,"anchorDate":"AM-3317-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Jehoiakim Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-608-03-23","details":"Jehoiakim (born Eliakim) was installed as king by Pharaoh Necho in place of his brother Jehoahaz and reigned 11 years (609–598 BC). He was a corrupt king who burned the scroll of Jeremiah's prophecies in his winter house (Jer. 36:23) and executed the prophet Urijah (Jer. 26:23). In his fourth year (605 BC) Nebuchadnezzar defeated Egypt at Carchemish and Jehoiakim became his vassal for three years, then rebelled. It was in his third year (Daniel 1:1) or fourth year (Jeremiah 25:1 — depending on counting system) that Daniel and companions were taken to Babylon. He died under uncertain circumstances during Nebuchadnezzar's siege (2 Kgs 24:6; Jer. 22:18–19). 2 Kings 23:34–24:6; Jeremiah 22:18–19; 36.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3317,"gregorianDate":"-608-03-23","originalDate":"-608-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364203659.6694,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364167254.1648,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:36:07.254Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:12:57.796Z","endEventDate":"-597-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3328,"anchorDate":"AM-3317-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3128-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Sivan-27":[{"title":"12-day war","time":"","eventDate":"2025-06-14","details":"The 12-Day War refers to Israel's June 2025 military campaign against Iran (Operation Rising Lion / Operation Roaring Lion), triggered by Iran's continued nuclear weapons development and the regional threat environment following the October 7 attacks and their aftermath. Israel struck Iranian nuclear facilities, military infrastructure and IRGC assets in a sustained air and missile campaign. Iran retaliated with ballistic missile salvoes against Israeli cities. The conflict lasted approximately 12 days before a US-brokered ceasefire. It was the first direct Israel-Iran military conflict and represented a significant escalation from the shadow war conducted through proxies. The campaign severely damaged Iran's nuclear programme and degraded its air defence and missile production capabilities.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":27,"amYear":5950,"gregorianDate":"2025-06-14","originalDate":"2025-06-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5950-Sivan-27","id":1769617506353.262,"createdAt":"2026-01-28T16:25:06.353Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-23T16:43:45.950Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"endEventDate":"2025-06-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Tammuz","endAMDay":8,"endAMYear":5950}],"AM-3340-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Fiery Furnace (Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego)","time":"","eventDate":"-585-03-24","details":"Nebuchadnezzar erected a gold statue 60 cubits high (approximately 27 metres) on the plain of Dura and commanded all officials to bow at the sound of music (Dan. 3:1–6). Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego refused. Thrown into a furnace heated seven times hotter than usual — so hot it killed the soldiers who threw them in — the three walked unbound in the fire, accompanied by a fourth figure 'like the Son of God' (Dan. 3:25 KJV). They emerged without even the smell of fire on them. Nebuchadnezzar declared: 'there is no other God that can deliver after this sort' (Dan. 3:29) and promoted the three men. This event demonstrates that God's protection operates even in the most extreme circumstances and points forward to the resurrection. Daniel 3.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3340,"gregorianDate":"-585-03-24","originalDate":"-585-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466377492.8274,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T01:59:37.492Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:10:24.354Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3340-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Temple in ruins","time":"","eventDate":"-585-03-24","details":"586 BC — Temple destroyed. Babylon destroys Jerusalem (Judah ends — 2 Kings 25:2)\n\n586 BC — Temple destroyed\n   ↓ 70 years\n516 BC — Second Temple completed ✅ EXACT","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3340,"gregorianDate":"-585-03-24","originalDate":"-585-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1767826160332.0369,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1771361003639.186,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771346502298.134,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T16:41:42.298Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z","anchorDate":"AM-3340-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-515-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3410}],"AM-3074-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Joram (Jehoram) Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-851-03-25","details":"Joram (Jehoram) son of Ahab reigned 12 years over Israel. He removed the sacred pillar of Baal his father had made but clung to the sins of Jeroboam (2 Kgs 3:2–3). His reign was dominated by conflict with Moab (2 Kgs 3) and Syria — including the siege of Samaria that reduced the city to cannibalism (2 Kgs 6:24–7:20). The prophet Elisha performed miracles throughout Joram's reign: the purification of the Jordan, the resurrection of the Shunammite's son, the healing of Naaman's leprosy, and the blinding of the Syrian army. Joram was killed by Jehu at Jezreel in the coup that ended the house of Ahab. 2 Kings 3:1–9:26.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3074,"gregorianDate":"-851-03-25","originalDate":"-851-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403698937.5989,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403675848.028,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:34:35.848Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:28:10.823Z","endEventDate":"-840-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3085,"anchorDate":"AM-3074-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2519-Shevat-1":[{"title":"Moses Opens His Mouth One Last Time: The Farewell Address Begins","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-01-17","details":"Month 11, Day 1 — Deuteronomy 1:3\n\"Moses Opens His Mouth One Last Time: The Farewell Address Begins\"\nOn the first day of the eleventh month of the fortieth year Moses begins speaking the words of Deuteronomy to all Israel on the plains of Moab beyond the Jordan. This is his great farewell address — a retelling of Israel's history, a renewal of the covenant, and a final call to obedience before they enter the land. Moses is 120 years old and knows he will not cross the Jordan. (Deuteronomy 1:3)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Shevat","amDay":1,"amYear":2519,"gregorianDate":"-1405-01-17","originalDate":"-1405-01-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2519-Shevat-1","id":1771699638642.4443,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T18:47:18.642Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T18:47:18.642Z"}],"AM-5952-Nisan-7":[],"AM-2617-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5946-Iyar-17":[{"title":"Guardian of the Wall Gaza","time":"","eventDate":"2021-05-03","details":"Operation Guardian of the Walls (10–21 May 2021; Hebrew: Shmirat HaHomot) was an 11-day military conflict triggered by Hamas rocket fire following tensions at the Temple Mount and Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in Jerusalem during Ramadan. Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other factions fired over 4,360 rockets at Israel — the heaviest barrage since 2014 — with Iron Dome intercepting approximately 90%. Israel conducted over 1,500 airstrikes in Gaza. 13 Israelis and approximately 256 Palestinians were killed. The conflict spread to Israeli Arab communities with unprecedented inter-communal violence. The operation ended with an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire on 21 May 2021. The conflict underscored the continued centrality of Jerusalem's status to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":17,"amYear":5946,"gregorianDate":"2021-05-03","originalDate":"2021-05-03","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5946-Iyar-17","id":1771624941021.6865,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T22:02:21.021Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:18:54.712Z"}],"1946-06-14":[{"title":"Donald Trump","time":"","eventDate":"1946-06-14","details":"Donald John Trump was born on June 14, 1946, in Queens, New York City. He is a businessman, television personality, and politician who served as the 45th President of the United States (January 20, 2017 – January 20, 2021) and was elected as the 47th President (January 20, 2025 – present). He is the first US president to serve non-consecutive terms since Grover Cleveland. As president he moved the US Embassy to Jerusalem (2018), brokered the Abraham Accords normalising relations between Israel and several Arab states, and took strong pro-Israel positions throughout both administrations. His relationship to biblical prophecy and end-times scenarios has been a subject of significant discussion in prophetic circles.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"gregorian-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"gregorian","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":26,"amYear":5871,"gregorianDate":"1946-06-14","originalDate":"1946-06-14","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771111129957.1057,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":true,"anchorDate":"1946-06-14","id":1771111052755.8953,"createdAt":"2026-02-14T23:17:32.755Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:27:28.599Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"-1965-01-20":[],"AM-5948-Av-5":[],"2025-03-02":[],"AM-3013-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Abijah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-912-03-23","details":"[1Ki 15:1-2 KJV] 1 Now in the eighteenth year of king Jeroboam the son of Nebat reigned Abijam over Judah. 2 Three years reigned he in Jerusalem. And his mother's name [was] Maachah, the daughter of Abishalom.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3013,"gregorianDate":"-912-03-23","originalDate":"-912-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771303713184.9097,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3013-Nisan-2","id":1771303604294.0754,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:46:44.294Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:31:31.058Z","endEventDate":"-909-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3016}],"AM-5425-Tevet-14":[],"-451-04-08":[],"1977-02-05":[],"AM-3527-Nisan-18":[],"AM-687-Nisan-3":[],"2025-12-28":[],"2026-09-15":[],"2026-06-16":[],"AM-2870-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Samson Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2870-Nisan-2","details":"Samson of the tribe of Dan was a Nazirite from birth (Judges 13:5), called to 'begin to deliver Israel from the Philistines.' His life is a paradox: the strongest man in the Bible yet the weakest in self-discipline. He killed a lion with his bare hands (14:6), slew 30 Philistines for their garments (14:19), burned the Philistines' crops with 300 foxes (15:4–5), killed 1,000 men with a jawbone of an ass (15:15), and tore off Gaza's city gates (16:3). He was betrayed by Delilah, who discovered that his strength lay in his uncut Nazirite hair. Blinded and enslaved, his hair grew back; at a Philistine feast he pushed down the pillars of the temple of Dagon, killing more in his death than in his life (16:30). He judged Israel 20 years. Judges 13–16.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2870,"gregorianDate":"AM-2870-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-2870-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771454038463.2283,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453965702.615,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:32:45.702Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T23:54:39.056Z","endEventDate":"-1035-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2890,"anchorDate":"AM-2870-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3173-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Zechariah Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-752-03-20","details":"Zechariah son of Jeroboam II reigned 6 months over Israel in Samaria — the fourth and last king of the dynasty of Jehu. He did evil in God's sight, walking in the sins of Jeroboam (2 Kgs 15:9). He was publicly assassinated by Shallum son of Jabesh. His death fulfilled God's word to Jehu: 'Your sons to the fourth generation shall sit on the throne of Israel' (2 Kgs 10:30) — Jehu, Jehoahaz, Jehoash, Jeroboam II, Zechariah. With Zechariah the last stable dynasty of the northern kingdom ended; the 30 remaining years of the northern kingdom saw five kings in rapid succession by assassination. 2 Kings 15:8–12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3173,"gregorianDate":"-752-03-20","originalDate":"-752-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403842239.6035,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403816096.0435,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:36:56.096Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:19:05.742Z","endEventDate":"-752-09-18","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Tishri","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3173,"anchorDate":"AM-3173-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5952-Adar-22":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-12":[{"title":"The Olivet Discourse / Judas Betrays","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-12","details":"On 12 Nisan, Jesus withdrew from the temple for the last time and sat on the Mount of Olives, where he delivered the Olivet Discourse — his extended prophecy concerning the destruction of Jerusalem, the signs of the end, and his return. That same day Judas went to the chief priests and agreed to betray Jesus for thirty pieces of silver, fulfilling Zechariah 11:12. Matt. 24–25; Mark 13; Luke 21:5–38; Matt. 26:14–16.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":12,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-12","originalDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-12","id":1774900578412.5789,"createdAt":"2026-03-30T19:56:18.412Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T02:03:44.266Z"}],"AM-5993-Nisan-1":[],"AM-3921-Tammuz-15":[],"AM-1656-Shevat-11":[{"title":"Gen 8:6 And it came to pass at the end of forty days, that Noah opened the window of the ark which he had made: Gen 8:7 And he sent forth a raven, which went forth to and fro, until the waters were dried up from off the earth. Gen 8:8 Also he sent forth a dove from him, to see if the waters were abated from off the face of the ground;","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-11","details":"","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Shevat","amDay":11,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-11","originalDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-11","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-11","id":1771624186407.1562,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:49:46.407Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z"}],"AM-3957-Nisan-22":[],"AM-0-Nisan-0":[],"AM-3594-Nisan-1":[],"2026-03-03":[],"AM-3922-Tishri-15":[{"title":"Birth of Jesus Christ ","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3922-Tishri-15","details":"Luke 2:7 And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. During the Feast of Tabernacles, Mary brought forth her firstborn son in Bethlehem — wrapping him in swaddling clothes and laying him in a manger, for there was no room in the inn. The Word became flesh and tabernacled among us (John 1:14) — a profound convergence of the Incarnation with the feast God had instituted in Leviticus 23:33–43 to commemorate the wilderness years, when Israel dwelt in booths while the Tabernacle stood in their midst. These two realities were simultaneous — God commanding Moses to build him a sanctuary that he might dwell among his people (Exodus 25:8), while Israel itself lived in temporary shelters around it. When the Tabernacle was completed, the glory of God filled it (Exodus 40:34). Sukkot was later instituted to memorialize that entire season as one unified picture — God dwelling among a people who themselves dwelt in tents. Now, in the fullness of time, that same glory took up residence not in a tent of acacia wood and fine linen, but in human flesh. The Greek word John uses — σκηνόω — means literally to pitch a tent, to tabernacle — a deliberate echo of the wilderness sanctuary. Shepherds in the nearby fields received the angelic announcement and came to worship. It was the census of Augustus that had drawn Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem — unknowingly fulfilling Micah's ancient word that out of Bethlehem would come the ruler of Israel, the city of David, whose goings forth have been from everlasting. Zechariah had prophesied that one day all nations would keep the Feast of Tabernacles in Jerusalem (Zech. 14:16–19) — a promise that reaches forward to the age to come. Luke 2:1–20; John 1:14; Exodus 25:8; Exodus 40:34; Leviticus 23:33–43; Deuteronomy 16:13–15; Micah 5:2; Zechariah 14:16–19.\n\n---\n\n**Tags/Events:** Jesus Born, Nativity, Birth of Christ, Incarnation, Bethlehem, Sukkot, Feast of Tabernacles, Tabernacle, Booths, Wilderness, Exodus, Tabernacle of Moses, Shekinah, Glory, Shepherds, Angels, Manger, Mary, Joseph, Census\n","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":15,"amYear":3922,"gregorianDate":"AM-3922-Tishri-15","originalDate":"AM-3922-Tishri-15","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771531378869.1604,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1774932001268.2688,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3922-Tishri-15","id":1771624516037.7454,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:55:16.037Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T20:20:00.654Z"}],"2025-03-09":[],"AM-5950-Cheshvan-5":[],"AM-2807-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1656-Shevat-10":[],"AM-2481-Nisan-14":[{"title":"Remembering the Night of Deliverance: Passover","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-03-31","details":"Month 1, Day 14\n\"Remembering the Night of Deliverance: Passover\"\nGod commands Moses in the wilderness of Sinai to have Israel observe the Passover — the first since the original one in Egypt the year before. The people observe it faithfully at twilight on the 14th of the first month, following all the ordinances Moses had given them. (Numbers 9:1-5)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-03-31","originalDate":"-1444-03-31","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Nisan-14","id":1771525683725.8486,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T18:28:03.725Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:10:26.426Z"}],"AM-1878-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5000-Shevat-18":[],"AM-2480-Adar-23":[],"AM-2923-Nisan-2":[{"title":"David Anointed King Over All Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1002-03-23","details":"After the assassination of Ishbosheth (2 Sam. 4), all the elders of Israel came to David at Hebron and anointed him king over all Israel in a covenant before God — his third and final anointing (2 Sam. 5:3). David was 30 years old when he began to reign (2 Sam. 5:4). He immediately moved to conquer Jerusalem from the Jebusites, calling it the City of David, and brought the Ark of the Covenant there. God made the Davidic Covenant with him — promising that his throne would be established forever and that one of his descendants would build a house for God's name (2 Sam. 7:12–16). The New Testament opens by identifying Jesus as 'the son of David' (Matt. 1:1). 2 Samuel 5:1–12; 7:1–17.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2923,"gregorianDate":"-1002-03-23","originalDate":"-1002-03-23","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454255401.349,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:37:35.401Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:52:42.278Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2923-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3286-Nisan-3":[],"2069-03-18":[],"AM-2717-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Deborah Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1208-03-20","details":"Deborah was a prophetess and the only female judge in the book of Judges. She held court under the Palm of Deborah between Ramah and Bethel in the hill country of Ephraim (Judges 4:4–5). She summoned Barak son of Abinoam and commanded him to muster forces at Mount Tabor to face Sisera, commander of Jabin king of Canaan's army with its 900 iron chariots. Barak refused to go without Deborah; she agreed but prophesied the honour would go to a woman. Sisera's army was routed and Sisera himself was killed by Jael, who drove a tent peg through his head (Judges 4:21). The Song of Deborah (Judges 5) is one of the oldest poems in the Bible. The land had rest 40 years. Judges 4–5.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2717,"gregorianDate":"-1208-03-20","originalDate":"-1208-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453758782.8176,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453735696.5952,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:28:55.696Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:58:21.673Z","endEventDate":"-1168-03-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2757,"anchorDate":"AM-2717-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3928-Nisan-1":[],"AM-3306-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Daniel","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3306-Nisan-2","details":"Daniel (Hebrew: God is my judge) was taken to Babylon in the first deportation under Nebuchadnezzar in 605 BC at approximately age 16 (Dan. 1:1–4). He was selected for training in the Babylonian royal court along with Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah (renamed Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego). Daniel purposed in his heart not to defile himself with the king's food and wine, and God gave him and his companions knowledge, skill in learning, and wisdom — and Daniel the ability to interpret visions and dreams (Dan. 1:17). He served in Babylon from approximately 605 BC to at least 537 BC — through the reigns of Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, and Darius the Mede. His prophetic ministry produced the most detailed and datable empire chronology in the Old Testament. Daniel 1.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3306,"gregorianDate":"AM-3306-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-3306-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1767826160332.0369,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466183592.6792,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T01:56:23.592Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T18:44:23.996Z","endEventDate":"-529-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3396,"anchorDate":"AM-3306-Nisan-2"}],"2026-01-09":[],"AM-0-Nisan-10":[],"AM-5950-Adar-19":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-16":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-26":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-29":[],"AM-3356-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Nebuchadnezzar's Dream of Tree","time":"","eventDate":"-569-03-25","details":"Nebuchadnezzar dreamed of a great tree reaching to heaven, visible to all the earth, sheltering animals and birds — then cut down to a stump, bound with iron and bronze, its mind changed from a man's to an animal's for seven times (Dan. 4:10–17). Daniel reluctantly interpreted: the tree is Nebuchadnezzar himself. Twelve months later, while boasting on his palace roof ('Is not this great Babylon that I have built?'), a voice fell from heaven and immediately he was driven out to eat grass like an ox for seven years until he acknowledged that 'the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of men' (Dan. 4:32). At the end of seven years his reason returned, he lifted his eyes to heaven, and his kingdom was restored. This is the only extended first-person narrative of a Gentile king in the Bible. Daniel 4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3356,"gregorianDate":"-569-03-25","originalDate":"-569-03-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466425700.1218,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:00:25.700Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:10:03.331Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3356-Nisan-2"}],"2026-01-06":[],"AM-5950-Iyar-5":[],"2075-07-05":[],"AM-5926-Tishri-19":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-11":[{"title":"Teaching in the Temple","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-11","details":"On 11 Nisan, the day after the Triumphal Entry, Jesus returned to Jerusalem and taught publicly in the temple. On the way he cursed a barren fig tree — an acted parable of judgment on fruitless religion. He cleansed the temple of money changers, and engaged religious leaders in a series of confrontational exchanges — parables of the two sons, the wicked tenants, and the wedding banquet. The Pharisees, Sadducees, and scribes each attempted to trap him with questions about taxes, resurrection, and the greatest commandment. Matt. 21:12–23:39; Mark 11:12–12:44; Luke 19:45–21:4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":11,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-11","originalDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-11","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-11","id":1774900482339.8464,"createdAt":"2026-03-30T19:54:42.339Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T20:35:59.041Z"}],"AM-3960-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus","time":"","eventDate":"35-03-18","details":"Saul of Tarsus, a Pharisee zealously persecuting the church, was travelling to Damascus with letters authorizing the arrest of believers when a blinding light struck him down and he heard the voice of the risen Jesus: 'Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?' (Acts 9:3–5). Blinded for three days, he was healed and baptized by Ananias. This event transformed the church's greatest persecutor into its greatest missionary. Paul dates his conversion as occurring three years before his first Jerusalem visit (Gal. 1:18). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3960,"gregorianDate":"35-03-18","originalDate":"35-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800027000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:27.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:27.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3960-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3016-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Asa Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-909-03-20","details":"[1Ki 15:9-10 KJV] 9 And in the twentieth year of Jeroboam king of Israel reigned Asa over Judah. 10 And forty and one years reigned he in Jerusalem. And his mother's name [was] Maachah, the daughter of Abishalom.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3016,"gregorianDate":"-909-03-20","originalDate":"-909-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771303996894.413,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3016-Nisan-2","id":1771303713184.9097,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:48:33.184Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:31:12.665Z","endEventDate":"-868-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3057}],"AM-2956-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Solomon Reigns Over Israel (UNITED KINGDOM)","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2956-Nisan-2","details":"Solomon son of David was anointed king while David was still alive to prevent Adonijah from seizing the throne (1 Kgs 1:38–40). He reigned 40 years and was the wisest man who ever lived — God appearing to him at Gibeon and offering him anything; he asked for wisdom to govern the people and received it, plus riches and honour as well (1 Kgs 3:5–14). His reign was the golden age of Israelite prosperity and culture: he built the First Temple (1 Kgs 6–8), composed 3,000 proverbs and 1,005 songs (1 Kgs 4:32), and received tributes from kings across the ancient world. His most famous judgment — the two women claiming one infant — became the symbol of divine wisdom in human governance. His great failure was marrying 700 wives and 300 concubines from foreign nations who turned his heart to their gods in his old age (1 Kgs 11:1–8). 1 Kings 1–11.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2956,"gregorianDate":"AM-2956-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-2956-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771290279823.7915,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1771303471323.8052,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1771403432275.6873,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1769635619537.6362,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2956-Nisan-2","id":1771303081717.4668,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:38:01.717Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T03:43:44.137Z","endEventDate":"-929-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2996}],"AM-5950-Tevet-5":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-0":[],"2025-12-13":[],"AM-3474-Nisan-17":[],"AM-3176-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jotham Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-749-03-24","details":"Jotham became king at 25 and reigned 16 years, having already served as co-regent while his father Uzziah was leprous. He 'did that which was right in the sight of the LORD' (2 Kgs 15:34), built the upper gate of the Temple, and continued his father's military successes against the Ammonites. However 'the people did yet corruptly' (2 Chr. 27:2) — Jotham's personal faithfulness did not reverse the nation's slide into idolatry. His reign marks the beginning of the period when the prophets Isaiah and Micah began their ministries. The Assyrian threat on the horizon would intensify under his successor Ahaz. 2 Kings 15:32–38; 2 Chronicles 27.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3176,"gregorianDate":"-749-03-24","originalDate":"-749-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363998726.4365,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363970437.3115,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:32:50.437Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:18:00.869Z","endEventDate":"-734-03-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3191,"anchorDate":"AM-3176-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2199-Nisan-15":[],"AM-2830-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2480-Tishri-10":[],"AM-5928-Nisan-2":[],"2072-10-03":[],"AM-6000-Adar-30":[],"AM-3406-Elul-24":[{"title":"Temple Rebuilding Resumes","time":"","eventDate":"-519-09-14","details":"Based on the biblical account, the temple rebuilding resumed around **520 BC** (in the second year of King Darius, per Haggai 1:15), and it was completed in **516 BC** — roughly **4 years later**, specifically on the third day of the month of Adar in the sixth year of Darius's reign (Ezra 6:15).","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Elul","amDay":24,"amYear":3406,"gregorianDate":"-519-09-14","originalDate":"-519-09-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403115701.2644,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:25:15.701Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-23T12:36:22.049Z","endEventDate":"-514-02-17","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Adar","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":3410,"anchorDate":"AM-3406-Elul-24"}],"AM-3229-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5272-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Black Death — plague reaches the Holy Land","time":"","eventDate":"1347-03-28","details":"The Black Death (Yersinia pestis) reached the Levant and Egypt by 1347–1348 AD, having spread from Central Asia along trade routes. Contemporary Arab chronicler Ibn Battuta and Ibn al-Wardi documented its devastation. The plague killed an estimated one-third to one-half of Europe's population and comparable proportions in the Middle East. Jewish communities were disproportionately blamed and massacred across Europe, accelerating the eastward movement of Ashkenazi Jews to Poland and Lithuania. The demographic collapse reshaped medieval Christendom and the Islamic world alike. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5272,"gregorianDate":"1347-03-28","originalDate":"1347-03-28","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800039000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:39.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:39.000Z","endEventDate":"1351-03-28","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":5276,"anchorDate":"AM-5272-Nisan-1"}],"2025-03-24":[],"AM-5948-Tevet-14":[],"AM-395-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3134-Nisan-3":[],"1977-11-25":[],"1-07-04":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-14":[],"AM-1723-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2832-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-13":[],"AM-5508-Tevet-11":[],"-1444-03-16":[],"AM-3112-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5951-Adar-31":[],"2026-03-26":[],"AM-3163-Sivan-22":[],"AM-5950-Adar-4":[],"2027-03-14":[],"2025-12-25":[],"1977-03-22":[],"AM-130-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3018-Nisan-3":[],"2025-12-06":[],"AM-2397-Av-1":[{"title":"Aaron","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2397-Av-1","details":"Aaron\nExodus 7:7 tells us Aaron was 83 at the Exodus and Numbers 33:38-39 tells us he died at 123 on a specific date. That gives us:\n\nBorn: 2397 AM (3 years before Moses)\nDied: Month 5, Day 1, 2519 AM","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Av","amDay":1,"amYear":2397,"gregorianDate":"AM-2397-Av-1","originalDate":"AM-2397-Av-1","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771700855798.6082,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":"-1406-07-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Av","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":2519,"anchorDate":"AM-2397-Av-1","id":1771701819479.5112,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T19:23:39.479Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T08:37:15.784Z"}],"AM-7000-Adar-30":[],"AM-2480-Tammuz-17":[],"AM-2617-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ehud Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1308-03-25","details":"After Othniel's death Israel sinned again. God strengthened Eglon king of Moab who allied with the Ammonites and Amalekites and occupied Jericho ('the city of palm trees') for 18 years. Ehud, a left-handed Benjaminite, fashioned a double-edged sword and assassinated Eglon with it after delivering Israel's tribute, escaping before the body was discovered. He then rallied Israel to seize the fords of the Jordan and killed 10,000 Moabites. The land had rest for 80 years — the longest peace in the judges period. The detail of Ehud's left-handedness is significant: it allowed him to carry a weapon on his right thigh, where guards would not check a right-handed man. Judges 3:12–30.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2617,"gregorianDate":"-1308-03-25","originalDate":"-1308-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453694961.2974,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453648148.4214,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:27:28.148Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:59:04.951Z","endEventDate":"-1228-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2697,"anchorDate":"AM-2617-Nisan-2"}],"3075-03-27":[],"2026-01-04":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-15":[{"title":"15th Nisan Dawn / Morning          THE WEALTH TRANSFER","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-03","details":"At dawn on 15 Nisan the Israelites carried out God's instruction to ask their Egyptian neighbours for articles of silver and gold and for clothing (Ex. 12:35–36; 11:2–3). God gave Israel favour in the eyes of the Egyptians, who willingly gave. The text says they 'plundered Egypt' (Ex. 12:36) — a fulfilment of God's promise to Abraham that his descendants would come out of Egypt with great possessions (Gen. 15:14). This transfer of Egypt's wealth is sometimes called the 'despoiling of Egypt' in rabbinic tradition. It provides Israel with the material resources used later for the construction of the Tabernacle (Ex. 25:1–9; 35:4–9). Exodus 12:35–36.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":15,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-03","originalDate":"-1445-04-03","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-15","id":1771637792771.145,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:36:32.771Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T04:32:26.397Z"},{"title":"15th Nisan Day 1 of March          Depart Rameses → Succoth","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-15","details":"~2–3 million people begin the Exodus. 600,000 men on foot plus women, children & mixed multitude. Ex. 12:37–38.\n\nPeople/Groups:\nMoses, Aaron, Israelites, mixed multitude, Pharaoh, Egyptians\nEvents:\nExodus, departure, march, plundering Egyptians, unleavened bread, Passover aftermath","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":15,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-15","originalDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-15","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771290279823.7915,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-15","id":1771638249303.9817,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:44:09.303Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T20:48:08.745Z"}],"AM-3956-Cheshvan-1":[],"1980-01-25":[],"AM-5997-Tishri-13":[],"AM-2851-Nisan-2":[],"2026-03-17":[],"AM-2852-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Elon Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1073-03-21","details":"Elon the Zebulunite judged Israel 10 years and was buried in Aijalon in the territory of Zebulun (Judges 12:11–12). His account is the second briefest in Judges — three verses — with no detail of his exploits. Like the other minor judges Elon represents the ongoing governance of the tribal confederation between the major crises. Zebulun was one of the northern tribes; its territory bordered the later region of Galilee. Judges 12:11–12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2852,"gregorianDate":"-1073-03-21","originalDate":"-1073-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453939421.066,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453915402.625,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:31:55.402Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:55:03.576Z","endEventDate":"-1063-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2862,"anchorDate":"AM-2852-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5951-Elul-31":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-15":[],"AM-3040-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Elah Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-885-03-26","details":"Elah son of Baasha reigned two years over Israel in Tirzah. He was killed in a conspiracy by Zimri, commander of half his chariotry, who struck him down at the house of his steward Arza while he was drunk (1 Kgs 16:9–10). Zimri then killed all the house of Baasha, fulfilling the prophecy of Jehu son of Hanani against Baasha (1 Kgs 16:1–4). Northern Israel's monarchy continued its unstable pattern of assassination and dynastic destruction. Elah was the second and last king of Baasha's dynasty. 1 Kings 16:8–14.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3040,"gregorianDate":"-885-03-26","originalDate":"-885-03-26","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403582270.6848,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403556792.3645,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:32:36.792Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:30:16.726Z","endEventDate":"-884-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3041,"anchorDate":"AM-3040-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3204-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Assyria Destroys Northern Kingdom","time":"","eventDate":"-721-03-24","details":"In 722/722 BC Sargon II of Assyria completed the conquest and deportation of the northern kingdom of Israel, following Shalmaneser V's three-year siege of Samaria (2 Kgs 17:5–6; 18:9–12). Sargon's own annals record: 'I besieged and conquered Samaria, led away as booty 27,290 inhabitants of it.' The Assyrian policy of mass deportation and resettlement of foreign populations deliberately mixed peoples to prevent future rebellion. The exiled Israelites merged with surrounding populations — the ten 'lost tribes.' The land was repopulated with peoples from Babylon, Cuthah, Avva, Hamath and Sepharvaim who intermarried with remaining Israelites, producing the Samaritans (2 Kgs 17:24–41). This fulfilled the warnings of Amos (5:27; 7:17) and Hosea (9:3; 11:5). 2 Kings 17:1–23.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3204,"gregorianDate":"-721-03-24","originalDate":"-721-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403987541.8691,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:39:47.541Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:15:38.145Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3204-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5949-Nisan-20":[],"2076-01-29":[],"AM-3085-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2872-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3338-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Ezekiel's Egypt oracle sequence (span)","time":"","eventDate":"-587-03-14","details":"Ezekiel's dated oracles against Egypt span 588–571 BC: Ezek. 29:1 (year 10 = Jan. 588 BC); 32:1 (year 12 = March 585 BC); 29:17 (year 27 = April 571 BC — the latest date in the book). Nebuchadnezzar's Egyptian campaign (~568 BC) fulfills the prophecy, confirmed by Babylonian sources. Dates in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3338,"gregorianDate":"-587-03-14","originalDate":"-587-03-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700007000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:07:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:07:00.000Z","endEventDate":"-571-03-14","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3354,"anchorDate":"AM-3338-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Ezekiel's dated oracles begin — Tyre and Egypt","time":"","eventDate":"-587-03-20","details":"Ezekiel 26:1 timestamps his oracle against Tyre to 'the eleventh year, on the first of the month' — Nisan 1, year 11 of Jehoiachin's exile = 588 BC. Ezekiel is unique among the prophets for providing precise year/month/day headers on his oracles, cross-referenceable with the Babylonian Chronicles. Egypt and Babylon are the two empires dominating this period; Nebuchadnezzar is God's instrument of judgment.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3338,"gregorianDate":"-587-03-20","originalDate":"-587-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600008000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:08:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:08:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3338-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2480-Sivan-7":[],"AM-3090-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Joel prophesies — Day of the LORD","time":"","eventDate":"-835-03-12","details":"Joel prophesies in response to a devastating locust plague interpreted as a foretaste of the Day of the LORD (Joel 1:4–2:11). He calls Israel to repentance and promises restoration, including the outpouring of God's Spirit on all flesh (Joel 2:28–32) — quoted by Peter at Pentecost (Acts 2:16–21). Joel's date is debated (900–400 BC); the early date of ~836 BC fits a pre-Amos position in the canonical sequence and the absence of Assyria or Babylon as a threat. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3090,"gregorianDate":"-835-03-12","originalDate":"-835-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800010000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:10.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:10.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3090-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5507-Tevet-17":[],"AM-2399-Adar-7":[{"title":"Birth of Moses","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2399-Adar-7","details":"Moses was born to Jochebed and Amram of the tribe of Levi in 2399 AM during Pharaoh's decree to kill Hebrew infant boys (Ex. 2:1–2). His mother hid him for three months, then placed him in a papyrus basket coated with bitumen and pitch among the reeds of the Nile. Pharaoh's daughter found him, named him Moses ('drawn out of water'), and raised him in the Egyptian court. Stephen in Acts 7:22 records that 'Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians.' Exodus 7:7 tells us Moses was 80 at the Exodus and Deuteronomy 34:7 that he died at 120 — giving a lifespan of 2399–2519 AM, dying in the plains of Moab in the 41st year after the Exodus. No specific month or day is given for either his birth or his death in the biblical text. Genesis 2:1–2; Exodus 7:7; Deuteronomy 34:7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":7,"amYear":2399,"gregorianDate":"AM-2399-Adar-7","originalDate":"AM-2399-Adar-7","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771638249303.9817,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":"-1405-02-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Adar","endAMDay":7,"endAMYear":2519,"anchorDate":"AM-2399-Adar-7","id":1771700855798.6082,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T19:07:35.798Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z"}],"AM-460-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jared","time":"","eventDate":"-3465-03-25","details":"Jared (Hebrew: descent / he who descended) was born to Mahalaleel at 65. He lived 962 years — the second-longest lifespan in the Bible after Methuselah (969) — and begat Enoch at 162. Jared is the sixth generation from Adam. Some ancient traditions (notably 1 Enoch 6) connect his name to the descent of the 'Watchers' (fallen angels) in his days, though this is extrabiblical. He is an ancestor of Noah and of the Messianic line. Genesis 5:15–20.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":460,"gregorianDate":"-3465-03-25","originalDate":"-3465-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942841886.1907,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942793499.6409,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:33:13.499Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:21:06.311Z","anchorDate":"AM-460-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2503-03-27","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1422}],"AM-3953-Av-3":[],"AM-3014-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5941-Shevat-2":[],"AM-4401-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Fall of Western Roman Empire","time":"","eventDate":"476-03-21","details":"The Western Roman Empire formally ended on 4 September 476 AD when the Germanic chieftain Odoacer deposed the last western emperor Romulus Augustulus and sent the imperial insignia to the Eastern Emperor Zeno in Constantinople. Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire treats this as the end of ancient history. In biblical terms this is the collapse of the fourth empire of Daniel — the legs of iron — and the transition to the fragmented toes of iron mixed with clay (Dan. 2:41–43). The Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire continued until 1453 AD. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4401,"gregorianDate":"476-03-21","originalDate":"476-03-21","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800034000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:34.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:34.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-4401-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3921-Tevet-8":[{"title":"The Annunciation — Conception of Jesus","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3921-Tevet-8","details":"Luke 1:26–27 And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth, to a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph. In the sixth month of Elizabeth's pregnancy, the angel Gabriel was sent to Mary in Nazareth, announcing that she would conceive and bear the Son of the Most High. Mary consented, and the Holy Spirit came upon her — the Word becoming flesh. From this day, 280 days of pregnancy would run until the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem. The Annunciation stands as the moment of the Incarnation itself, preceding the Nativity by approximately nine months. Luke 1:26–38.\n\n\nDate reverse calculated","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tevet","amDay":8,"amYear":3921,"gregorianDate":"AM-3921-Tevet-8","originalDate":"AM-3921-Tevet-8","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771624516037.7454,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3921-Tevet-8","id":1774933647145.5535,"createdAt":"2026-03-31T05:07:27.145Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T18:16:35.692Z"}],"AM-100-Nisan-20":[],"-3924-03-18":[],"AM-3284-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Amon Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-641-03-23","details":"Amon became king at 22 and reigned 2 years. He did evil in the LORD's sight as his father Manasseh had done — worshipping and serving all the carved images his father had made — 'but he did not humble himself before the LORD, as Manasseh his father had humbled himself' (2 Chr. 33:23). He was assassinated by his own servants in his palace. The people of the land executed the conspirators and made his 8-year-old son Josiah king. Amon's brief, wicked reign serves as a foil to Josiah's sweeping reformation that follows immediately. 2 Kings 21:19–26; 2 Chronicles 33:21–25.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3284,"gregorianDate":"-641-03-23","originalDate":"-641-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364109180.193,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364085907.176,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:34:45.907Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:14:29.427Z","endEventDate":"-639-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3286,"anchorDate":"AM-3284-Nisan-2"}],"AM-1948-Nisan-15":[],"AM-1693-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2108-Nisan-15":[],"AM-3016-Nisan-3":[],"-1998-10-25":[],"AM-5112-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Saladin retakes Jerusalem","time":"","eventDate":"1187-03-27","details":"Saladin (Salah ad-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub) defeated the Crusader forces at the Battle of Hattin on 4 July 1187 and retook Jerusalem on 2 October 1187 AD, 88 years after the First Crusade. Unlike the 1099 Crusader conquest, Saladin permitted most of the Christian population to ransom their freedom and leave. He re-opened Jerusalem to Jewish settlement for the first time since the Crusaders' ban. The city would remain under Muslim rule (Ayyubid, then Mamluk, then Ottoman) until the British Mandate in 1917. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5112,"gregorianDate":"1187-03-27","originalDate":"1187-03-27","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800037000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:37.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:37.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5112-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5950-Adar-18":[],"AM-3074-Nisan-3":[],"2026-03-20":[],"AM-5925-Av-6":[],"AM-2969-Tishri-3":[],"AM-5951-Sivan-3":[],"2024-01-02":[],"AM-3905-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-14":[],"AM-5507-Tevet-11":[],"2017-01-21":[],"1960-02-10":[],"AM-3390-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Temple foundation laid","time":"","eventDate":"-535-03-24","details":"[Ezr 3:8-10 KJV] 8 Now in the second year of their coming unto the house of God at Jerusalem, in the second month, began Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, and Jeshua the son of Jozadak, and the remnant of their brethren the priests and the Levites, and all they that were come out of the captivity unto Jerusalem; and appointed the Levites, from twenty years old and upward, to set forward the work of the house of the LORD. 9 Then stood Jeshua [with] his sons and his brethren, Kadmiel and his sons, the sons of Judah, together, to set forward the workmen in the house of God: the sons of Henadad, [with] their sons and their brethren the Levites. 10 And when the builders laid the foundation of the temple of the LORD, they set the priests in their apparel with trumpets, and the Levites the sons of Asaph with cymbals, to praise the LORD, after the ordinance of David king of Israel.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3390,"gregorianDate":"-535-03-24","originalDate":"-535-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3390-Nisan-2","id":1771347975913.5164,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T17:06:15.913Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null},{"title":"Temple Rebuilding Halted","time":"","eventDate":"-535-03-24","details":"After the initial return of exiles under Zerubbabel and Joshua (~537 BC) and the laying of the Temple foundation (~536 BC), local opponents — the peoples resettled in Samaria — wrote to Artaxerxes (or Cyrus; the text is disputed) and succeeded in halting the building by force until the second year of Darius I (520 BC; Ezra 4:24). The work stopped for approximately 16 years. God raised up the prophets Haggai and Zechariah in 520 BC to stir the people to resume building. Haggai's first oracle rebuked the people for living in panelled houses while the Temple lay waste (Hag. 1:4). Within 23 days of his first oracle the work resumed (Hag. 1:15). Ezra 4:24.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3390,"gregorianDate":"-535-03-24","originalDate":"-535-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771402925185.91,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:22:05.185Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-23T16:50:00.584Z","endEventDate":"-519-09-14","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Elul","endAMDay":24,"endAMYear":3406,"anchorDate":"AM-3390-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Daniel's Vision of the Man","time":"","eventDate":"-535-03-24","details":"In the third year of Cyrus (~534 BC), Daniel received a vision by the Tigris River. He saw a man clothed in linen with a body like beryl, face like lightning, eyes like torches, arms and legs like burnished bronze, and a voice like a multitude (Dan. 10:5–6) — a description strikingly similar to John's vision of the glorified Christ in Revelation 1:13–16. The vision overwhelmed Daniel so completely that all his strength left him and he fell into a deep sleep (Dan. 10:8–9). The heavenly messenger told Daniel he had been delayed 21 days by the 'prince of Persia' — a reference to angelic conflict over nations — until Michael came to help (Dan. 10:13). This chapter opens the most detailed predictive prophecy in the Bible (Daniel 11). Daniel 10.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3390,"gregorianDate":"-535-03-24","originalDate":"-535-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466638738.6006,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:03:58.738Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:59:36.717Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3390-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Prophecies of Kings & End Times","time":"","eventDate":"-535-03-24","details":"Daniel 11–12 contains the most detailed and extensively fulfilled predictive prophecy in Scripture, delivered to Daniel in the third year of Cyrus (~534 BC). The chapter traces with extraordinary precision: the Persian kings (11:2), Alexander the Great (11:3), the division of his kingdom (11:4), the wars between the Ptolemies and Seleucids (11:5–20), Antiochus IV Epiphanes's campaigns and desecration of the Temple (11:21–35), and then a final king of the end times (11:36–45). Chapter 12 introduces the resurrection of the dead and the tribulation ('a time of trouble such as never was'). The prophecy closes with the sealed book to be opened at the time of the end. Daniel 11–12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3390,"gregorianDate":"-535-03-24","originalDate":"-535-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466680285.2556,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:04:40.285Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:59:45.333Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3390-Nisan-2"}],"AM-150-Nisan-25":[],"AM-0-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5504-Tevet-11":[],"AM-5941-Shevat-1":[],"AM-3163-Tammuz-21":[],"AM-5950-Adar-7":[],"1583-01-07":[],"32-04-09":[],"AM-3995-Nisan-2":[],"AM-2804-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Kislev-6":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-2":[],"AM-3387-Tishri-16":[{"title":"Belshazzar's Feast & Fall of Babylon","time":"","eventDate":"-538-10-03","details":"On the night of Babylon's fall (October 539 BC), Belshazzar held a great feast for a thousand of his lords and ordered the gold and silver vessels looted from the Jerusalem Temple to be used for drinking (Dan. 5:1–4). Suddenly a human hand appeared and wrote on the plaster wall: MENE MENE TEKEL UPHARSIN. All the wise men of Babylon failed to interpret it; only Daniel was brought in. He read the inscription as God's verdict: 'MENE — God has numbered your kingdom and finished it; TEKEL — you are weighed in the balances and found wanting; PERES — your kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians' (Dan. 5:26–28). That very night Belshazzar was slain and Darius the Mede received the kingdom. Confirmed by the Nabonidus Chronicle. Daniel 5.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"am","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":16,"amYear":3387,"gregorianDate":"-538-10-02","originalDate":"-538-10-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466530007.1113,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:02:10.007Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-19T02:02:10.007Z"}],"AM-5951-Nisan-8":[],"AM-5948-Tishri-18":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-22":[{"title":"Days 8–9 22nd–23rd Nisan           Pharaoh Pursues","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-22","details":"Ex. 14:9 But the Egyptians pursued after them, all the horses and chariots of Pharaoh, and his horsemen, and his army, and overtook them encamping by the sea, beside Pi Hahiroth.\nThe Egyptian army — 600 choice chariots, all the other chariots of Egypt, and infantry — overtook Israel camped beside Pi Hahiroth. The Israelites saw the Egyptians advancing and were terrified, crying out against Moses: 'Was it because there were no graves in Egypt that you brought us to the desert to die?' (14:11). Moses answered: 'Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the LORD will bring you today. The Egyptians you see today you will never see again. The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still' (14:13–14). Exodus 14:9–14.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":22,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-22","originalDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-22","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-22","id":1771639293367.8945,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:01:33.367Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T21:05:17.055Z"}],"70-08-04":[],"AM-2916-Nisan-3":[],"2072-04-05":[],"31-11-03":[],"2026-01-31":[],"2026-01-27":[],"-515-03-20":[],"AM-2764-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Gideon Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1161-03-25","details":"Gideon was called by the Angel of the LORD while threshing wheat in a winepress to hide it from the Midianites, who had oppressed Israel for 7 years. God reduced his army from 32,000 to 300 men — lest Israel claim the victory was their own. The 300 men with trumpets, empty pitchers and torches routed the vast Midianite camp by night in a panic (Judges 7:19–22). Gideon refused the people's offer to make him king: 'The LORD shall rule over you' (Judges 8:23). However he made an ephod of the Midianite gold that became an idolatrous snare to Israel. The land had rest 40 years in Gideon's lifetime. His son Abimelech later killed 70 of his brothers and seized the kingship. Judges 6–8.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2764,"gregorianDate":"-1161-03-25","originalDate":"-1161-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453785185.4314,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453758782.8176,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:29:18.782Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:57:56.820Z","endEventDate":"-1121-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2804,"anchorDate":"AM-2764-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5907-Sivan-15":[],"-1405-03-18":[],"AM-3133-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jeroboam II Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-792-03-21","details":"Jeroboam II son of Joash reigned 41 years over Israel — the longest reign of any northern king and a period of great prosperity and territorial expansion. He restored the border of Israel from Lebo-hamath to the Sea of the Arabah (2 Kgs 14:25), fulfilling the prophecy of Jonah son of Amittai. Despite doing evil in God's sight, God had compassion on Israel's affliction and used Jeroboam as deliverer. It was during his prosperous reign that Amos and Hosea prophesied, denouncing Israel's social injustice and spiritual complacency. The prosperity of Jeroboam II's reign was the last great flourishing of the northern kingdom before its rapid collapse and Assyrian destruction (722 BC). 2 Kings 14:23–29; Amos 1:1; Hosea 1:1.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3133,"gregorianDate":"-792-03-21","originalDate":"-792-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403816096.0435,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403783725.613,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:36:23.725Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:24:43.029Z","endEventDate":"-752-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3173,"anchorDate":"AM-3133-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5951-Kislev-31":[],"AM-1656-Shevat-17":[],"2026-02-17":[],"1977-03-15":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-9":[{"title":"The Anointing at Bethany","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-9","details":"John 12:1 *Then Jesus six days before the passover came to Bethany, where Lazarus was, which had been dead, whom he raised from the dead.*\n\nSix days before the Passover, on 9 Nisan, Jesus came to Bethany — the village of Lazarus, whom he had raised from the dead. Bethany lay on the eastern slope of the Mount of Olives, less than two miles from Jerusalem. The presence of Lazarus — recently raised from the dead — drew a crowd, and it is here that Mary anointed Jesus with costly spikenard, Judas objected to the extravagance, and Jesus defended her act as an anointing for his burial. The gathering at Bethany sets the scene for the Triumphal Entry the following day, 10 Nisan — the very day prescribed in Exodus 12:3 for the selection and setting apart of the Passover lamb. John 12:1–8.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":9,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-9","originalDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-9","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-9","id":1774037962906.0068,"createdAt":"2026-03-20T20:19:22.906Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T20:20:31.280Z"}],"2072-09-03":[],"-3924-03-20":[],"AM-2520-Nisan-7":[{"title":"God Speaks to the New Leader: Joshua Is Commissioned","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-03-25","details":"Month 1, Day 7 — 2520 AM\n\"God Speaks to the New Leader: Joshua Is Commissioned\"\nAfter the thirty days of mourning for Moses are complete, God speaks directly to Joshua for the first time as the sole leader of Israel. God commands him to arise and cross the Jordan, promising that every place the sole of his foot treads has been given to them. God charges him three times to be strong and courageous and promises that the book of the law shall not depart from his mouth. Joshua immediately begins organizing the nation for the crossing, instructing the officers to prepare provisions. The baton has fully passed. (Joshua 1:1-11; Deuteronomy 34:8)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":7,"amYear":2520,"gregorianDate":"-1405-03-25","originalDate":"-1405-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453598248.5093,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2520-Nisan-7","id":1771704524336.7485,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T20:08:44.336Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T20:56:42.844Z"}],"AM-5950-Adar-13":[{"title":"Operation Roaring Lion","time":"","eventDate":"2026-02-28","details":"Operation Roaring Lion (also referred to as Operation Rising Lion) was Israel's direct military campaign against Iran launched in June 2025, following years of Iranian proxy warfare, drone and missile attacks, and continued nuclear weapons development. Israel struck Iranian nuclear facilities including Natanz and Fordow, ballistic missile production sites, IRGC command infrastructure and air defence systems in a multi-day air and missile campaign. Iran retaliated with ballistic missile and drone salvoes at Israeli cities. The operation represented the first direct, acknowledged Israeli military action on Iranian soil at scale — a significant escalation from the decade-long shadow war. A ceasefire was brokered after approximately 12 days. Israel assessed the operation had set Iran's nuclear programme back by several years.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":13,"amYear":5950,"gregorianDate":"2026-02-28","originalDate":"2026-02-28","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5950-Adar-13","id":1772442180530.0833,"createdAt":"2026-03-02T09:03:00.530Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-09T23:58:25.712Z"}],"AM-2020-Nisan-15":[],"2025-12-22":[],"AM-6000-Shevat-15":[],"AM-2956-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5508-Tevet-10":[],"2026-03-19":[],"AM-3128-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoash (Joash) Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-797-03-21","details":"Jehoash (Joash) son of Jehoahaz reigned 16 years over Israel in Samaria. He defeated Syria three times in battle, recovering the cities Israel had lost (2 Kgs 13:25) — fulfilling the prophecy given when the dying Elisha told him to strike the ground with arrows. He struck three times and stopped; Elisha was angry, saying he should have struck five or six times to destroy Syria completely. Jehoash also defeated Amaziah of Judah at Beth Shemesh, broke down 400 cubits of Jerusalem's wall, and took gold, silver and hostages from the Temple (2 Kgs 14:11–14). His reign marks a brief military recovery for the northern kingdom before its final decline. 2 Kings 13:10–25; 14:8–16.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3128,"gregorianDate":"-797-03-21","originalDate":"-797-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403783725.613,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403748579.7114,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:35:48.579Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:25:26.485Z","endEventDate":"-781-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3144,"anchorDate":"AM-3128-Nisan-2"}],"-3795-03-22":[],"AM-5945-Iyar-3":[],"AM-3013-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2967-Tishri-8":[],"AM-7000-Nisan-4":[],"-199-01-20":[],"AM-3165-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Amos prophesies — justice for Israel and the nations","time":"","eventDate":"-760-03-12","details":"Amos, a shepherd and dresser of sycamore trees from Tekoa in Judah, prophesied in Israel during the reigns of Uzziah (Judah) and Jeroboam II (Israel) — a period of prosperity concealing deep injustice (Amos 1:1). He denounced Israel's exploitation of the poor, corrupt worship, and false security. His circuit of judgments against surrounding nations (chs. 1–2) culminates in Israel receiving the harshest verdict. He prophesied the coming Assyrian exile and the future restoration of David's fallen booth (9:11). Date anchored by Amos 1:1; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3165,"gregorianDate":"-760-03-12","originalDate":"-760-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800012000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:12.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:12.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3165-Nisan-1"}],"AM-4999-Tevet-17":[],"-1445-04-01":[],"2026-03-16":[],"-3600-03-24":[],"AM-5898-Tishri-18":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2967-Tishri-15":[{"title":"First Temple","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2967-Tishri-15","details":"Solomon's Temple (the First Temple) was completed in the 11th year of Solomon's reign, in the month of Bul (the 8th month), and dedicated at the Feast of Tabernacles in 2967 AM. It stood on Mount Moriah — the site where Abraham bound Isaac (Gen. 22:2; 2 Chr. 3:1). The Temple was built of cedar from Lebanon, hewn stone, and overlaid throughout with gold. The inner sanctuary (the Holy of Holies) housed the Ark of the Covenant. At the dedication, fire came down from heaven, consuming the burnt offerings, and the glory of the LORD filled the house so that the priests could not stand to minister (2 Chr. 7:1–2). Solomon's prayer of dedication (1 Kgs 8; 2 Chr. 6) is the most comprehensive prayer of consecration in the Old Testament. The Temple stood until its destruction by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC. 1 Kings 6–8; 2 Chronicles 3–7.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":15,"amYear":2967,"gregorianDate":"AM-2967-Tishri-15","originalDate":"AM-2967-Tishri-15","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771346502298.134,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2967-Tishri-15","id":1769635619537.6362,"createdAt":"2026-01-28T21:26:59.537Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T03:46:42.067Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"endEventDate":"-584-08-13","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Av","endAMDay":25,"endAMYear":3341}],"AM-1693-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Salah","time":"","eventDate":"-2232-03-25","details":"Salah (or Shelah; Hebrew: petition/sprout) was born to Arphaxad at 35. He lived 433 years and begat Eber at 30. He is the third generation after the Flood in the Shemite line leading to Abraham. The genealogy in Genesis 11 notes lifespans declining significantly after the Flood — from the pre-Flood figures of 900+ years to the post-Flood descent: Shem 600, Arphaxad 438, Salah 433, Eber 464, Peleg 239, Reu 239, Serug 230, Nahor 148, Terah 205, Abraham 175. Genesis 11:12–15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1693,"gregorianDate":"-2232-03-25","originalDate":"-2232-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943295328.254,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943215480.1475,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:40:15.480Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:24:41.969Z","anchorDate":"AM-1693-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1799-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2126}],"-3775-04-16":[],"AM-5871-Sivan-26":[],"1981-04-12":[],"AM-3953-Kislev-30":[],"AM-2480-Iyar-15":[{"title":"Israel came unto the wilderness of Sin","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-05-03","details":"[Exo 16:1 KJV] 1 And they took their journey from Elim, and all the congregation of the children of Israel came unto the wilderness of Sin, which [is] between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after their departing out of the land of Egypt.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":15,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-05-02","originalDate":"-1445-05-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Iyar-15","id":1771480426200.5276,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T05:53:46.200Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-19T05:54:32.786Z"}],"70-04-04":[],"-1445-04-06":[],"AM-5950-Adar-3":[],"AM-2306-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1056-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Noah","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1056-Nisan-2","details":"On the 17th day of the second month of Noah's 600th year, God caused the fountains of the great deep to burst open and the windows of heaven to pour down rain upon the earth. The floodwaters rose for 40 days and nights, covering every mountain and killing every living creature on land. The waters then prevailed for 150 days, and at the close of those days they were abated — the waters returned from off the earth continually, and on the 17th day of the seventh month the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat. On the first day of the tenth month the mountain tops became visible. After sending out a raven and then a dove, Noah received confirmation that the land was dry. On the first day of Noah's 601st year the water had dried from the earth, and on the 27th day of the second month the land was fully dry. God then commanded Noah, his family, and all the animals to leave the ark, and established his covenant with Noah — marked by a rainbow — never again to destroy all life with a flood. The event is recorded in Genesis 6–9 and stands as one of the foundational narratives of the Hebrew Bible, with parallel flood traditions found across ancient Near Eastern literature.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1056,"gregorianDate":"AM-1056-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-1056-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943042039.8413,"isRepeating":false},{"id":1770943179873.8748,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942954806.1333,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:35:54.806Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.174Z","anchorDate":"AM-1056-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1919-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2006}],"-398-04-05":[],"AM-5892-Sivan-17":[],"AM-2481-Nisan-13":[],"AM-5993-Adar-30":[],"AM-5937-Nisan-19":[],"AM-3328-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoiachin Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-597-03-25","details":"Jehoiachin (also called Coniah or Jeconiah) became king at 18 on his father Jehoiakim's death and reigned only three months and ten days before surrendering to Nebuchadnezzar in 598 BC (2 Kgs 24:8–12). Nebuchadnezzar took him to Babylon along with the Temple treasures and 10,000 leading citizens — including Ezekiel (2 Kgs 24:14). Jeremiah declared that none of his descendants would prosper sitting on the throne of David (Jer. 22:30) — a curse resolved in Christ, who is legally descended from Jehoiachin through Joseph (Matt. 1:12) but biologically through Nathan's line via Mary (Luke 3:31), bypassing the curse. Jehoiachin was eventually released from prison and given a place of honour at the Babylonian court (2 Kgs 25:27–30). 2 Kings 24:6–15; Jeremiah 22:24–30.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3328,"gregorianDate":"-597-03-25","originalDate":"-597-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771369687244.3848,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364203659.6694,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:36:43.659Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:06:58.234Z","endEventDate":"-596-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":3329,"anchorDate":"AM-3328-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3321-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Daniel & Friends Trained","time":"","eventDate":"-604-03-18","details":"Nebuchadnezzar commanded his chief official Ashpenaz to select young men from the Israelite nobility — 'in whom was no blemish, but well favoured, and skilful in all wisdom, and cunning in knowledge' (Dan. 1:4) — for a three-year training program in Babylonian language, literature, and royal service. Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah were among those selected and given Babylonian names (Dan. 1:7). Daniel purposed not to defile himself with the king's food and proposed a ten-day vegetable-and-water test. At the end of ten days they appeared healthier than all who ate the royal food; at the end of three years they were found ten times wiser than all the magicians and enchanters of Babylon (Dan. 1:20). Daniel 1:3–21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3321,"gregorianDate":"-604-03-18","originalDate":"-604-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466309172.748,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T01:58:29.172Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:12:12.742Z","endEventDate":"-601-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3324,"anchorDate":"AM-3321-Nisan-2"},{"title":"70 Years of Exile","time":"","eventDate":"-604-03-18","details":"Jeremiah prophesied that Judah would serve the king of Babylon for seventy years (Jer. 25:11–12; 29:10). This decree was given in the fourth year of Jehoiakim (605 BC) — the year of the Battle of Carchemish and Daniel's first deportation. Two interpretations exist: (1) 605 BC to 537 BC (Daniel's captivity to the Cyrus decree) = 68 years by inclusive reckoning, or (2) 586 BC (Temple destruction) to 516 BC (Temple completion) = 70 years. The seventy years are interpreted in Daniel 9:2 as the trigger for Daniel's great prayer, which receives the 70-weeks prophecy in response. Zechariah also references the 70 years (Zech. 1:12; 7:5). 2 Chronicles 36:21 says the land enjoyed its Sabbaths during the exile — 70 years of Sabbath rest for 490 years of neglected Sabbath years. Jeremiah 25:11–12; 29:10; Daniel 9:2; 2 Chronicles 36:21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3321,"gregorianDate":"-604-03-18","originalDate":"-604-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771468872216.029,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:41:12.216Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:12:22.302Z","endEventDate":"-534-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3391,"anchorDate":"AM-3321-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Babylon","time":"","eventDate":"-604-03-18","details":"Babylon\nRise: 605 BC — 3321 AM | Fall: 539 BC — 3387 AM | Duration: 66 years\nNebuchadnezzar defeats Egypt at the Battle of Carchemish, becomes the dominant world power, and takes Daniel and others captive to Babylon. Represented by the head of gold (Daniel 2) and the lion with eagle's wings (Daniel 7). The empire ends when Belshazzar holds a great feast using the sacred vessels stolen from the Jerusalem Temple. The hand of God writes on the wall — Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin. That same night Cyrus the Great and the Medo-Persian army enter Babylon by diverting the Euphrates river and marching under the city walls. Belshazzar is slain and power passes immediately to Medo-Persia. (Daniel 2, 5, 7)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3321,"gregorianDate":"-604-03-18","originalDate":"-604-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":"-538-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3387,"anchorDate":"AM-3321-Nisan-2","id":1771728744085.2637,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:52:24.085Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:52:58.357Z"}],"AM-5951-Tammuz-0":[],"-2269-04-24":[],"AM-5951-Tevet-0":[],"AM-5417-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Jews expelled from Spain — Edicto de Granada","time":"","eventDate":"1492-03-29","details":"King Ferdinand II and Queen Isabella I of Spain issued the Alhambra Decree (Edicto de Granada) on 31 March 1492, ordering the expulsion of all Jews who refused baptism. Between 130,000 and 800,000 Jews were expelled; many went to the Ottoman Empire, North Africa, and the Netherlands. The expulsion is considered one of the most consequential events in Jewish diaspora history. On the same year Columbus sailed westward — many of his crew were conversos (Jews who had converted under duress). The Ottoman Sultan Bayezid II famously welcomed the exiles. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5417,"gregorianDate":"1492-03-29","originalDate":"1492-03-29","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800040000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:40.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:40.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5417-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5951-Sivan-31":[],"1582-10-31":[],"AM-5993-Tishri-1":[],"AM-5950-Adar-16":[{"title":"Lunar Eclipse","time":"","eventDate":"2026-03-03","details":"A significant lunar eclipse visible from the Middle East region. Lunar eclipses hold eschatological significance in biblical prophecy — Joel 2:31 predicts 'the moon shall be turned to blood before the great and terrible day of the LORD,' and Acts 2:20 quotes this prophecy in the context of Pentecost. The Hebrew calendar's coincidence with lunar cycles means lunar eclipses can fall on or near biblically significant dates such as Passover (15 Nisan) and Sukkot (15 Tishri). Blood moon tetrad sequences falling on Jewish feast days in 1948–49, 1967–68, and 2014–15 have been the subject of prophetic discussion. Eclipses are also used in biblical chronology — the Bur-Sagale eclipse of 763 BC is the anchor for the Assyrian period chronology.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":16,"amYear":5950,"gregorianDate":"2026-03-03","originalDate":"2026-03-03","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5950-Adar-16","id":1772989442669.0796,"createdAt":"2026-03-08T17:04:02.669Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-09T23:57:17.959Z"}],"AM-5024-Nisan-1":[{"title":"First Crusade — Crusaders take Jerusalem","time":"","eventDate":"1099-03-26","details":"Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont (1095 AD) calling for the liberation of Jerusalem and the Holy Land from Muslim rule. Crusader forces besieged Jerusalem and captured the city on 15 July 1099, massacring much of the Muslim and Jewish population (Gesta Francorum). The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem was established under Godfrey of Bouillon. Jerusalem remained in Crusader hands until Saladin's reconquest in 1187 AD. The Crusades represent a pivotal reshaping of the medieval Middle East, Europe, and Jewish-Christian-Muslim relations. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5024,"gregorianDate":"1099-03-26","originalDate":"1099-03-26","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800036000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:36.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:36.000Z","endEventDate":"1187-03-27","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":5112,"anchorDate":"AM-5024-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3527-Nisan-17":[],"AM-3163-Sivan-16":[],"AM-3085-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ahaziah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-840-03-25","details":"[2Ki 8:26 KJV] 26 Two and twenty years old [was] Ahaziah when he began to reign; and he reigned one year in Jerusalem. And his mother's name [was] Athaliah, the daughter of Omri king of Israel.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3085,"gregorianDate":"-840-03-25","originalDate":"-840-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363801919.659,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3085-Nisan-2","id":1771304550062.371,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T05:02:30.062Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:27:02.509Z","endEventDate":"-840-03-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":3085},{"title":"Athaliah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-840-03-25","details":"When her son Ahaziah was killed by Jehu, Athaliah — daughter of Ahab and Jezebel, and the only woman to reign as monarch over Judah — seized the throne and ordered the massacre of all the royal seed (2 Kgs 11:1). She reigned for six years. But the infant Joash was hidden in the Temple by his aunt Jehosheba (the wife of the high priest Jehoiada) for the full six years of Athaliah's reign. In the seventh year Jehoiada orchestrated a coup, brought out Joash, crowned him, and had Athaliah executed at the horse gate. The Davidic line survived by a single hidden infant — a striking example of providential preservation of the messianic lineage. 2 Kings 11:1–20; 2 Chronicles 22:10–23:15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3085,"gregorianDate":"-840-03-25","originalDate":"-840-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363876383.8418,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363801919.659,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:30:01.919Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:27:13.716Z","endEventDate":"-834-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3091,"anchorDate":"AM-3085-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Jehu Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-840-03-25","details":"Jehu son of Jehoshaphat was anointed king of Israel by one of Elisha's prophetic disciples (2 Kgs 9:1–10) and immediately drove furiously to Jezreel. He killed Joram king of Israel and Ahaziah king of Judah in the same hour. He found Jezebel in Jezreel; she was thrown from a window at his command, trampled by his horses, and eaten by dogs — fulfilling Elijah's prophecy exactly (1 Kgs 21:23; 2 Kgs 9:36). He slaughtered all 70 sons of Ahab (2 Kgs 10:1–11) and killed the prophets of Baal in their own temple by deception (10:18–28). God commended him for executing judgment on the house of Ahab but he did not depart from the golden calves of Jeroboam. He reigned 28 years. 2 Kings 9–10.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3085,"gregorianDate":"-840-03-25","originalDate":"-840-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403723704.7178,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403698937.5989,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:34:58.937Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:27:24.360Z","endEventDate":"-813-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3112,"anchorDate":"AM-3085-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5902-Nisan-0":[],"2026-01-03":[],"AM-3955-Kislev-12":[],"AM-5931-Tammuz-22":[],"AM-2839-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jephthah Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1086-03-23","details":"Jephthah the Gileadite was the son of a prostitute, driven out by his half-brothers. When the Ammonites oppressed Israel the elders of Gilead sought him out. Before battle Jephthah made a rash vow: if God gave him victory he would offer as a burnt offering whatever came out of his house first (Judges 11:31). He won the victory; his only daughter came out to meet him. Jephthah mourned; the daughter asked for two months to bewail her virginity and accepted her fate. Jephthah judged Israel 6 years. His vow is one of the most debated passages in Judges — whether it resulted in literal human sacrifice or in his daughter's lifelong consecrated virginity (given the Torah's explicit prohibition of child sacrifice). Judges 11–12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2839,"gregorianDate":"-1086-03-23","originalDate":"-1086-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453889124.821,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453865149.883,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:31:05.149Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:56:11.004Z","endEventDate":"-1080-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2845,"anchorDate":"AM-2839-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2845-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ibzan Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1080-03-22","details":"Ibzan of Bethlehem judged Israel 7 years. He had 30 sons and 30 daughters — he sent his daughters abroad and brought in 30 women from abroad for his sons (Judges 12:8–10). The scale of his family alliances suggests significant diplomatic activity and wealth. Some traditions identify Ibzan with Boaz of Bethlehem (the kinsman-redeemer of Ruth), though this is not universally accepted. His brief tenure continues the pattern of minor judges who maintained Israel's governance between the major crises. Judges 12:8–10.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2845,"gregorianDate":"-1080-03-22","originalDate":"-1080-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453915402.625,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453889124.821,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:31:29.124Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:55:50.866Z","endEventDate":"-1073-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2852,"anchorDate":"AM-2845-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3950-Elul-9":[],"2025-12-19":[],"AM-1849-Nisan-3":[],"-3795-03-20":[],"AM-3888-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Herod the Great — King of Judea","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3888-Nisan-1","details":"The Roman Senate appointed Herod (an Idumean, not a Jew by birth) King of Judea in 38 BC after he retook Jerusalem from the Parthian-backed Hasmonean Antigonus (Josephus, Ant. 14.16.2). Herod's reign (38–1 BC) was marked by massive building projects — including the renovation of the Second Temple into one of the ancient world's grandest structures — alongside brutal political violence, including the massacre of the infant boys in Bethlehem (Matt. 2:16). He died in 1 BC, several years after the birth of Jesus in 4 BC. The later death date aligns better with Josephus's record of a 37-year reign from appointment and 34 years from his capture of Jerusalem. Dates confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3888,"gregorianDate":"AM-3888-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-3888-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800024000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:24.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T04:35:45.274Z","endEventDate":"0-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Adar","endAMDay":30,"endAMYear":3924,"anchorDate":"AM-3888-Nisan-1"}],"AM-1723-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Eber","time":"","eventDate":"-2202-03-23","details":"Eber (Hebrew: the region beyond / one who crosses over) lived 464 years — longer than his descendants — and begat Peleg at 34. He is the ancestor of the 'Hebrews' (Ibrim — those who cross over or come from beyond), a designation connected to his name. All three major divisions of the Semitic peoples (Shemites) trace through Eber: the line to Abraham (Hebrews), and the Arabic and Aramaic peoples. His son Peleg's name ('division') marks the epoch of the dispersal of peoples (Gen. 10:25). Eber is mentioned in Luke 3:35 in the genealogy of Jesus. Genesis 11:14–17.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1723,"gregorianDate":"-2202-03-23","originalDate":"-2202-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943334334.9932,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943295328.254,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:41:35.328Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:24:54.018Z","anchorDate":"AM-1723-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1738-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2187}],"2026-01-08":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-26":[],"AM-2876-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5993-Nisan-0":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-18":[],"AM-3495-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Malachi prophesies — last voice of the Old Testament","time":"","eventDate":"-430-03-15","details":"Malachi ('my messenger') is the last of the writing prophets (~431 BC), contemporary with Nehemiah's second mission (Neh. 13). He rebukes corrupt priests (1:6–2:9), mixed marriages, divorce, and neglect of tithes. He promises the coming of a messenger who will prepare the way (3:1), identifies him with the return of Elijah (4:5), and closes the Hebrew prophetic canon with the instruction to remember the law of Moses (4:4). After Malachi, Jewish tradition speaks of 400 years of prophetic silence before John the Baptist. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3495,"gregorianDate":"-430-03-15","originalDate":"-430-03-15","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800020000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:20.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:20.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3495-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3386-Nisan-1":[],"AM-1658-Nisan-3":[],"-458-04-01":[],"AM-2048-Nisan-3":[{"title":"Isaac","time":"","eventDate":"-1877-03-27","details":"[Gal 3:16-17 KJV] 16 Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ. 17 And this I say, [that] the covenant, that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the law, which was four hundred and thirty years after, cannot disannul, that it should make the promise of none effect.\n\n[Gen 25:26 KJV] 26 And after that came his brother out, and his hand took hold on Esau's heel; and his name was called Jacob: and Isaac [was] threescore years old when she bare them.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":3,"amYear":2048,"gregorianDate":"-1877-03-27","originalDate":"-1877-03-27","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770915170884.0754,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2048-Nisan-3","id":1770851285428.9944,"createdAt":"2026-02-11T23:08:05.428Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.175Z","endEventDate":"-1697-03-28","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2228}],"1977-12-18":[],"AM-1948-Nisan-3":[],"-1999-11-18":[],"2025-01-01":[],"1944-09-01":[],"AM-1558-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Shem","time":"","eventDate":"-2367-03-25","details":"[Gen 11:10 KJV] 10 These [are] the generations of Shem: Shem [was] an hundred years old, and begat Arphaxad two years after the flood:","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1558,"gregorianDate":"-2367-03-25","originalDate":"-2367-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943179873.8748,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943042039.8413,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:37:22.039Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:24:17.367Z","anchorDate":"AM-1558-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1767-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2158}],"2026-01-15":[],"AM-3863-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Roman Empire — begins","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3861-Nisan-1","details":"Rome (63 BC – 476 AD) is Daniel's iron kingdom (Dan. 2:40) — strong as iron, crushing and breaking all others. It is the fourth terrible beast of Daniel 7, and the sixth head of Revelation 17 that 'is' at the time of writing (~95 AD).\n\nRise: 63 BC — 3862 AM | Fall: 476 AD — 4401 AM | Duration: 539 years over Israel\n\nPompey the Great captures Jerusalem in 63 BC, entering the Holy of Holies — the fourth empire transition that sets the stage for the Messianic era. Josephus records the event in detail (Antiquities 14.4); confirmed by Roman and Greek historians.\n\nUnlike the empires before it, Rome is not conquered but crumbles from within, eventually splitting into Eastern and Western empires, fulfilling the two legs of iron. In 70 AD (3995 AM) the Roman general Titus destroys Jerusalem and the Temple, fulfilling Daniel 9:26. The Western Roman Empire falls in 476 AD (4401 AM) when Romulus Augustulus is deposed by Odoacer — the iron empire fragmenting into the nations of Europe, the ten toes of iron and clay (Dan. 2:41–43). (Daniel 2, 7, 9; Revelation 17)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3863,"gregorianDate":"AM-3861-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-3861-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1774063300407.1316,"createdAt":"2026-03-21T03:21:40.407Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T03:27:54.617Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3863-Nisan-1"}],"1977-01-22":[],"2025-03-25":[],"2026-01-23":[],"2025-12-17":[],"AM-5950-Kislev-3":[],"AM-5928-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Operation Iraqi Freedom","time":"","eventDate":"2003-03-20","details":"The Second Iraq War (Operation Iraqi Freedom) began on **March 20, 2003**, when a US-led coalition invaded Iraq to topple Saddam Hussein's government.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5928,"gregorianDate":"2003-03-20","originalDate":"2003-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5928-Nisan-1","id":1769790963434.9258,"createdAt":"2026-01-30T16:36:03.434Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:24:14.587Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"AM-5902-Kislev-29":[],"AM-5994-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5951-Tishri-1":[],"AM-3112-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoahaz Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-813-03-20","details":"Jehoahaz son of Jehu reigned 17 years over Israel in Samaria. He did evil in the sight of the LORD, following the sins of Jeroboam. God's anger burned against Israel and he delivered them into the hand of Hazael king of Syria and Ben-hadad his son throughout Jehoahaz's reign. Israel was reduced to just 50 horsemen, 10 chariots and 10,000 foot soldiers — 'for the king of Syria had destroyed them, and had made them like the dust by threshing' (2 Kgs 13:7). Jehoahaz sought the LORD and God gave Israel a saviour who delivered them from Syrian oppression. 2 Kings 13:1–9.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3112,"gregorianDate":"-813-03-20","originalDate":"-813-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403748579.7114,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403723704.7178,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:35:23.704Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:25:50.182Z","endEventDate":"-797-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3128,"anchorDate":"AM-3112-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2862-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Abdon Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1063-03-22","details":"Abdon son of Hillel the Pirathonite judged Israel 8 years. He had 40 sons and 30 grandsons who rode 70 donkeys — an even larger family than Jair's 30 sons on 30 donkeys, suggesting great wealth and influence (Judges 12:13–15). His burial in Pirathon in the land of Ephraim in the hill country of the Amalekites is a notable geographical detail. Abdon is the last of the minor judges before the narrative turns to Samson and then to Samuel and the transition to monarchy. Judges 12:13–15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2862,"gregorianDate":"-1063-03-22","originalDate":"-1063-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453965702.615,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453939421.066,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:32:19.421Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:54:43.890Z","endEventDate":"-1055-03-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2870,"anchorDate":"AM-2862-Nisan-2"}],"1000-03-20":[],"AM-3041-Nisan-10":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-2":[],"AM-622-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Enoch","time":"","eventDate":"AM-622-Nisan-2","details":"Enoch (Hebrew: dedicated/initiated) was born to Jared at 65. He 'walked with God' — a phrase used elsewhere only of Noah (Gen. 6:9) — for 300 years after begetting Methuselah, and 'was not, for God took him' (Gen. 5:24). He never died. He is one of only two people in the Old Testament taken without death (the other being Elijah, 2 Kgs 2:11). He lived 365 years — corresponding to the solar year, suggesting a connection to the 364-day solar calendar tradition. Jude 14–15 quotes his prophecy about the Lord's coming with ten thousands of his saints. Hebrews 11:5 says 'by faith Enoch was taken up so that he should not see death.' He is the seventh generation from Adam. Genesis 5:18–24; Jude 14–15; Hebrews 11:5.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":622,"gregorianDate":"AM-622-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-622-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942883196.0488,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942841886.1907,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:34:01.886Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T04:01:57.307Z","anchorDate":"AM-622-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2938-03-29","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":987}],"2026-03-18":[],"2072-05-25":[],"AM-2481-Iyar-14":[{"title":"A Second Chance at Passover","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-04-30","details":"Month 2, Day 14\n\"A Second Chance at Passover\"\nCertain men who had been ritually unclean due to contact with a dead body were unable to observe the Passover on the 14th of the first month. They come before Moses and Aaron and ask why they should be kept from presenting the offering of the Lord. God responds with a unique provision — any person who is unclean or away on a journey may observe a second Passover on the 14th of the second month, with the same ordinances as the first. This becomes a standing law for all generations. (Numbers 9:6-14)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":14,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-04-30","originalDate":"-1444-04-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Iyar-14","id":1771650888971.3274,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:14:48.971Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:14:48.971Z"}],"AM-5950-Adar-23":[],"1582-10-01":[],"AM-2058-Nisan-1":[],"2026-04-28":[],"AM-2851-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5424-Tevet-14":[],"-1444-04-05":[],"AM-5992-Nisan-0":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-26":[],"2025-12-27":[],"-958-10-03":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-1":[],"-1445-04-05":[],"2076-01-31":[],"AM-3942-Av-5":[],"AM-2481-Nisan-15":[{"title":"[Lev 23:6 KJV] 6 And on the fifteenth day of the same month [is] the feast of unleavened bread unto the LORD: seven days ye must eat unleavened bread.","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-04-08","details":"The Feast of Unleavened Bread (Chag HaMatzot) begins on 15 Nisan — the day after Passover — and continues for seven days (Lev. 23:6–8). All leaven (chametz) must be removed from the house before it begins (Ex. 12:15). The first and seventh days are holy convocations with no ordinary work. The feast commemorates the haste of the Exodus — Israel left so quickly there was no time for the dough to rise (Ex. 12:39). Paul interprets the leaven as sin and malice, and Christ as our Passover lamb: 'Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven... but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth' (1 Cor. 5:7–8). In the DSS calendar the seven days run 15–21 Nisan. Leviticus 23:6–8; Exodus 12:15–20; 1 Corinthians 5:7–8.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":15,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-04-07","originalDate":"-1444-04-07","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Nisan-15","id":1771525788158.6597,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T18:29:48.158Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-19T18:32:07.585Z"}],"AM-2969-Tishri-2":[],"2025-03-18":[],"AM-5994-Nisan-0":[],"AM-5931-Tammuz-21":[{"title":"2nd Lebanon War Israel","time":"","eventDate":"2006-07-12","details":"The Second Lebanon War (12 July – 14 August 2006; Hebrew: Milchemet Levanon HaShniya) began when Hezbollah crossed the border and ambushed an Israeli patrol, killing 3 soldiers and kidnapping 2. Israel responded with airstrikes across Lebanon and a ground offensive into southern Lebanon. Hezbollah fired over 4,000 rockets into northern Israel, forcing approximately 300,000 Israelis to flee south and 1,000,000 to live in bomb shelters. The war ended with UN Resolution 1701 calling for a ceasefire and the deployment of an enlarged UNIFIL force. Israel suffered 165 military and 44 civilian deaths; Lebanese casualties were approximately 1,200. The war was perceived as inconclusive and prompted significant Israeli military reforms. Hezbollah's arsenal grew substantially in the years following.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tammuz","amDay":21,"amYear":5931,"gregorianDate":"2006-07-12","originalDate":"2006-07-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5931-Tammuz-21","id":1771624740965.5928,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:59:00.965Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:23:46.503Z"}],"AM-1656-Iyar-5":[],"2072-07-01":[],"AM-2967-Cheshvan-8":[],"2069-03-19":[],"1977-12-17":[],"2025-07-20":[],"2025-10-25":[],"AM-3340-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-18":[{"title":"Saturday sunset (or just before Sunday dawn): Resurrection — completing exactly three days and three nights","time":"","eventDate":"32-04-04","details":"18 Nisan — Sunday dawn. Jesus rose from the dead 'early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark' (John 20:1) or 'at the rising of the sun' (Mark 16:2) — at the transition from Saturday night to Sunday. This completes exactly three days and three nights in the tomb (Matt. 12:40: 'as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, so shall the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth'). The count: Wednesday sunset to Thursday sunset (day 1), Thursday sunset to Friday sunset (day 2), Friday sunset to Saturday sunset (day 3) — rising in the night of Sunday. Mary Magdalene arrived at the empty tomb; angels announced 'He is risen'; Jesus appeared to Mary (John 20:14–17), then to two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13–35), then to the eleven that evening (Luke 24:36–49). 1 Corinthians 15:4: 'he rose again the third day according to the scriptures.' Matthew 28; Mark 16; Luke 24; John 20.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":18,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-04-04","originalDate":"32-04-04","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-18","id":1771531876423.8997,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:11:16.423Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-24T03:46:21.844Z"}],"AM-5950-Adar-29":[],"-965-04-25":[],"AM-3128-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Elisha's ministry ends — death of Elisha","time":"","eventDate":"-797-03-13","details":"Elisha died during the reign of Jehoash (Joash) of Israel (2 Kgs 13:14–20). Even in his sickness he gave Joash a prophetic sign — striking the ground with arrows — and rebuked him for stopping at three strokes instead of five or six, limiting Israel's victories over Syria. A later episode records that a dead man revived when his body touched Elisha's bones (2 Kgs 13:21) — a sign that the prophetic Spirit still rested on him even after death. His ministry spanned approximately 50 years. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3128,"gregorianDate":"-797-03-12","originalDate":"-797-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800011000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:11.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:11.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3128-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3974-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Jerusalem Council — Gentiles and the Law","time":"","eventDate":"49-03-18","details":"The Jerusalem Council (Acts 15; c. 49 AD) was convened to resolve whether Gentile believers must be circumcised and keep the Mosaic law. Peter, Paul, Barnabas and James presented their cases; James gave the decisive ruling: Gentiles are not required to be circumcised but should abstain from food sacrificed to idols, blood, strangled animals, and sexual immorality (Acts 15:19–21). This council is the first major theological decision of the church and the anchor for Paul's Galatians letter. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3974,"gregorianDate":"49-03-18","originalDate":"49-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800028000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:28.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:28.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3974-Nisan-1"}],"AM-4057-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Bar Kokhba revolt — last Jewish revolt against Rome","time":"","eventDate":"132-03-20","details":"Simon bar Kokhba led the third and last major Jewish revolt against Rome (132–135 AD), initially recapturing Jerusalem and establishing a short-lived independent state. Rabbi Akiva hailed him as the Messiah ('son of a star'; Num. 24:17). The revolt was crushed by Emperor Hadrian; Cassius Dio records 580,000 Jewish casualties and the destruction of 985 villages (69.14). Hadrian rebuilt Jerusalem as the Roman colony Aelia Capitolina, banned Jews from entering, and renamed the province Syria Palaestina — erasing the name Judea. The Jewish diaspora was now complete. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4057,"gregorianDate":"132-03-19","originalDate":"132-03-19","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800031000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:31.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:31.000Z","endEventDate":"135-03-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":4060,"anchorDate":"AM-4057-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3785-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Hasmonean kingdom established — Simon Maccabeus","time":"","eventDate":"-140-03-17","details":"Simon Maccabeus, the last surviving son of Mattathias, achieved full political independence from the Seleucid Empire in 141 BC when the Seleucid king Demetrius II acknowledged Jewish autonomy and remitted taxes (1 Macc. 13:41–42). The great assembly of Israel confirmed Simon as high priest, military commander and ethnarch — the first indigenous Jewish ruler since the Babylonian exile. The Hasmonean dynasty ruled until Pompey's conquest of Jerusalem in 63 BC — a span of about 77 years of Jewish political independence. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3785,"gregorianDate":"-140-03-17","originalDate":"-140-03-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800023000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:23.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:23.000Z","endEventDate":"-63-03-18","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3862,"anchorDate":"AM-3785-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2400-Nisan-1":[],"-49-03-10":[],"AM-3211-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3173-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5951-Leap Week-7":[],"AM-2480-Sivan-15":[{"title":"Children of Israel arrive at Mount Sinai","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-06-02","details":"[Exo 19:1 KJV] 1 In the third month, when the children of Israel were gone forth out of the land of Egypt, the same day came they [into] the wilderness of Sinai.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":15,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-06-02","originalDate":"-1445-06-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Sivan-15","id":1772032903724.0957,"createdAt":"2026-02-25T15:21:43.724Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-25T15:21:43.724Z"}],"-1998-05-15":[],"AM-3194-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3078-Nisan-3":[],"2027-03-16":[],"AM-5951-Sivan-10":[],"-1445-03-31":[],"AM-2559-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Othniel Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1366-03-21","details":"Othniel son of Kenaz, Caleb's younger brother, was the first judge of Israel. Israel served Cushan-Rishathaim of Mesopotamia for 8 years; Othniel cried to the LORD and the Spirit of the LORD came upon him. He defeated Cushan-Rishathaim and the land had rest for 40 years (Judges 3:7–11). Othniel is the paradigmatic judge — his account establishes the cycle that runs throughout the book: sin → servitude → supplication → salvation → sabbath rest. He is from Judah, the tribe of the future kings. Judges 3:7–11.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2559,"gregorianDate":"-1366-03-21","originalDate":"-1366-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453648148.4214,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453598248.5093,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:26:38.248Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:59:24.553Z","endEventDate":"-1326-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2599,"anchorDate":"AM-2559-Nisan-2"}],"-1999-11-04":[],"1991-01-16":[{"title":"Operation Desert Storm","time":"","eventDate":"1991-01-16","details":"Operation Desert Storm began on **January 17, 1991**, when the coalition air campaign against Iraq launched. The ground offensive began on **February 24, 1991**, and a ceasefire was declared on **February 28, 1991**, making the ground war just 100 hours long.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"gregorian-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"gregorian","amMonth":"Tevet","amDay":28,"amYear":5915,"gregorianDate":"1991-01-16","originalDate":"1991-01-16","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771380725754.5173,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T02:12:05.754Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:25:47.644Z","anchorDate":"1991-01-16","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"AM-2480-Nisan-14":[{"title":"14th Nisan WEDNESDAY          Lamb Slain at Twilight (~3 PM)","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-02","details":"Blood applied to doorposts and lintel with hyssop. Passover Meal eaten that night in haste. Ex. 12:6–7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-02","originalDate":"-1445-04-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-14","id":1771637586803.2244,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:33:06.803Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.175Z"},{"title":"14th Nisan MIDNIGHT          THE DEATH ANGEL STRIKES","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-02","details":"10th Plague — all firstborn of Egypt die. Not one Hebrew house touched under the blood. Pharaoh's son slain. Ex. 12:29–30.\n\nTag: Passover","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-02","originalDate":"-1445-04-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-14","id":1771637660359.8892,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:34:20.359Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T20:36:20.700Z"},{"title":"14th/15th Nisan After Midnight          PHARAOH'S DIRECTIVE","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-02","details":"Pharaoh orders the Hebrews out of Egypt — a government decree that triggers everything. Ex. 12:31–33.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-02","originalDate":"-1445-04-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-14","id":1771637704480.327,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:35:04.480Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T01:39:15.453Z"}],"2026-02-10":[],"AM-3957-Iyar-27":[],"2026-01-01":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-15":[{"title":"Wednesday sunset → Thursday: Day 1 night / Day 1 day — the High Sabbath (15th of Nisan, first day of Unleavened Bread)","time":"","eventDate":"32-04-01","details":"15 Nisan — Thursday. The High Sabbath (John 19:31 — 'for that sabbath day was a high day') — the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. This is not the weekly Sabbath (Saturday) but the annual holy convocation mandated in Leviticus 23:6–7. Jesus lay in the tomb through Wednesday night and Thursday day — Day 1 night and Day 1 day of 'three days and three nights' (Matt. 12:40). The Jewish religious leaders asked Pilate to seal and guard the tomb 'until the third day' (Matt. 27:64). The women who saw where Jesus was buried prepared spices and rested on the Sabbath according to the commandment (Luke 23:56). In the DSS solar calendar 15 Nisan is always a Thursday — the High Sabbath. Matthew 27:62–66; John 19:31; Leviticus 23:6–7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":15,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-04-01","originalDate":"32-04-01","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-15","id":1771531481626.302,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:04:41.626Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:52:26.229Z"}],"1991-01-17":[],"AM-3956-Cheshvan-6":[],"AM-2480-Iyar-27":[],"1914-07-28":[{"title":"World War I","time":"","eventDate":"1914-07-28","details":"World War I (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918) began with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo and escalated through a web of alliances to engulf Europe, the Middle East, Africa and beyond. Approximately 17–20 million people were killed. For the biblical timeline the war has direct prophetic significance: General Allenby's capture of Jerusalem from the Ottoman Empire on 9 December 1917 ended 400 years of Ottoman rule and opened the way for the Balfour Declaration (2 November 1917) — Britain's commitment to a Jewish homeland in Palestine. This set in motion the chain of events leading to Israel's rebirth in 1948. The disintegration of the Ottoman Empire was also the collapse of the last Sunni Islamic Caliphate — a major geopolitical shift in the Middle East.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"gregorian-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"gregorian","amMonth":"Av","amDay":5,"amYear":5839,"gregorianDate":"1914-07-28","originalDate":"1914-07-28","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771381552985.1133,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T02:25:52.985Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-18T21:19:19.903Z","anchorDate":"1914-07-28","endEventDate":"1918-11-11","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Cheshvan","endAMDay":25,"endAMYear":5843}],"32-09-24":[],"1939-09-01":[{"title":"World War II","time":"","eventDate":"1939-09-01","details":"World War II\nSeptember 1, 1939 – September 2, 1945 (though the European theater ended May 8, 1945 with Germany's surrender)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"gregorian-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"gregorian","amMonth":"Elul","amDay":13,"amYear":5864,"gregorianDate":"1939-09-01","originalDate":"1939-09-01","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771381669969.16,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T02:27:49.969Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-18T21:20:29.011Z","anchorDate":"1939-09-01","endEventDate":"1945-09-02","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Elul","endAMDay":15,"endAMYear":5870}],"AM-3921-Tammuz-22":[{"title":"The Conception of John the Baptist","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3921-Tammuz-15","details":"Luke 1:13 But the angel said unto him, Fear not, Zacharias: for thy prayer is heard; and thy wife Elisabeth shall bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John. While Zacharias was serving his priestly course in the temple, the angel Gabriel appeared to him at the altar of incense, announcing that his aged and barren wife Elizabeth would conceive a son who would go before the Lord in the spirit and power of Elijah. Zacharias doubted and was struck mute until the child's birth. When his temple service ended, he returned home to Elizabeth — and she conceived. From this conception, 280 days would run until the birth of John. The Annunciation to Zacharias stands as the opening movement of the nativity narrative, preceding the Annunciation to Mary by six months. Luke 1:5–25.\n\n\nDate reverse calculated","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tammuz","amDay":22,"amYear":3921,"gregorianDate":"AM-3921-Tammuz-15","originalDate":"AM-3921-Tammuz-15","linkedEvents":[{"id":1774933647145.5535,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3921-Tammuz-22","id":1774934454772.8,"createdAt":"2026-03-31T05:20:54.772Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T18:29:27.524Z"}],"-1996-09-17":[],"2027-03-17":[],"-956-09-19":[],"AM-5937-Cheshvan-26":[{"title":"Pillar of Defence Gaza","time":"","eventDate":"2012-11-14","details":"Operation Pillar of Defence (14–21 November 2012; Hebrew: Amud Anan) was an eight-day Israeli military operation in Gaza targeting Hamas's military command structure and long-range rocket stockpiles. It began with the targeted killing of Hamas military commander Ahmed Jabari. During the operation Hamas and other factions fired over 1,500 rockets at Israel, with the Iron Dome missile defence system intercepting approximately 421 of them — the first large-scale operational test of Iron Dome. The operation ended with an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire. Approximately 167 Palestinians and 6 Israelis were killed. The operation demonstrated Iron Dome's effectiveness but also the challenge of deterring rocket fire without a ground operation to eliminate the launch infrastructure.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Cheshvan","amDay":26,"amYear":5937,"gregorianDate":"2012-11-14","originalDate":"2012-11-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5937-Cheshvan-26","id":1771624795675.749,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:59:55.675Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:22:41.660Z"}],"AM-3323-Nisan-3":[],"-3924-NaN-18":[],"AM-5933-Tevet-10":[{"title":"Operation Cast Lead Gaza","time":"","eventDate":"2008-12-27","details":"Operation Cast Lead (27 December 2008 – 18 January 2009) was an Israeli military operation in the Gaza Strip targeting Hamas's military infrastructure following years of rocket fire into southern Israel. The operation began with an intensive air campaign destroying Hamas's security headquarters, training camps and weapons storage facilities, followed by a ground offensive on 3 January 2009. Approximately 1,400 Palestinians were killed (including significant civilian casualties due to Hamas's use of civilian infrastructure) and 13 Israelis. The Goldstone Report (later partially retracted) and the operation generated significant international controversy. Hamas's rocket capability was degraded but not eliminated. The operation highlighted the strategic and moral dilemmas of asymmetric warfare in densely populated urban areas.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tevet","amDay":10,"amYear":5933,"gregorianDate":"2008-12-27","originalDate":"2008-12-27","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5933-Tevet-10","id":1771624757400.3699,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:59:17.400Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:23:26.323Z"}],"AM-3523-Nisan-17":[],"-1995-03-13":[],"AM-2852-Nisan-3":[],"-3795-03-24":[],"AM-5951-Adar-23":[],"AM-5952-Adar-23":[],"AM-2030-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5951-Tishri-2":[],"AM-3995-Av-15":[{"title":"Second Temple Destroyed","time":"","eventDate":"70-08-02","details":"The Second Temple — Zerubbabel's Temple, massively expanded by Herod the Great — was destroyed by the Roman legions under Titus on 9–10 Av, 70 AD. The Temple had stood for approximately 586 years (516 BC – 70 AD). According to the Talmud (Yoma 9b), the Second Temple was destroyed because of sinat chinam — causeless hatred among Israel. Josephus records that the Roman soldiers set fire to the Temple against Titus's orders; the gold melted and ran between the stones, motivating soldiers to tear every stone apart to retrieve it — fulfilling Jesus's prophecy precisely. The destruction ended the entire Levitical sacrificial system; no sacrifice has been offered since. The Western Wall (Kotel) — a retaining wall of Herod's Temple Mount expansion — remains standing. Josephus, Jewish War 6.4–6; Matthew 24:1–2; Talmud Yoma 9b.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Av","amDay":15,"amYear":3995,"gregorianDate":"70-08-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3995-Av-15","id":1767825979897.5698,"createdAt":"2026-01-07T07:29:06.502Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-23T21:51:48.697Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"originalDate":"70-08-02","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null},{"title":"Rome — Destruction of Jerusalem & the Temple","time":"","eventDate":"70-08-02","details":"The Roman general Titus besieged Jerusalem from Passover 70 AD (trapping the Passover pilgrims inside) until the 9th of Av (Tisha B'Av), when the Temple was burned to the ground — the same date the First Temple had been destroyed by Babylon in 586 BC. Josephus records 1,100,000 people died (mostly from famine and plague) and 97,000 were taken captive (Jewish War 6.9.3). Titus's soldiers tore apart the Temple stones to retrieve the melted gold — fulfilling Jesus's prophecy that 'there shall not be left here one stone upon another that shall not be thrown down' (Matt. 24:2). The Arch of Titus in Rome still depicts the menorah and Temple vessels being carried in triumph. This event ends the Second Temple period and inaugurates the long Jewish diaspora. Matthew 24:1–2; Josephus, Jewish War 6.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Av","amDay":15,"amYear":3995,"gregorianDate":"70-08-02","originalDate":"70-08-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726300329.4424,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:11:40.329Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-25T03:28:07.002Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3995-Av-15"}],"2072-10-04":[],"AM-2448-Nisan-15":[],"AM-3211-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Hezekiah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-714-03-22","details":"Hezekiah became king at 25 and reigned 29 years — one of Judah's greatest kings. In his first year he opened and repaired the Temple, restored the Levitical worship, and held a great Passover that included people from the northern kingdom (2 Chr. 29–30). He destroyed the high places, broke the bronze serpent Moses had made (2 Kgs 18:4), and removed the Asherah poles. When Sennacherib of Assyria invaded and his field commander Rabshakeh mocked God before the walls of Jerusalem, Hezekiah prayed and Isaiah prophesied; the angel of the LORD struck 185,000 Assyrian soldiers dead overnight (2 Kgs 19:35). When he became mortally ill, he prayed and God added 15 years to his life — confirmed by the sundial sign (2 Kgs 20). He showed Babylon his treasuries, earning a prophecy of future Babylonian captivity. 2 Kings 18–20; 2 Chronicles 29–32; Isaiah 36–39.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3211,"gregorianDate":"-714-03-22","originalDate":"-714-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364059848.1313,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364024051.1973,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:33:44.051Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:15:14.016Z","endEventDate":"-685-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3240,"anchorDate":"AM-3211-Nisan-2"}],"AM-325-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Cainan","time":"","eventDate":"AM-325-Nisan-2","details":"Cainan (or Kenan; Hebrew: possession/smith) was born to Enos at age 90. He lived 910 years and begat Mahalaleel at 70. Cainan is listed in the Sethite genealogy of Genesis 5 as the fourth generation from Adam. Luke 3:37 also includes him in the genealogy of Jesus. Some ancient manuscripts of the Septuagint (LXX) include a second Cainan between Arphaxad and Salah (Luke 3:36) — not present in the Masoretic text. Genesis 5:9–14.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":325,"gregorianDate":"AM-325-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-325-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942756175.83,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942692197.346,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:31:32.197Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T14:52:48.211Z","anchorDate":"AM-325-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2690-03-29","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1235}],"AM-3992-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Paul martyred in Rome","time":"","eventDate":"67-03-18","details":"Paul was beheaded in Rome under Nero (~67 AD), according to early church tradition preserved by Eusebius (HE 2.25), Clement of Rome (1 Clem. 5), and the Muratorian Canon. His execution followed a second Roman imprisonment referenced in the Pastoral Epistles (2 Tim. 4:6–8: 'I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand'). Peter was reportedly crucified upside-down in the same Neronian persecution. Together their martyrdoms mark the end of the apostolic generation and the transition to the post-apostolic church. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3992,"gregorianDate":"67-03-18","originalDate":"67-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800030000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:30.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:30.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3992-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5951-Nisan-7":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-10":[{"title":"Passover Lamb Chosen","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-03-29","details":"Each household selects a perfect, unblemished male lamb. Jesus enters Jerusalem on the same day (Triumphal Entry, Sabbath). Ex. 12:3–5; John 12:12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":10,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-03-29","originalDate":"-1445-03-29","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-10","id":1771637511619.131,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:31:51.619Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T01:31:51.619Z"}],"AM-3861-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5839-Av-5":[],"AM-3191-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ahaz Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-734-03-19","details":"Ahaz became king at 20 and reigned 16 years — one of Judah's most wicked kings. He walked in the ways of the kings of Israel and even sacrificed his son in the fire (2 Kgs 16:3). During the Syro-Ephraimite War (Pekah of Israel and Rezin of Syria attacking Judah), Ahaz refused Isaiah's offer of a sign from God and instead sent silver and gold from the Temple treasuries to bribe Tiglath-Pileser of Assyria for help — making Judah an Assyrian vassal (16:7–9). He replaced the bronze altar in the Temple with a copy of a pagan altar he saw in Damascus. Isaiah rebuked him and gave the Immanuel sign anyway (Isa. 7:14). Ahaz effectively bound Judah to Assyria and opened the door to wholesale Assyrian cultural influence. 2 Kings 16; 2 Chronicles 28; Isaiah 7–8.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3191,"gregorianDate":"-734-03-19","originalDate":"-734-03-19","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364024051.1973,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363998726.4365,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:33:18.726Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:16:43.094Z","endEventDate":"-714-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3211,"anchorDate":"AM-3191-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3041-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Zimri Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-884-03-24","details":"Zimri reigned exactly 7 days — the shortest reign of any king in the Bible. When the army at Gibbethon heard that Zimri had killed Elah, they immediately proclaimed their commander Omri king. Omri marched on Tirzah; Zimri saw the city was taken, went into the citadel of the royal palace, and burned it over himself and died (1 Kgs 16:18). 'Zimri' later became a proverbial word for a murderer of his master (2 Kgs 9:31). Zimri's 7-day reign and self-immolation are among the most dramatic episodes in the history of the northern kingdom. 1 Kings 16:15–20.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3041,"gregorianDate":"-884-03-24","originalDate":"-884-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403582270.6848,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:33:02.270Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:29:41.460Z","endEventDate":"-884-03-31","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":9,"endAMYear":3041,"anchorDate":"AM-3041-Nisan-2"}],"2026-03-05":[],"AM-460-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5506-Tevet-17":[],"AM-2862-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3410-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2520-Nisan-10":[{"title":"Forty Years of Wandering End: Israel Crosses the Jordan","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-03-28","details":"\nYear 41 — 2520 AM\nMonth 1, Day 10 — Joshua 4:19\n\"Forty Years of Wandering End: Israel Crosses the Jordan\"\nOn the tenth day of the first month of the forty-first year — exactly forty years after Israel would have been selecting their Passover lambs in Egypt — the entire nation crosses the Jordan River on dry ground into the Promised Land. The priests bearing the Ark stand in the middle of the riverbed while all Israel passes over. Twelve stones are taken from the riverbed and set up at Gilgal as a memorial. Israel camps at Gilgal on the eastern border of Jericho. The forty years of wilderness wandering are over. (Joshua 3–4)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":10,"amYear":2520,"gregorianDate":"-1405-03-28","originalDate":"-1405-03-28","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2520-Nisan-10","id":1771699958423.51,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T18:52:38.423Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T18:52:38.423Z"}],"AM-5950-Shevat-2":[],"-3795-03-21":[],"AM-3373-Nisan-3":[],"2026-01-12":[],"AM-5950-Adar-12":[],"AM-2520-Nisan-1":[],"AM-3185-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Isaiah begins prophesying — Assyria dominant","time":"","eventDate":"-740-03-12","details":"Isaiah receives his commission in the year King Uzziah died (~741 BC; Isa. 6:1), ministering through four reigns: Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, Hezekiah (Isa. 1:1). Assyria is the reigning world power. His burden oracles (chs. 13–23) survey Babylon, Assyria, Egypt and Tyre — a geopolitical map with dateable empire transitions. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3185,"gregorianDate":"-740-03-12","originalDate":"-740-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700002000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:02:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:02:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3185-Nisan-1"}],"2025-03-22":[],"2027-03-31":[],"AM-5950-Adar-2":[{"title":"Solar Eclipse ","time":"","eventDate":"2026-02-17","details":"A significant solar eclipse visible from the region. Solar eclipses are associated in Scripture with cosmic signs preceding the Day of the LORD (Amos 8:9: 'I will cause the sun to go down at noon, and I will darken the earth in the clear day'; Joel 2:31; Matthew 24:29). Total solar eclipses were recorded by ancient chroniclers and are used by modern astronomers to verify ancient dates with precision. The solar eclipse of 15 June 763 BC (Bur-Sagale eclipse) is the cornerstone anchor for the entire chronology of the Assyrian and early Hebrew monarchy periods. In the context of the DSS solar calendar, solar events reinforce the calendar's grounding in observable astronomical phenomena rather than pure calculation.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":2,"amYear":5950,"gregorianDate":"2026-02-17","originalDate":"2026-02-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5950-Adar-2","id":1773097909448.2502,"createdAt":"2026-03-09T23:11:49.448Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-09T23:57:01.736Z"}],"AM-3596-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Greece — Alexander Conquers Persia","time":"","eventDate":"-330-03-21","details":"Alexander the Great completed his conquest of the Persian Empire at the Battle of Gaugamela in October 331 BC, defeating Darius III decisively and entering Babylon without resistance. He went on to capture Persepolis, the Persian capital, burning the royal palace in 330 BC. Alexander then pushed east through Bactria and into India before his army refused to go further. He died in Babylon in June 323 BC at age 32, having never lost a battle. His campaigns fulfilled Daniel 8:5–7 with remarkable precision: the swift goat 'touched not the ground' — Alexander covered 11,000 miles in 8 years. At his death the kingdom was divided among his four generals (Cassander, Lysimachus, Ptolemy, Seleucus), fulfilling Daniel 8:8 and 11:4. 2 Kings 14:23; Daniel 8:5–8; 11:3–4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"am","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3596,"gregorianDate":"-329-03-21","originalDate":"-329-03-21","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726119787.8374,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:08:39.787Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:08:39.787Z","anchorDate":"AM-3596-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5515-Tevet-13":[],"AM-1948-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Abraham","time":"","eventDate":"-1977-03-24","details":"Abraham (originally Abram; Hebrew: father of a multitude) was called by God from Ur of the Chaldeans to leave his country, kindred and father's house for a land God would show him (Gen. 12:1). He obeyed, not knowing where he was going (Heb. 11:8). God made covenant with him, promising him the land of Canaan, innumerable descendants, and that all the families of the earth would be blessed in him (Gen. 12:2–3; 15; 17). He was 75 at his departure from Haran (Gen. 12:4) and 100 at Isaac's birth (Gen. 21:5) — having waited 25 years for the promised son. The supreme test came when God commanded him to offer Isaac on Mount Moriah; at the last moment God provided a ram as substitute (Gen. 22). Paul calls him 'the father of all who believe' (Rom. 4:11). He died at 175. Genesis 11:26–25:8; Romans 4; Hebrews 11:8–19.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1948,"gregorianDate":"-1977-03-24","originalDate":"-1977-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770851285428.9944,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1948-Nisan-2","id":1770851059385.7236,"createdAt":"2026-02-11T23:04:19.385Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.175Z","endEventDate":"-1802-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2123}],"AM-3403-Tammuz-22":[],"1948-05-14":[],"AM-1558-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3174-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Shallum Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-751-03-19","details":"Shallum son of Jabesh conspired against Zechariah son of Jeroboam II and killed him in public, reigning in his place for one month before being killed by Menahem son of Gadi (2 Kgs 15:10–14). Shallum's assassination of Zechariah ended the dynasty of Jehu — the last dynasty of any length in the northern kingdom — fulfilling God's promise to Jehu that his sons would sit on the throne of Israel to the fourth generation (2 Kgs 10:30; 15:12). The four generations were Jehu, Jehoahaz, Jehoash, Jeroboam II, and Zechariah. After Shallum, the northern kingdom experienced only chaotic, short-lived usurpers before Assyrian destruction in 722 BC. 2 Kings 15:10–15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3174,"gregorianDate":"-751-03-19","originalDate":"-751-03-19","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403870385.52,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403842239.6035,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:37:22.239Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:18:43.449Z","endEventDate":"-751-04-18","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Iyar","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3174,"anchorDate":"AM-3174-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5505-Tevet-16":[],"AM-5951-Adar-22":[],"AM-3052-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Ahab Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-873-03-25","details":"Ahab son of Omri reigned 22 years over Israel. He did more to provoke God to anger than all the kings of Israel before him (1 Kgs 16:33). He married Jezebel, daughter of the Phoenician king of Sidon, and served and worshipped Baal, building a Baal temple and Asherah pole in Samaria. His reign is dominated by his conflict with the prophet Elijah: the three-and-a-half-year drought, the contest on Mount Carmel (1 Kgs 18), and the murder of Naboth for his vineyard (1 Kgs 21). Despite three Syrian wars and a period of relative political success, he died at the Battle of Ramoth-gilead — shot by an archer 'at random' in an arrow that found the gap in his armour — fulfilling Elijah's prophecy. Elijah's word was also fulfilled when dogs licked his blood (22:38). 1 Kings 16:28–22:40.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3052,"gregorianDate":"-873-03-25","originalDate":"-873-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403652808.5652,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403629430.3357,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:33:49.430Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:29:11.109Z","endEventDate":"-852-03-19","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3073,"anchorDate":"AM-3052-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2480-Sivan-6":[],"AM-3410-Adar-3":[{"title":"Second Temple","time":"","eventDate":"-514-02-17","details":"The Second Temple was completed on 3 Adar in the sixth year of Darius I = March 516 BC (Ezra 6:15) — exactly 70 years after the destruction of the First Temple in 586 BC, fulfilling Jeremiah's prophecy (Jer. 29:10). Zerubbabel's Temple was significantly less grand than Solomon's — the older priests who had seen the First Temple wept aloud at the new foundation (Ezra 3:12). The prophet Haggai promised that the glory of the latter house would surpass the former (Hag. 2:9), interpreted as fulfilled when Jesus — 'in whom all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell' (Col. 1:19) — entered the Temple courts. It stood until Titus destroyed it in 70 AD. Ezra 6:14–18.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":3,"amYear":3410,"gregorianDate":"-514-02-17","originalDate":"-514-02-17","linkedEvents":[{"id":1767826160332.0369,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3410-Adar-3","id":1771361003639.186,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T20:43:23.639Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-23T21:52:48.693Z","endEventDate":"70-08-02","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Av","endAMDay":15,"endAMYear":3995}],"AM-3317-Nisan-3":[],"AM-4238-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Edict of Milan — Christianity legalised","time":"","eventDate":"313-03-21","details":"Co-emperors Constantine I and Licinius issued the Edict of Milan in 313 AD, granting full religious tolerance throughout the Roman Empire and specifically restoring confiscated church property (Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum 48). This ended three centuries of intermittent Roman persecution of Christians. Constantine went further, actively patronising the church, building the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem (~326 AD), and convening the Council of Nicaea (325 AD). The edict represents the single most consequential political shift in the history of Christianity. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4238,"gregorianDate":"313-03-21","originalDate":"313-03-21","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800032000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:32.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:32.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-4238-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5950-Nisan-1":[],"2026-03-25":[],"AM-2199-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3387-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Medo-Persia","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3387-Nisan-2","details":"**Medo-Persian Empire** | Second World Empire\nRise: 539 BC — 3387 AM | Fall: 331 BC — 3595 AM | Duration: 208 years\n\nCyrus the Great conquers Babylon in a single night, becoming the dominant world power. The empire unites the Medes and Persians under one crown, pressing westward until Alexander the Great shatters it at the Battle of Gaugamela — the ram broken by the goat, with no power able to stand before him.\n\nRepresented by the chest and arms of silver (Daniel 2), the bear raised up on one side (Daniel 7), and the ram with two horns representing Media and Persia (Daniel 8). It is the second beast of Daniel 7 and the present empire of Zechariah (520 BC). Isaiah named its founder Cyrus by name generations before his birth.\n\n**Prophetic Anchor — 457 BC (3469 AM):** Artaxerxes I issues the decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem, the starting point of Daniel's 70 Weeks prophecy. The Nehemiah decree of Nisan 445 BC (Neh. 2:1) is the leading rival candidate for this starting point. The empire falls when Alexander defeats Darius III at Gaugamela, 331 BC.\n\n*(Daniel 2, 7, 8; Daniel 9 · 70 Weeks; Isaiah 44–45; Ezra 7; Nehemiah 2:1; Zechariah 1)*","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3387,"gregorianDate":"AM-3387-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-3387-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726043926.4983,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:07:23.926Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-14T23:32:22.491Z","endEventDate":"-330-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3595,"anchorDate":"AM-3387-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Tevet-23":[],"AM-3015-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Assyrian Empire — dominant period","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3014-Nisan-1","details":"The Neo-Assyrian Empire (~911–609 BC) is the dominant world power presupposed by Isaiah and Jeremiah. Isaiah 10 predicts Assyria's rise and fall. Nahum is entirely devoted to Nineveh's destruction (612 BC). The fall of Nineveh transitions hegemony to Babylon. Anchor: Isaiah 1:1 (~740 BC); fall confirmed by the Babylonian Chronicle. Dates in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3015,"gregorianDate":"AM-3014-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-3014-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700001000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:01:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T03:56:00.028Z","endEventDate":"-608-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3317,"anchorDate":"AM-3015-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5442-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Ottoman conquest of Jerusalem — Suleiman the Magnificent","time":"","eventDate":"1517-03-30","details":"The Ottoman Sultan Selim I defeated the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate at the Battle of Marj Dabiq (1516) and entered Jerusalem in January 1517, establishing Ottoman rule over the Holy Land. His son Suleiman the Magnificent later rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem (1537–1541), including the walls and gates that largely stand today. Ottoman rule over Jerusalem lasted until General Allenby's entry in December 1917. The Ottoman period (~400 years) is thus the longest single-power rule over Jerusalem in the second millennium. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5442,"gregorianDate":"1517-03-30","originalDate":"1517-03-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800041000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:41.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:41.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5442-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Protestant Reformation — Luther's 95 Theses","time":"","eventDate":"1517-03-30","details":"On 31 October 1517, Martin Luther, an Augustinian friar and theology professor, published his 95 Theses challenging the sale of indulgences and papal authority over purgatory. Distributed rapidly via the printing press, this act sparked the Protestant Reformation — the fracture of Western Christendom into Catholic and Protestant branches. The Reformation profoundly shaped European history, produced new Bible translations in vernacular languages, and eventually contributed to the religious freedom movements that enabled modern Zionism and Jewish emancipation. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5442,"gregorianDate":"1517-03-30","originalDate":"1517-03-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800042000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:42.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:42.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5442-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5507-Cheshvan-10":[],"AM-3390-Nisan-24":[{"title":"Daniel's Vision by Tigris River","time":"","eventDate":"-535-04-15","details":"In the third year of Cyrus (~534 BC) Daniel was standing by the great river Tigris when he saw a man clothed in linen, his body like beryl, his face like lightning, his eyes like flaming torches, his arms and legs like burnished bronze, his voice like the sound of a multitude (Dan. 10:5–6). The vision so overwhelmed Daniel that all strength left him, his radiant appearance was horribly changed, and he fell into a deep sleep. A hand touched him and lifted him, and the heavenly messenger explained he had been delayed 21 days by the 'prince of Persia' (an angelic power over nations) until Michael came to help. This chapter introduces Daniel 11–12 — the most detailed predictive prophecy in Scripture. Daniel 10.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":24,"amYear":3390,"gregorianDate":"-535-04-14","originalDate":"-535-04-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771469239498.7666,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T02:47:19.498Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-19T02:49:25.897Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3390-Nisan-24"}],"AM-3957-Sivan-7":[{"title":"Pentecost — the Holy Spirit poured out","time":"","eventDate":"32-05-30","details":"Fifty days after the Passover crucifixion, the disciples were gathered in Jerusalem when a sound like a rushing mighty wind filled the room, tongues of fire appeared on each person, and all were filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke in other languages (Acts 2:1–4). Peter preached to the assembled Jewish pilgrims from across the diaspora; about 3,000 were baptized that day (Acts 2:41). This event, fulfilling Joel 2:28–32 and Jesus's promise in Acts 1:8, marks the birth of the New Testament church. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":7,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-05-30","originalDate":"32-05-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800026000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:26.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-14T02:24:51.673Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Sivan-7"}],"AM-5951-Tishri-0":[],"AM-5950-Adar-30":[],"2075-08-17":[],"1977-12-22":[],"-535-04-23":[],"AM-3924-Adar-28":[],"2075-07-17":[],"-585-04-07":[],"AM-5525-Tevet-12":[],"AM-3595-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Greek/Macedonian Empire — begins","time":"","eventDate":"-331-03-20","details":"The Macedonian Greek Empire (331–63 BC) is Daniel's bronze kingdom and the third beast (leopard with four wings, Dan. 7). Daniel 8 describes it as the swift he-goat from the west who 'touched not the ground' — fulfilled precisely in Alexander's lightning campaigns. After Alexander's death (323 BC), the empire divides into four — matching Daniel 8:8 ('four notable horns'). Ends with Pompey's entry into Jerusalem, 63 BC.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3595,"gregorianDate":"-330-03-20","originalDate":"-330-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600014000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:14:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:14:00.000Z","endEventDate":"-63-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3862,"anchorDate":"AM-3595-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Alexander defeats Persia at Gaugamela","time":"","eventDate":"-331-03-20","details":"Alexander the Great defeats Darius III at the Battle of Gaugamela (October 331 BC), fulfilling Daniel 8:5–8's vision of the swift goat from the west. Daniel's four-empire sequence is now three-for-three: Babylon (605 BC), Persia (539 BC), Greece (331 BC). The breaking of the goat's 'great horn' at the height of power (Alexander's death, 323 BC) and the four divisions that follow are explicitly predicted in Daniel 8:8 and 11:4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3595,"gregorianDate":"-330-03-20","originalDate":"-330-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600015000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:15:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:15:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3595-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3995-Av-17":[],"AM-3170-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Hosea prophesies — God's covenant love for Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-755-03-12","details":"Hosea prophesied during the turbulent final decades of the northern kingdom (Hos. 1:1; c. 756–715 BC), commanding to marry Gomer as a living parable of Israel's unfaithfulness to YHWH. He is the first prophet to use marriage as a metaphor for the covenant relationship. He announced the Assyrian exile as inevitable but held out the hope of a future restoration in which God would renew the covenant (Hos. 2:14–23). His ministry spans the reigns of Jeroboam II through Hoshea and the fall of Samaria (722 BC). Dates approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3170,"gregorianDate":"-755-03-12","originalDate":"-755-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800013000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:13.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:13.000Z","endEventDate":"-715-03-12","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3210,"anchorDate":"AM-3170-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2481-Iyar-1":[{"title":"The Command Goes Out: Count Every Man for Battle","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-04-17","details":"Month 2, Day 1\n\"The Command Goes Out: Count Every Man for Battle\"\nOn this day God commands Moses and Aaron to take a census of the whole congregation of Israel — every male 20 years and older who is able to go to war — clan by clan and tribe by tribe. The tribe of Levi is excluded and set apart to care for the Tabernacle. The final count of all the other twelve tribes comes to 603,550 men of fighting age. The tribes are then arranged around the Tabernacle in specific positions, each under their own banner, forming the organized camp of Israel. (Numbers 1–2)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":1,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-04-17","originalDate":"-1444-04-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Iyar-1","id":1771650850423.4624,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:14:10.423Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T18:28:00.675Z"}],"-1998-11-08":[],"AM-3524-Nisan-17":[],"AM-2872-Nisan-2":[],"1581-01-01":[],"AM-3174-Tishri-3":[],"AM-20-Nisan-15":[],"-1477-04-06":[],"AM-2481-Iyar-20":[{"title":"The Cloud Moves: Israel Leaves Sinai","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-05-06","details":"Month 2, Day 20\n\"The Cloud Moves: Israel Leaves Sinai\"\nAfter nearly a year camped at the foot of Mount Sinai, the cloud lifts from the Tabernacle for the first time — the signal to break camp and move out. The silver trumpets are blown, the tribes march out in their prescribed order with the Ark of the Lord going before them, and Israel sets out into the wilderness of Paran. Moses invites his father-in-law Hobab to travel with them as a guide through the wilderness. After a year of receiving the law, building the Tabernacle, and being formed into a nation, Israel is finally on the move toward the Promised Land. (Numbers 10:11-32)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":20,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-05-06","originalDate":"-1444-05-06","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Iyar-20","id":1771650939839.3657,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:15:39.839Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:15:39.839Z"}],"2072-05-24":[],"AM-3017-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2559-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5000-Nisan-13":[],"AM-4562-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Islamic conquest of Jerusalem","time":"","eventDate":"637-03-23","details":"Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab entered Jerusalem in 637 AD after the city surrendered to the Muslim Arab forces following the Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Yarmouk (636 AD). Umar signed the Covenant of Umar granting protection to Christian inhabitants and their holy sites. The Dome of the Rock was built on the Temple Mount by Caliph Abd al-Malik in 691 AD. This conquest began approximately 1,280 years of Islamic political control over Jerusalem (637–1917 AD, with the Crusader interlude, 1099–1187 AD). Recorded by Theophanes and Byzantine chronicles. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4562,"gregorianDate":"637-03-23","originalDate":"637-03-23","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800035000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:35.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:35.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-4562-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2118-Nisan-15":[],"AM-3590-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Greece — Alexander the Great","time":"","eventDate":"-335-03-20","details":"Greece — Alexander the Great\nRise: 336 BC — 3590 AM | Fall: 323 BC — 3603 AM | Duration: 13 years\nAlexander becomes King of Macedon and sweeps across the known world with breathtaking speed. Represented by the belly and thighs of bronze (Daniel 2), the leopard with four wings (Daniel 7), and the goat from the west with a notable horn (Daniel 8). He destroys the Medo-Persian empire, the great horn shattering the ram. At the height of his power Alexander dies suddenly in Babylon at age 32 without an heir. The united empire lasts only 13 years. (Daniel 2, 7, 8)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3590,"gregorianDate":"-335-03-20","originalDate":"-335-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726096600.7751,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:08:16.600Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:55:45.458Z","endEventDate":"-322-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3603,"anchorDate":"AM-3590-Nisan-2"}],"-956-09-20":[],"AM-2830-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jair Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1095-03-20","details":"Jair the Gileadite judged Israel 22 years. He had 30 sons who rode 30 donkeys and had 30 cities in Gilead — called Havvoth-jair ('the villages of Jair') to this day (Judges 10:3–5). The detail of 30 sons on 30 donkeys indicates substantial wealth and political influence; riding donkeys was a mark of nobility in ancient Israel (cf. Judges 5:10; 12:14). After Jair's death Israel returned to idolatry — worshipping the gods of Sidon, Moab, Ammon, Philistia and Syria — leading to 18 years of Ammonite oppression and the rise of Jephthah. Judges 10:3–5.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2830,"gregorianDate":"-1095-03-20","originalDate":"-1095-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453865149.883,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453841052.0483,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:30:41.052Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:56:53.981Z","endEventDate":"-1073-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2852,"anchorDate":"AM-2830-Nisan-2"}],"-3912-03-19":[],"AM-2901-Nisan-3":[],"2025-12-21":[],"AM-3527-Nisan-16":[],"1500-12-31":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-16":[{"title":"Thursday sunset → Friday: Day 2 night / Day 2 day","time":"","eventDate":"32-04-02","details":"16 Nisan — Friday — Day 2 night and Day 2 day. An ordinary working day between the High Sabbath (15 Nisan / Thursday) and the weekly Sabbath (17 Nisan / Saturday). This is the day the women purchased and prepared additional spices for the anointing of Jesus's body (Mark 16:1: 'when the sabbath was past' — referring to the High Sabbath — 'they bought sweet spices'). Luke 23:56 records that they 'prepared spices and ointments and rested the sabbath day' — this resting refers to the weekly Sabbath on Day 3, not this day. Jesus remained in the tomb. In the DSS solar calendar 16 Nisan is always a Friday. Mark 16:1.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":16,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-04-02","originalDate":"32-04-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-16","id":1771531696596.0476,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:08:16.596Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:53:54.188Z"}],"2075-06-19":[],"AM-3956-Iyar-6":[],"2026-01-28":[],"AM-5425-Tevet-13":[],"AM-3306-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3751-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Seleucid Empire — Antiochus Epiphanes","time":"","eventDate":"-174-03-24","details":"Seleucid Empire — Antiochus Epiphanes\nRise: 175 BC — 3751 AM | Fall: 164 BC — 3762 AM | Duration: 11 years\nAntiochus IV Epiphanes rises to power over the Seleucid Empire and is identified as the little horn of Daniel 8. He campaigns against Egypt and on his return vents his fury against Israel. In 168 BC — 3758 AM he desecrates the Jerusalem Temple, stops the daily sacrifice, erects an altar to Zeus, and sacrifices a pig on the altar — the abomination of desolation (Daniel 8:11-14, 11:31). Judas Maccabeus leads a revolt and recaptures and cleanses the Temple in 165 BC — 3761 AM, an event celebrated as Hanukkah. Antiochus dies on campaign in Persia in 164 BC, fulfilling Daniel 8:25 — he is broken without human hand. (Daniel 8, 11)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3751,"gregorianDate":"-174-03-24","originalDate":"-174-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726202355.839,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:10:02.355Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:59:24.883Z","endEventDate":"-163-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3762,"anchorDate":"AM-3751-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2480-Nisan-18":[{"title":"Days 4–7 18th–21st Nisan          Etham → Pi Hahiroth","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-18","details":"Ex. 14:1–2 *And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, that they turn and encamp before Pi Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea.*\n\nGod commands Israel to turn southward and camp before Pi Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea. This change of direction makes Israel appear trapped: 'the wilderness has closed them in' (14:3). But the divine strategy is deliberate — God is hardening Pharaoh's heart so that he will pursue, that God may get glory over Pharaoh (14:4). Israel arrives at Pi Hahiroth, encamped between Migdol and the sea, hemmed in by desert on either side, the sea before them and Pharaoh's army now in pursuit behind them. The Exodus route via the Gulf of Aqaba — Yam Suph, the Sea of Reeds or Red Sea — is consistent with this southward movement along the Sinai peninsula and with the identification of Mount Sinai as Jabal al-Lawz in northwest Saudi Arabia. Exodus 14:1–9.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":18,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-18","originalDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-18","id":1771639203099.825,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:00:03.099Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T20:47:21.303Z"}],"AM-3265-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Nahum prophesies — fall of Nineveh","time":"","eventDate":"-660-03-13","details":"Nahum the Elkoshite delivers an oracle entirely devoted to the coming destruction of Nineveh, capital of Assyria (Nah. 1:1). His prophecy is datable between 663 BC (fall of Thebes/No-Amon, which Nahum refers to as past; 3:8) and 612 BC (the actual fall of Nineveh). Where Jonah earlier preached repentance to Nineveh (~760 BC), Nahum announces irreversible judgment — Nineveh's destruction will be total and permanent. Confirmed: Nineveh fell to the Babylonian-Median coalition in 612 BC. Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3265,"gregorianDate":"-660-03-13","originalDate":"-660-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800015000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:15.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:15.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3265-Nisan-1"}],"AM-395-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Mahalaleel","time":"","eventDate":"-3530-03-21","details":"Mahalaleel (Hebrew: praise of God / the blessed God) was born to Cainan at 70. He lived 895 years and begat Jared at 65. His name is one of the most explicitly theological in the pre-Flood genealogy — incorporating the divine name El and the root meaning praise or bless. He is the fifth generation from Adam in the Sethite line. Genesis 5:12–17.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":395,"gregorianDate":"-3530-03-21","originalDate":"-3530-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942793499.6409,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942756175.83,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:32:36.175Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:23:24.188Z","anchorDate":"AM-395-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2635-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1290}],"AM-1657-Iyar-27":[{"title":"Gen 8:14 And in the second month, on the seven and twentieth day of the month, was the earth dried.","time":"","eventDate":"-2268-05-15","details":"On 27 Iyar AM 1657 — exactly one solar year and ten days after the Flood began (17 Iyar AM 1656) — God declares the earth fully dry and commands Noah, his family, and all the animals to leave the ark (Gen. 8:15–17). Noah's first act on the restored earth is to build an altar and offer burnt offerings of every clean animal and bird (Gen. 8:20). God responds with the Noahic covenant — the first covenant with all humanity — promising never again to destroy all life by flood, and setting the rainbow as its sign (Gen. 9:8–17). Genesis 8:14–22; 9:1–17.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":27,"amYear":1657,"gregorianDate":"-2268-05-14","originalDate":"-2268-05-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1657-Iyar-27","id":1771624270074.312,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:51:10.074Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-20T21:51:10.074Z"}],"2075-08-07":[],"31-11-02":[],"AM-3758-Kislev-25":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-3":[],"2072-07-08":[],"AM-3906-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Herod begins rebuilding the Temple","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3905-Nisan-1","details":"In approximately 20–19 BC, Herod the Great began the massive renovation of Zerubbabel's Second Temple (Josephus, Ant. 15.11.1). He doubled the Temple Mount platform, constructing the enormous retaining walls (the Western Wall is part of this construction), and rebuilt the sanctuary itself with white marble and gold. Josephus records that Herod trained 1,000 priests as masons so that the sacred precincts would not be touched by laymen. The project was still ongoing in Jesus's day — John 2:20 records that 'forty and six years was this temple in building.' Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3906,"gregorianDate":"AM-3905-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-3905-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800025000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:25.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T01:32:49.868Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3906-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5950-Tishri-0":[],"AM-3955-Nisan-1":[],"-3794-03-19":[],"AM-200-Iyar-29":[],"AM-3163-Sivan-15":[{"title":"The Bur-Sagale Eclipse & Jonah's Mission to Nineveh","time":"","eventDate":"-762-06-07","details":"The Bur-Sagale Eclipse & Jonah's Mission to Nineveh\nEclipse: 763 BC — 3163 AM | Jonah's Arrival: ~760 BC — 3166 AM | Duration: single generation\nOn June 15, 763 BC — 3163 AM a total solar eclipse recorded in the Assyrian Eponym Chronicle passes directly over Nineveh, plunging the most powerful city on earth into sudden darkness. Combined with a plague and internal revolt recorded in Assyrian records at the same time, the Assyrian people are primed with fear and a sense of divine judgment. Within a few years Jonah arrives in Nineveh with his message — yet forty days and Nineveh shall be overthrown (Jonah 3:4). Rather than resist, the king and the entire city from the greatest to the least repent in sackcloth and ashes. God relents from the disaster. This is one of the greatest mass repentances in recorded history and the eclipse provides the historical context for why the most powerful empire in the world would humble itself before the God of a small Hebrew prophet. The Assyrian records confirm the timeline and the eclipse can be used as a precise anchor point in biblical chronology. (Jonah 3)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":15,"amYear":3163,"gregorianDate":"-762-06-07","originalDate":"-762-06-07","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3163-Sivan-15","id":1771624470165.2566,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:54:30.165Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-14T02:03:30.530Z"}],"AM-3957-Nisan-10":[{"title":"Passover Lamb Chosen","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-10","details":"Ex. 12:3 On the tenth day of this month each man is to take a lamb for his family, one for each household.\nOn 10 Nisan, the prescribed day for selecting the Passover lamb, Jesus entered Jerusalem riding on a donkey — fulfilling Zechariah's prophecy of the coming king. Each household was to choose a perfect, unblemished male lamb on this day and set it apart until the fourteenth. Jesus, arriving publicly before the crowds, stepped into that role himself — the lamb chosen and presented. Mark notes he entered the temple, looked around, and returned to Bethany. Zechariah 9:9; Ex. 12:3–5; Matt. 21:1–11; Mark 11:1–11; Luke 19:28–44; John 12:12; 1 Pet. 1:19.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":10,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-10","originalDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-10","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-10","id":1774898310722.2915,"createdAt":"2026-03-30T19:18:30.722Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T19:44:32.469Z"}],"AM-2764-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2901-Nisan-2":[{"title":"David Anointed (1st time)","time":"","eventDate":"-1024-03-22","details":"When Saul disobeyed God's command to utterly destroy the Amalekites, God rejected him as king and sent Samuel secretly to Bethlehem to anoint one of Jesse's sons (1 Sam. 15–16). Jesse presented seven sons but God rejected each. Samuel asked if there were more — the youngest, David, was out keeping sheep. When David came in, God told Samuel: 'Arise, anoint him: for this is he' (1 Sam. 16:12). Samuel anointed David in the midst of his brothers with oil, and 'the Spirit of the LORD came upon David from that day forward' (16:13). This private anointing precedes David's actual reign by approximately 15 years. 1 Samuel 16:1–13.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2901,"gregorianDate":"-1024-03-22","originalDate":"-1024-03-22","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454196608.4922,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:36:36.608Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:53:31.172Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2901-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3130-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3190-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Micah prophesies — Bethlehem prophecy","time":"","eventDate":"-735-03-12","details":"Micah of Moresheth prophesied under Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah of Judah (Mic. 1:1; c. 736–700 BC). He pronounced judgment on both Samaria and Jerusalem and their corrupt leaders and prophets (chs. 1–3). He is most famous for predicting that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem Ephrathah (Mic. 5:2) — cited by the chief priests when Herod asked where the Christ was to be born (Matt. 2:5–6). He also prophesied the universal kingdom of peace (4:1–5), quoted in Isaiah 2:2–4. Dates approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3190,"gregorianDate":"-735-03-12","originalDate":"-735-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800014000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:14.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:14.000Z","endEventDate":"-700-03-13","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3225,"anchorDate":"AM-3190-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3480-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Artaxerxes decree to Nehemiah — 70 Weeks starts","time":"","eventDate":"-445-03-20","details":"Artaxerxes I grants Nehemiah permission to rebuild Jerusalem's walls in Nisan of his 20th year (Neh. 2:1) = Nisan 446 BC. This is the leading candidate for the starting point of Daniel's 70 Weeks (Dan. 9:25: 'from the going out of the word to restore and build Jerusalem'). From 446 BC + 69 × 7 prophetic years (360 days) = AD 32–33, pointing to Messiah's entry into Jerusalem. Persian period anchor, confirmed by the Elephantine Papyri.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3480,"gregorianDate":"-445-03-20","originalDate":"-445-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600013000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:13:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:13:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3480-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5937-Nisan-18":[{"title":"Start of the Kingdom Age","time":"","eventDate":"AM-5937-Nisan-18","details":"","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":18,"amYear":5937,"gregorianDate":"AM-5937-Nisan-18","originalDate":"AM-5937-Nisan-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5937-Nisan-18","id":1773971232301.1846,"createdAt":"2026-03-20T01:47:12.301Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T04:20:09.887Z"}],"-3690-03-23":[],"AM-5515-Tevet-11":[],"AM-5864-Elul-13":[],"2026-02-11":[],"AM-2960-Iyar-3":[],"AM-5950-Cheshvan-6":[],"AM-2108-Nisan-3":[{"title":"Jacob","time":"","eventDate":"-1817-03-22","details":"Joseph was 30 when appointed (Genesis 41:46)\n+7 years of plenty (Genesis 41:53–54)\n+2 years of famine elapsed when Joseph revealed himself (Genesis 45:6)\n= Joseph was 39 when Jacob relocated to Egypt ✅\n\nHowever, the question is: When was Joseph born?\nJacob was 130 when he stood before Pharaoh (Genesis 47:9).\nJoseph was 39 at that time.\n130 − 39 = 91 ✅","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":3,"amYear":2108,"gregorianDate":"-1817-03-22","originalDate":"-1817-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770914829014.733,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2108-Nisan-3","id":1770915170884.0754,"createdAt":"2026-02-12T16:46:10.954Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:26:33.647Z","endEventDate":"-1670-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2255}],"AM-5950-Kislev-7":[],"AM-2520-Nisan-2":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-7":[],"AM-3387-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Fall of Babylon — Cyrus takes power","time":"","eventDate":"-539-03-20","details":"Cyrus the Great takes Babylon without a battle in October 539 BC. This fulfills: (1) Isaiah's prophecy naming Cyrus (Isa. 44–45), written ~200 years earlier; (2) Jeremiah's 70-year decree (605–537 BC); (3) Daniel's four-empire vision (the silver kingdom succeeding gold). Daniel 5 places the handwriting on the wall on the precise night of Babylon's fall. Confirmed by the Cyrus Cylinder and the Nabonidus Chronicle.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3387,"gregorianDate":"-538-03-20","originalDate":"-538-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600010000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:10:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:10:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3387-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2008-Nisan-1":[],"AM-3953-Tammuz-3":[],"AM-5951-Iyar-12":[],"AM-3339-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Obadiah prophesies — judgment on Edom","time":"","eventDate":"-586-03-14","details":"Obadiah, the shortest book in the Old Testament, delivers a single oracle against Edom for its treachery when Jerusalem fell (c. 587 BC): Edom stood aloof, rejoiced at Judah's destruction, cut off fugitives, and handed over survivors to Babylon (Obad. 10–14). The vision announces Edom's complete destruction and Judah's restoration. Edom (the nation descended from Esau) represents the perpetual enmity between the brothers — a theme running from Genesis 25 to Revelation 18 (Babylon-as-Edom). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3339,"gregorianDate":"-586-03-14","originalDate":"-586-03-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800018000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:18.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:18.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3339-Nisan-1"}],"-587-07-31":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-24":[{"title":"Day 10 24th Nisan — Night          Cloud Moves to the Rear","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-12","details":"As the Egyptian army approached the Israelite camp, the angel of God who had been travelling in front of Israel's army moved behind them, and the pillar of cloud moved from in front and stood behind them (Ex. 14:19–20). It came between the armies of Egypt and Israel — cloud and darkness to the Egyptians, light to Israel — so that neither side came near the other all night long. God was actively separating and protecting Israel through the night before the crossing. Then Moses stretched out his hand over the sea and God drove the sea back with a strong east wind all night, turning the sea into dry land (14:21). Exodus 14:19–21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":24,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-12","originalDate":"-1445-04-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-24","id":1771639408588.253,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:03:28.588Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:03:28.588Z"},{"title":"Day 10 24th Nisan — Dawn          RED SEA CROSSING AT GULF OF AQABA","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-12","details":"Moses stretches rod — east wind parts the sea. Dry ground. Walls of water. Israel crosses. Gulf of Aqaba / Nuweiba crossing point. Ex. 14:21–22.\n\nThe Nuweiba Underwater Causeway\nLocated in the Gulf of Aqaba, the Nuweiba underwater causeway is a natural underwater land bridge stretching approximately 8 miles (13 km) across the gulf from Nuweiba, Egypt to the shores of Saudi Arabia. The causeway sits at a relatively shallow depth compared to the surrounding waters, which drop to over 800 meters (2,600 feet) on either side.\nThe water directly over the top of the causeway ranges from approximately 100 to 200 feet (30 to 60 meters) deep at its shallowest points, while the surrounding gulf floor drops dramatically to 800-900 meters on both sides. This makes a natural crossing impossible today, yet the underwater land bridge provides a clear and logical physical path — perfectly consistent with the biblical account of a miraculous parting of the waters.\nThis underwater ridge has gained significant attention because many researchers, archaeologists, and biblical scholars believe it to be the site of the Red Sea Crossing described in the Book of Exodus, where Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt. The gradual slope on both sides of the causeway would have made it physically possible for a large group of people to cross on foot once the waters were divided.\nRon Wyatt, an amateur archaeologist, famously claimed in the 1970s-80s to have discovered chariot wheels and human bones along the causeway floor, which he associated with the Egyptian army's destruction during the crossing as described in Exodus.\nThis natural formation at such a historically and biblically significant location continues to fascinate researchers, faith communities, and explorers worldwide.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":24,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-12","originalDate":"-1445-04-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-24","id":1771639459238.7915,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:04:19.238Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-25T21:31:06.542Z"},{"title":"Day 10 24th Nisan — Morning          PHARAOH'S ARMY DESTROYED","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-12","details":"After Israel completed the crossing, Moses stretched out his hand over the sea and at daybreak the waters flowed back over the Egyptians — over their chariots and horsemen and the entire army. Not one of them survived (Ex. 14:28). The Israelites saw the Egyptians lying dead on the shore. The Egyptian army — including Pharaoh's elite chariot force — was completely destroyed in a single morning. The text emphasises totality: 'not one of them survived' (14:28). This military reversal — Israel helpless slaves the night before, Egypt's army destroyed by morning — is held up throughout the rest of Scripture as the supreme demonstration of God's power and faithfulness. Exodus 14:26–30.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":24,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-12","originalDate":"-1445-04-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-24","id":1771639610866.5393,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:06:50.866Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:06:50.866Z"},{"title":"Day 10 24th Nisan — After          Song of Moses & Miriam","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-12","details":"After seeing the Egyptians dead on the shore, Moses and the Israelites sang the Song of Moses (Ex. 15:1–18) — the first song recorded in Scripture. Its opening line: 'I will sing to the LORD, for he has triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.' It celebrates God's power, his holy war on Egypt's behalf of Israel, and looks ahead to God's guidance to the Promised Land. Miriam the prophetess (Aaron's sister) then led the women in a second song with tambourines and dancing: 'Sing to the LORD, for he has triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea' (15:21) — the oldest recorded quotation of a woman's voice in Scripture. Exodus 15:1–21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":24,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-12","originalDate":"-1445-04-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-24","id":1771639713653.1824,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T02:08:33.653Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:08:33.653Z"}],"32-04-11":[],"2076-03-16":[],"AM-687-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Methuselah","time":"","eventDate":"-3238-03-23","details":"Methuselah (Hebrew: possibly 'man of the dart' or 'his death shall bring judgment') was born to Enoch at 65. He holds the record for the longest human lifespan in Scripture: 969 years. He begat Lamech at 187. Adding the years from his birth to the Flood (187 + 182 + 600 = 969) reveals that Methuselah died in the very year of the Flood — either just before it or in it. This is why some have suggested his name means 'when he dies, it will come' — as if God delayed the Flood for the full length of Methuselah's life. He is the eighth generation from Adam and the grandfather of Noah. Genesis 5:21–27.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":687,"gregorianDate":"-3238-03-23","originalDate":"-3238-03-23","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942915779.9646,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770942883196.0488,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:34:43.196Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:20:46.410Z","anchorDate":"AM-687-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2269-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1656}],"2025-11-22":[],"AM-3410-Nisan-2":[],"AM-1056-Nisan-3":[],"AM-874-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2480-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Sacred Calendar","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-03-20","details":"[Exo 12:2 KJV] 2 This month [shall be] unto you the beginning of months: it [shall be] the first month of the year to you.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-03-20","originalDate":"-1445-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-1","id":1771637442018.3672,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:30:42.018Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T03:49:44.921Z"}],"AM-3174-Tishri-2":[{"title":"Menahem Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-751-09-17","details":"Menahem son of Gadi seized power by killing Shallum and reigned 10 years. He sacked Tiphsah because it would not open its gates to him and ripped open all the pregnant women (2 Kgs 15:16). During his reign Tiglath-Pileser III of Assyria (called Pul) invaded Israel; Menahem gave him 1,000 talents of silver to confirm his hold on the kingdom and secure Assyrian support — taxing all the wealthy Israelites 50 shekels each (15:19–20). This is the first explicit reference to Assyrian tribute payments from Israel, marking the beginning of Israel's vassalage to Assyria that would end in deportation under Hoshea. 2 Kings 15:14–22.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":2,"amYear":3174,"gregorianDate":"-751-09-17","originalDate":"-751-09-17","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403892173.225,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403870385.52,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:37:50.385Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:18:22.095Z","endEventDate":"-741-03-21","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3184,"anchorDate":"AM-3174-Tishri-2"}],"AM-1756-Adar-30":[{"title":"Tower of Babel — nations scattered","time":"","eventDate":"-2168-03-20","details":"Genesis 10:25 records that Peleg was named because 'in his days the earth was divided' — the Hebrew peleg means division or canal. Genesis 11:1–9 describes the entire earth speaking one language; the people gathered in Shinar and began building a city and tower 'whose top may reach unto heaven.' God confused their language and scattered them across the earth. This event is the origin of the world's distinct nations and language families, and sets the stage for the Table of Nations (Gen. 10). Approximate date based on Peleg's genealogical position. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":30,"amYear":1756,"gregorianDate":"-2168-03-20","originalDate":"-2168-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800001000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:01.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-14T01:50:58.825Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-1756-Adar-30"}],"AM-3474-Nisan-14":[{"title":"Daniel's Prophecy (7 Weeks)","time":"","eventDate":"-451-04-06","details":"The first section of Daniel's 70-weeks prophecy (Dan. 9:25) specifies 'seven weeks' (49 years) from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem until Jerusalem is rebuilt 'with street and moat, even in troubled times.' From Nehemiah's decree in Nisan 445 BC, 7 × 7 = 49 years brings us to approximately 396 BC — the approximate completion of the Old Testament canon with Malachi and Nehemiah's reforms. Some scholars connect the 7 weeks to the period from Nehemiah's decree to the close of the prophetic canon, after which prophetic silence fell until John the Baptist. The 7 weeks and 62 weeks are often read as separate phases: 49 years of rebuilding, then 434 years to Messiah. Daniel 9:25.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":3474,"linkedEvents":[{"id":1767848687150.3247,"isRepeating":false}],"anchorDate":"AM-3474-Nisan-14","id":1767826160332.0369,"createdAt":"2025-12-29T21:14:38.554Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z","gregorianDate":"-451-04-06","linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"hideUntilReminder":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"originalDate":"-451-04-06","endEventDate":"-402-04-04","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":17,"endAMYear":3523}],"2025-04-13":[],"AM-1757-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5699-Tevet-12":[],"AM-1656-Tishri-15":[{"title":"Gen 8:3 And the waters returned from off the earth continually: and after the end of the hundred and fifty days the waters were abated.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-14","details":"The waters returned from off the earth continually, and at the close of 150 days they were abated. The Hebrew word for 'abated' (*chaser*) means to lack or diminish — the same word used when the manna ceased. God 'remembered Noah' and caused a wind to pass over the earth (Gen. 8:1) — the same Hebrew root (*ruach*) as the Spirit hovering over the waters at creation (Gen. 1:2), signalling a new creation beginning. Genesis 8:1–3.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":15,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-14","originalDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Tishri-15","id":1771624155314.3948,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:49:15.314Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T18:15:18.562Z"}],"AM-3134-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Uzziah (Azariah) Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-791-03-20","details":"Uzziah (also called Azariah) became king at age 16 and reigned 52 years — the longest reign in Judah after Manasseh. He 'did that which was right in the sight of the LORD' and was militarily successful, defeating the Philistines, Arabians and Ammonites, and fortifying Jerusalem with towers and war engines (2 Chr. 26:3–15). But in his strength he acted presumptuously, entering the Temple to burn incense — a duty reserved for the Aaronic priests. God struck him with leprosy on the spot; he remained a leper until his death, living in a separate house while his son Jotham administered the kingdom (2 Kgs 15:5). Isaiah's call came in the year Uzziah died (Isa. 6:1). 2 Kings 15:1–7; 2 Chronicles 26.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3134,"gregorianDate":"-791-03-20","originalDate":"-791-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363970437.3115,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363939461.4004,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:32:19.461Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:24:23.893Z","endEventDate":"-739-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3186,"anchorDate":"AM-3134-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3948-Iyar-2":[],"AM-3469-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Medo-Persia — Decree to Rebuild Jerusalem","time":"","eventDate":"-456-03-24","details":"In the 20th year of Artaxerxes I (Nehemiah 2:1; Nisan 445 BC), Nehemiah — the king's cupbearer — appeared sad before the king and was asked why. He requested permission to go to Judah and rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. Artaxerxes granted it, giving him letters of safe passage and an order to the keeper of the king's forest for timber (Neh. 2:7–8). This decree is the leading candidate for the starting point of Daniel's 70 Weeks (Dan. 9:25: 'from the going out of the word to restore and build Jerusalem'). It is distinct from the earlier Cyrus decree (538 BC) which authorised the Temple, and the Artaxerxes decree to Ezra (458 BC) which focused on religious observance. From Nisan 445 BC + 69 × 7 prophetic years of 360 days = AD 30–33. Nehemiah 2:1–8; Daniel 9:25.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"am","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3469,"gregorianDate":"-456-03-24","originalDate":"-456-03-24","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726069880.4922,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:07:49.880Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:07:49.880Z"}],"AM-3329-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Zedekiah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-596-03-23","details":"Zedekiah (born Mattaniah) was installed as king by Nebuchadnezzar after the deportation of Jehoiachin in 597 BC. He reigned 11 years — Judah's last king. He was weak and vacillating, torn between pro-Egyptian advisors and the prophet Jeremiah, who urged surrender to Babylon as God's will. Despite swearing allegiance to Nebuchadnezzar, he rebelled and sought Egyptian help (Ezek. 17:15). Nebuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem for 18 months; the city fell in 586 BC. Zedekiah attempted to flee but was captured in the plains of Jericho. His sons were killed before his eyes; then his eyes were put out — so the last thing he saw was his sons' deaths — and he was taken in chains to Babylon (2 Kgs 25:7; Jer. 52:10–11). The prophecies of both Jeremiah (34:3) and Ezekiel (12:13) were fulfilled simultaneously in this. 2 Kings 24:18–25:7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3329,"gregorianDate":"-596-03-23","originalDate":"-596-03-23","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771369687244.3848,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T23:08:07.244Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:11:11.452Z","endEventDate":"-585-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3340,"anchorDate":"AM-3329-Nisan-2"},{"title":"2nd Deportation — Ezekiel Taken","time":"","eventDate":"-596-03-23","details":"In 597 BC, during the reign of Jehoiachin, Nebuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem a second time. Jehoiachin surrendered and was taken captive to Babylon along with 10,000 of Judah's leading citizens — officers, mighty men of valour, craftsmen and smiths — leaving only the poorest people (2 Kgs 24:14). The prophet Ezekiel was among the deportees. He began his prophetic ministry five years later (592 BC) on the banks of the river Chebar in Babylon with the great vision of the chariot-throne of God (Ezek. 1). Ezekiel dates all his oracles from this deportation year, making his book the most precisely dated prophetic collection in the Bible. 2 Kings 24:10–16; Ezekiel 1:1–3.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3329,"gregorianDate":"-596-03-23","originalDate":"-596-03-23","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771402794448.6523,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:19:54.448Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:11:19.650Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3329-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2481-Nisan-20":[],"AM-3323-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Nebuchadnezzar's Dream of Statue","time":"","eventDate":"-602-03-23","details":"In the second year of his reign Nebuchadnezzar had a disturbing dream of a great statue: head of fine gold, chest and arms of silver, belly and thighs of bronze, legs of iron, feet of iron mixed with clay — struck by a stone cut without hands that became a great mountain filling the whole earth (Dan. 2:31–35). He demanded his wise men tell him both the dream and its interpretation on pain of death. Only Daniel, after prayer with his companions, received the revelation from God. The statue represents four successive world empires — Babylon (gold), Persia (silver), Greece (bronze), Rome (iron) — followed by God's eternal kingdom (the stone). This is the foundational four-empire vision that structures all subsequent biblical prophecy. Daniel 2.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3323,"gregorianDate":"-602-03-23","originalDate":"-602-03-23","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771466342123.0225,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T01:59:02.123Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:06:26.827Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3323-Nisan-2"}],"2025-12-30":[],"2075-06-23":[],"AM-2804-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Abimelech Reigns","time":"","eventDate":"-1121-03-24","details":"Abimelech, son of Gideon by a Shechemite concubine, hired worthless men with 70 pieces of silver and killed 70 of his 71 brothers on a single stone — only Jotham the youngest escaped. The men of Shechem made him king. Jotham delivered a parable from Mount Gerizim: the trees sought a king; the olive, fig and vine refused; the bramble (Abimelech) accepted and threatened to consume the cedars of Lebanon (Judges 9:8–15). After 3 years Shechem revolted. Abimelech destroyed Shechem, sowed it with salt, and burned the tower of Thebez — but a woman dropped a millstone on his head. He commanded his armour-bearer to kill him so no one could say a woman killed him. Judges 9.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2804,"gregorianDate":"-1121-03-24","originalDate":"-1121-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453812590.4531,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453785185.4314,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:29:45.185Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:57:36.560Z","endEventDate":"-1118-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2807,"anchorDate":"AM-2804-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Tevet-21":[],"AM-5950-Kislev-24":[],"AM-2519-Nisan-2":[{"title":"The Prophetess: The Death of Miriam","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2519-Nisan-2","details":"Num. 20:1 And the children of Israel, even the whole congregation, came into the desert of Zin in the first month: and the people abode in Kadesh; and Miriam died there, and was buried there.\nIn the first month of the fortieth year Israel arrives at the wilderness of Zin and camps at Kadesh. There Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron, dies and is buried. No day is given, only the month. She was a prophetess who led Israel in song after the crossing of the sea (Ex. 15:20–21) and had watched over her infant brother Moses in the reeds of the Nile. Her death marks the first loss among the three great leaders who brought Israel out of Egypt — Aaron would follow at Mount Hor, and Moses last of all on Mount Nebo. Numbers 20:1.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2519,"gregorianDate":"AM-2519-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-2519-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2519-Nisan-2","id":1771699255836.3809,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T18:40:55.836Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T21:24:17.354Z"}],"AM-3204-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3338-Av-9":[],"2026-01-11":[],"AM-5950-Adar-28":[],"AM-3040-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3759-Kislev-25":[{"title":"Seleucid Empire — Temple Desecrated","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3759-Kislev-25","details":"Antiochus IV Epiphanes ('God Manifest'), the Seleucid king, desecrated the Jerusalem Temple on 25 Kislev 167 BC — exactly the date later commemorated by Hanukkah. He erected an altar to Zeus Olympios over the altar of burnt offering ('the abomination of desolation'; Dan. 11:31; 1 Macc. 1:54), sacrificed a pig on it, banned circumcision and Torah observance on pain of death, and burned the sacred scrolls. Daniel had predicted this with precision: 'they shall pollute the sanctuary of strength, and shall take away the daily sacrifice, and they shall place the abomination that maketh desolate' (Dan. 11:31). Jesus referenced this event as the type of a greater end-time abomination (Matt. 24:15). Daniel's prophecy of 2,300 evenings and mornings (Dan. 8:14) is understood by many scholars as referring to 1,150 days — each evening and morning representing a single day's sacrifices (~3.15 years). Reckoned this way, the period from the desecration to the Temple's rededication on 25 Kislev 164 BC falls close to, though not precisely at, 1,150 days. The correspondence is approximate rather than exact, and some interpreters apply the prophecy to a different or future fulfillment altogether. 1 Maccabees 1:54; Daniel 8:14, 11:31; Matthew 24:15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Kislev","amDay":25,"amYear":3759,"gregorianDate":"AM-3759-Kislev-25","originalDate":"AM-3759-Kislev-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726238705.7349,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:10:38.705Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T13:54:18.892Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3759-Kislev-25"},{"title":"Maccabean revolt begins — Mattathias","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3758-Kislev-25","details":"When Antiochus IV Epiphanes issued decrees banning Jewish practice — forbidding Torah, Sabbath, circumcision, and ordering sacrifice to pagan gods — Mattathias, a priest in Modein, refused to comply and killed both a Jew who obeyed and a royal officer (1 Macc. 2:15–26). He fled to the hills with his five sons and began the guerrilla revolt that would eventually liberate Judea. His son Judas Maccabeus ('the Hammer') took over the revolt after Mattathias's death (1 Macc. 2:49–70) and would rededicate the Temple in 164 BC. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Kislev","amDay":25,"amYear":3759,"gregorianDate":"AM-3758-Kislev-25","originalDate":"AM-3758-Kislev-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800021000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:21.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T13:38:45.951Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3759-Kislev-25"}],"AM-6000-Shevat-16":[],"2026-01-30":[],"2025-06-14":[],"AM-1926-Sivan-21":[],"AM-1757-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Peleg","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1757-Nisan-2","details":"Peleg (Hebrew: *division/canal*) was born to Eber at 34. He lived 239 years and begat Reu at 30. Genesis 10:25 gives the interpretive note: 'in his days the earth was divided' — the primary reference to the Tower of Babel and the scattering of the nations (Gen. 11:1–9). His name 'division' is thus the linguistic marker of the most significant demographic event since the Flood, the dispersal of the nations placed squarely within his lifetime. He is the sixth generation after the Flood. Genesis 11:16–19.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1757,"gregorianDate":"AM-1757-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-1757-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943368995.488,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943334334.9932,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:42:14.334Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T18:52:45.854Z","anchorDate":"AM-1757-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1929-03-28","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1996}],"AM-5951-Adar-30":[],"AM-3091-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Joash Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-834-03-25","details":"Joash (also called Jehoash) became king at 7 years old after the priest Jehoiada's coup deposed Athaliah. He reigned 40 years in Jerusalem and 'did that which was right in the sight of the LORD all the days of Jehoiada the priest' (2 Kgs 12:2). He ordered the repair of the Temple, collecting money from all Israel. But after Jehoiada's death he allowed the people to return to Asherah worship, and when Jehoiada's son Zechariah prophesied against this, Joash had him stoned in the Temple court (2 Chr. 24:20–22) — Jesus references this murder in Matthew 23:35. A small Syrian force defeated Judah and wounded Joash; his own officials then conspired and killed him. 2 Kings 12; 2 Chronicles 24.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3091,"gregorianDate":"-834-03-25","originalDate":"-834-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363906139.255,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363876383.8418,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:31:16.383Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:26:10.047Z","endEventDate":"-795-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3130,"anchorDate":"AM-3091-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Iyar-4":[],"2025-12-18":[],"AM-2050-Nisan-15":[],"2025-12-24":[],"AM-5933-Tevet-11":[],"AM-3762-Kislev-25":[{"title":"Temple rededicated — Feast of Hanukkah","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3761-Kislev-25","details":"After defeating the Seleucid forces, Judas Maccabeus cleansed and rededicated the Jerusalem Temple on 25 Kislev 164 BC — exactly three years after Antiochus had desecrated it (1 Macc. 4:52–54). The altar was rebuilt, new sacred vessels made, and the eight-day feast of dedication (Hanukkah) established. The Talmud records the miracle of the one-day supply of consecrated oil burning for eight days (Shabbat 21b). Jesus was present at the Temple in Jerusalem during the feast of dedication (John 10:22), walking in the colonnade of Solomon. Date confirmed by 1 Maccabees; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Kislev","amDay":25,"amYear":3762,"gregorianDate":"AM-3761-Kislev-25","originalDate":"AM-3761-Kislev-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800022000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:22.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T13:43:06.971Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3762-Kislev-25"}],"2025-01-02":[],"AM-2030-Nisan-15":[],"AM-3329-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-14":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-13":[],"AM-1656-Sivan-27":[{"title":"Gen 7:12 And the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights.","time":"","eventDate":"-2269-06-16","details":"The rain falls continuously for exactly 40 days and 40 nights (Gen. 7:12), from 17 Iyar to 27 Sivan AM 1656. The number 40 is the biblical number of testing and judgment — it will recur at Moses's 40 days on Sinai, Israel's 40 years in the wilderness, Elijah's 40-day journey to Horeb, and Jesus's 40 days of temptation. The Flood is not merely heavy rain — the waters 'prevailed' and rose 15 cubits above the highest mountains (Gen. 7:20), indicating a global hydraulic event far beyond normal precipitation. Genesis 7:12, 17–20.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":27,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"-2269-06-15","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Sivan-27","id":1771090727359.0002,"createdAt":"2026-01-13T15:51:29.843Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"originalDate":"-2269-06-15"}],"AM-3077-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Elijah taken up — Elisha's ministry begins","time":"","eventDate":"-848-03-13","details":"Elijah was taken up into heaven in a whirlwind with a chariot and horses of fire, witnessed by Elisha (2 Kgs 2:11). Elisha caught Elijah's falling mantle — signifying the double portion of spirit he had requested (2 Kgs 2:9) — and struck the Jordan River, which parted for him. Elisha's ministry (~849–797 BC) spans six kings of Israel and includes healing Naaman's leprosy (2 Kgs 5), multiplying the widow's oil (2 Kgs 4), and raising the Shunammite's son (2 Kgs 4:35). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3077,"gregorianDate":"-848-03-12","originalDate":"-848-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800009000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:09.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:09.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3077-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2520-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3194-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Hoshea Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-731-03-22","details":"Hoshea son of Elah, the last king of Israel, reigned 9 years in Samaria. He did evil but not as the kings of Israel before him (2 Kgs 17:2 — a rare relative qualification). He became a vassal of Shalmaneser V of Assyria but conspired with So king of Egypt and stopped paying tribute. Shalmaneser arrested Hoshea, besieged Samaria for three years, and in 722/721 BC Samaria fell — conquered by Sargon II (Shalmaneser's successor). Sargon's own annals record deporting 27,290 Israelites to Assyria and resettling the land with foreigners. The Assyrian deportation ended the northern kingdom permanently, fulfilling the warnings of Amos, Hosea and Micah. 2 Kings 17:1–6; 18:9–12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3194,"gregorianDate":"-731-03-22","originalDate":"-731-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403987541.8691,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403948705.5256,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:39:08.705Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:16:17.343Z","endEventDate":"-721-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3204,"anchorDate":"AM-3194-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Shevat-15":[],"AM-5950-Shevat-18":[],"2017-01-19":[],"AM-1656-Tevet-1":[{"title":"Gen 8:5 And the waters decreased continually until the tenth month: in the tenth month, on the first day of the month, were the tops of the mountains seen.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Tevet-1","details":"On 1 Tevet AM 1656 — the first day of the 10th month — the mountaintops become visible for the first time since the Flood began. This is the first visual confirmation of the receding waters. The progression is precise: ark rests 17 Tishri (month 7), mountains visible 1 Tevet (month 10) — exactly 76 days later. Noah is still confined to the ark; he can see but not yet leave. The slow, measured recession of the Flood mirrors the deliberate pace of God's covenantal restoration. Genesis 8:5.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tevet","amDay":1,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Tevet-1","originalDate":"AM-1656-Tevet-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Tevet-1","id":1771624175405.898,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:49:35.405Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z"}],"AM-5942-Elul-2":[],"AM-130-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Seth","time":"","eventDate":"-3795-03-22","details":"Seth (Hebrew: appointed/placed) was born to Adam at age 130, after the murder of Abel (Gen. 4:25; 5:3). Eve declared 'God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel.' Seth is the ancestor of Noah and the line from which the Messiah would come. He lived 912 years and begat Enos at 105. The Sethite line (Gen. 5) stands in contrast to the Cainite line (Gen. 4) — one marked by calling on the name of the LORD (4:26), the other by the violence of Lamech. All of humanity after the Flood descends from Noah, who is of Seth's line. Genesis 4:25; 5:3–8.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":130,"gregorianDate":"-3795-03-22","originalDate":"-3795-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770942646308.311,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-130-Nisan-2","id":1770930137101.5864,"createdAt":"2026-01-30T22:10:12.563Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:21:24.874Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"endEventDate":"-2883-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":1042}],"2069-01-01":[],"2025-04-21":[],"AM-3863-Nisan-2":[],"AM-5926-Tishri-18":[{"title":"Operation Enduring Freedom","time":"","eventDate":"2001-10-07","details":"The official name of that war is Operation Enduring Freedom. It was the U.S.-led operation that aimed to dismantle al-Qaeda and remove the Taliban from power in Afghanistan.","reminder":null,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":18,"amYear":5926,"gregorianDate":"2001-10-07","originalDate":"2001-10-07","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5926-Tishri-18","id":1769791376078.495,"createdAt":"2026-01-30T16:42:56.078Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:24:44.544Z","hideUntilReminder":false,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"AM-1656-Sivan-24":[],"AM-2400-Nisan-2":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-28":[],"AM-5941-Tevet-30":[{"title":"Donald Trump first term start","time":"","eventDate":"AM-5941-Tevet-30","details":"Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 45th President of the United States on 20 January 2017 (5941 AM). His first term (2017–2021) included several significant developments relevant to biblical chronology and Israeli-Palestinian dynamics: the relocation of the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem on 14 May 2018 (the 70th anniversary of Israel's independence), recognising Jerusalem as Israel's capital; the Abraham Accords (September 2020) normalising relations between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco; recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights; and withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA). These policies represented the most pro-Israel stance of any US administration and were viewed by many in prophetic circles as significant in the context of end-times scenarios.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tevet","amDay":30,"amYear":5941,"gregorianDate":"AM-5941-Tevet-30","originalDate":"AM-5941-Tevet-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5941-Tevet-30","id":1771111129957.1057,"createdAt":"2026-02-14T23:18:49.957Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T04:34:21.150Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null}],"-514-02-17":[],"AM-3956-Cheshvan-15":[],"AM-5950-Iyar-3":[],"AM-4999-Adar-30":[],"AM-3184-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Pekahiah Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-741-03-21","details":"Pekahiah son of Menahem reigned two years over Israel in Samaria. He did evil in God's sight, not departing from the sins of Jeroboam. His military commander Pekah son of Remaliah conspired against him with fifty Gileadite men, killed him in the citadel of the palace at Samaria, and reigned in his place. Pekahiah's brief reign is part of the rapid succession of assassinations that marked Israel's final decades. 2 Kings 15:23–26.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3184,"gregorianDate":"-741-03-21","originalDate":"-741-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403921886.971,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403892173.225,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:38:12.173Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:17:33.178Z","endEventDate":"-739-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3186,"anchorDate":"AM-3184-Nisan-2"}],"AM-1656-Shevat-24":[],"AM-5950-Nisan-10":[],"AM-1683-Nisan-1":[],"AM-2519-Adar-7":[{"title":"The Man of God Is Gathered: The Death of Moses","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-02-22","details":"Month 12, Day 7 — 2519 AM\n\"The Man of God Is Gathered: The Death of Moses\"\nOn the seventh day of Adar, Moses dies on Mount Nebo in the land of Moab at the age of exactly 120 years — born and dying on the same day of the same month, having lived a perfectly complete life. God himself shows Moses the entire Promised Land from the mountaintop before he dies — from Gilead to Dan, Naphtali, Ephraim, Manasseh, Judah, the Negev, and the plain of Jericho. His eyes are not dim and his natural strength is not diminished. God himself buries Moses and no man knows the place of his burial to this day. Israel mourns him for thirty days. No prophet like Moses has risen in Israel since — one whom the Lord knew face to face. The 7th of Adar is observed to this day by Jewish burial societies as a solemn fast day in his memory. (Deuteronomy 34; Exodus 7:7; Talmud Kiddushin 38a; Seder Olam Rabbah; Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":7,"amYear":2519,"gregorianDate":"-1405-02-22","originalDate":"-1405-02-22","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2519-Adar-7","id":1771704082504.8057,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T20:01:22.504Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T20:15:36.901Z"},{"title":"The Heir Stands Ready: Joshua Appointed Before Moses Dies","time":"","eventDate":"-1405-02-22","details":"Month 12, Day 7 — 2519 AM\n\"The Heir Stands Ready: Joshua Appointed Before Moses Dies\"\nBefore ascending Mount Nebo, Moses publicly appoints Joshua as his successor in front of all Israel and before the Lord at the Tabernacle. Moses charges him with the words \"Be strong and courageous, for you shall bring the people into the land.\" God himself confirms the appointment, commissioning Joshua to lead Israel and promising to be with him as he was with Moses. Joshua has been at Moses' side since his youth and has been prepared for this moment his entire life. (Deuteronomy 31:1-23)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Adar","amDay":7,"amYear":2519,"gregorianDate":"-1405-02-22","originalDate":"-1405-02-22","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2519-Adar-7","id":1771704469452.6118,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T20:07:49.452Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T20:07:49.452Z"}],"AM-3957-Nisan-13":[{"title":"Tuesday sunset → Wednesday: Last Supper eaten, arrest in Gethsemane","time":"","eventDate":"32-03-30","details":"13 Nisan (Tuesday sunset) — the Passover preparation day. Jesus sent Peter and John to prepare the Passover meal (Luke 22:8). That evening — as Tuesday gave way to Wednesday in the Hebrew reckoning (the new day begins at sunset) — Jesus ate the Last Supper with his twelve disciples in the upper room (Luke 22:14–20). He instituted the Lord's Supper (Eucharist) with the bread and wine, identified Judas as the betrayer, gave the farewell discourses of John 13–17, prayed the High Priestly Prayer of John 17, and went to Gethsemane across the Kidron Valley. There he prayed three times in agony while the disciples slept. Judas arrived with a band of soldiers and temple officers; Jesus was arrested. Peter struck Malchus's ear; Jesus healed it. The disciples fled. Jesus was taken first to Annas. Matthew 26:17–56; Luke 22:7–53; John 13–18.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":13,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-03-30","originalDate":"32-03-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-13","id":1771531304771.3809,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:01:44.771Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-04T05:44:34.012Z"}],"AM-2480-Nisan-16":[{"title":"Days 2–3 15th–17th Nisan          Succoth → Etham","time":"","eventDate":"-1445-04-04","details":"Israel's march: on 15 Nisan they depart Rameses and travel to Succoth (Ex. 12:37), a distance of approximately 30–40 km. There they bake unleavened cakes from the dough they brought from Egypt (12:39). From Succoth they continue to Etham at the edge of the wilderness (13:20). God leads them as a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night — the first appearance of the Shekinah glory guiding Israel. Etham is likely a fortified Egyptian border post on the eastern edge of the Delta. The route takes them southeast, toward the Gulf of Aqaba. Exodus 12:37–39; 13:20–22.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":16,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"-1445-04-04","originalDate":"-1445-04-04","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Nisan-16","id":1771638958646.027,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T01:55:58.646Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T01:58:30.661Z"}],"-762-07-07":[],"AM-5950-Adar-20":[],"AM-5907-Sivan-14":[{"title":"Lebanon War Israel","time":"","eventDate":"1982-05-30","details":"The First Lebanon War (6 June 1982 – 18 June 1985; Hebrew: Milchemet Levanon HaRishona) was launched by Israel under Defence Minister Ariel Sharon with the stated goal of destroying the PLO's military infrastructure in southern Lebanon following the attempted assassination of Israel's ambassador to the UK. Israeli forces advanced to Beirut; the PLO leadership was evacuated to Tunisia. The war became controversial due to the Sabra and Shatila massacre by Lebanese Phalangist forces while Israeli forces controlled the perimeter. Israel established a security zone in southern Lebanon maintained until 2000. The war gave rise to Hezbollah, backed by Iran, which would become a persistent threat to Israel's northern border. Approximately 18,000 Lebanese and Palestinians and 657 Israeli soldiers were killed.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":14,"amYear":5907,"gregorianDate":"1982-05-30","originalDate":"1982-05-30","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5907-Sivan-14","id":1771624719416.6833,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:58:39.416Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:26:05.618Z"}],"AM-3018-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Baasha Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-907-03-24","details":"Baasha son of Ahijah of the tribe of Issachar killed Nadab son of Jeroboam and seized the throne of Israel, reigning 24 years in Tirzah. He killed all the house of Jeroboam, fulfilling the prophecy of Ahijah the Shilonite (1 Kgs 15:29). He warred continually against Asa king of Judah, building Ramah to blockade Judah. Asa bribed Ben-hadad of Syria to break his alliance with Baasha; Syria invaded the northern territories forcing Baasha to stop building Ramah. The prophet Jehu son of Hanani announced that because Baasha had walked in the ways of Jeroboam, his house would be destroyed like Jeroboam's — fulfilled under his son Elah. 1 Kings 15:27–16:7.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3018,"gregorianDate":"-907-03-24","originalDate":"-907-03-24","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403556792.3645,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403527112.0562,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:32:07.112Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:30:35.425Z","endEventDate":"-885-03-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3040,"anchorDate":"AM-3018-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3603-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Greece — Death of Alexander / Kingdom Divided","time":"","eventDate":"-322-03-25","details":"Greece — The Divided Kingdom\nRise: 323 BC — 3603 AM | Fall: 168 BC — 3758 AM | Duration: 155 years\nFollowing Alexander's death his empire is divided among four of his generals — Cassander, Lysimachus, Seleucus, and Ptolemy — fulfilling the prophecy of the four notable horns that replace the great horn (Daniel 8:8). The two most significant divisions for biblical history are the Ptolemaic Empire over Egypt and the Seleucid Empire over Syria and the East, as Israel sits between them and is fought over continually. This period ends when the Seleucid ruler Antiochus Epiphanes desecrates the Jerusalem Temple. (Daniel 8, 11)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3603,"gregorianDate":"-322-03-25","originalDate":"-322-03-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771726149329.6523,"createdAt":"2026-02-22T02:09:09.329Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T02:57:55.794Z","endEventDate":"-167-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3758,"anchorDate":"AM-3603-Nisan-2"}],"2026-01-29":[],"-958-10-30":[],"AM-3957-Nisan-17":[{"title":"Friday sunset → Saturday: Day 3 night / Day 3 day — the weekly Sabbath","time":"","eventDate":"32-04-03","details":"17 Nisan — Saturday — the weekly Sabbath. Day 3 night and Day 3 day. Jesus remains in the tomb. The women rest according to the fourth commandment (Luke 23:56: 'they rested the sabbath day according to the commandment'). In the DSS solar calendar 17 Nisan is always a Saturday — the weekly Sabbath. This is also the date on which the wave sheaf offering (Firstfruits) was presented — 'the morrow after the Sabbath' being Sunday 18 Nisan (Lev. 23:11). Paul calls Christ 'the firstfruits of them that slept' (1 Cor. 15:20), fulfilled by his resurrection at the exact time of the Firstfruits wave offering. Three days and three nights: Wednesday night, Thursday day, Thursday night, Friday day, Friday night, Saturday day = 3 nights and 3 days complete. Matthew 12:40; Leviticus 23:10–11; 1 Corinthians 15:20.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":17,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"32-04-03","originalDate":"32-04-03","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-17","id":1771531756569.302,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:09:16.569Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T02:54:25.783Z"}],"AM-3862-Nisan-1":[],"AM-5892-Sivan-16":[{"title":"6 Day War Israel","time":"","eventDate":"1967-06-06","details":"The Six-Day War (5–10 June 1967; Hebrew: Milchemet Sheshet HaYamim) was fought between Israel and the combined forces of Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Egyptian President Nasser blockaded the Straits of Tiran and massed 100,000 troops in Sinai. Israel launched a pre-emptive air strike on 5 June 1967, destroying the Egyptian air force on the ground within hours. Israeli forces captured the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt, the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan, and the Golan Heights from Syria — tripling Israel's territory in six days. Most significantly, Israel captured the Old City of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount on 7 June 1967 — the first time Jerusalem had been under Jewish sovereignty since 70 AD. General Moshe Dayan declared at the Western Wall: 'We have returned to our holiest of holy places, never to depart again.'","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Sivan","amDay":16,"amYear":5892,"gregorianDate":"1967-06-06","originalDate":"1967-06-06","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5892-Sivan-16","id":1771624629898.6838,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:57:09.898Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:26:53.725Z"}],"AM-5000-Nisan-6":[],"-604-04-30":[],"1947-11-15":[],"AM-5872-Cheshvan-30":[],"AM-3957-Tishri-3":[],"AM-3050-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Elijah's ministry begins","time":"","eventDate":"-875-03-12","details":"Elijah the Tishbite appears suddenly in 1 Kings 17:1 — no genealogy, no call narrative — announcing a drought of three-and-a-half years to King Ahab of Israel. His ministry encompasses the contest on Mount Carmel (1 Kgs 18), the still small voice at Horeb (1 Kgs 19), confronting Ahab over Naboth's vineyard (1 Kgs 21), and prophesying the death of Ahaziah (2 Kgs 1). He is the first of the great Israelite prophets after Samuel and the forerunner-type for John the Baptist (Mal. 4:5; Matt. 11:14). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3050,"gregorianDate":"-875-03-12","originalDate":"-875-03-12","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800008000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:08.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:08.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3050-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5950-Tevet-20":[],"32-03-30":[],"AM-150-Nisan-24":[],"AM-1819-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1787-Nisan-3":[],"AM-1656-Tammuz-0":[],"AM-3321-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Battle of Carchemish — Babylon ascendant","time":"","eventDate":"-605-03-13","details":"Nebuchadnezzar defeats Egypt at Carchemish (605 BC) — the exact year of Jeremiah's 70-years vision (Jer. 25:1: 'fourth year of Jehoiakim'). Primary chronological anchor for Jeremiah's empire sequence. Babylon receives 70 years of world dominion; Babylon's own fall is decreed (Jer. 51). Confirmed by the Babylonian Chronicle (ABC 5). Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3321,"gregorianDate":"-604-03-13","originalDate":"-604-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700005000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:05:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:05:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3321-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Daniel deported to Babylon","time":"","eventDate":"-605-03-20","details":"Daniel and companions are taken to Babylon in Nebuchadnezzar's first deportation (Dan. 1:1: 'third year of Jehoiakim'). Daniel begins the prophetic career spanning both Babylonian and Persian empires. He provides the foundational four-empire sequence: Babylon (gold/lion), Persia (silver/bear), Greece (bronze/leopard), Rome (iron/terrible beast) — in Daniel 2 and 7 — which anchors all subsequent biblical empire chronology.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3321,"gregorianDate":"-604-03-20","originalDate":"-604-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600007000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:07:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:07:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3321-Nisan-1"}],"AM-5950-Shevat-27":[],"AM-3356-Nisan-3":[],"2026-12-15":[],"AM-2000-Nisan-1":[],"100-01-20":[],"3076-03-20":[],"AM-2521-Nisan-14":[],"AM-5950-Tammuz-0":[],"AM-5514-Tevet-11":[],"AM-1656-Iyar-10":[{"title":"Gen 7:4 For yet seven days, and I will cause it to rain upon the earth forty days and forty nights; and every living substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the earth.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Iyar-10","details":"Seven days before the Flood begins (AM 1656, 10 Iyar), God warns Noah of what is coming and commands him to enter the ark with his family and the animals (Gen. 7:1–4). The seven-day warning mirrors the seven-day creation week — this is an uncreation event. The words 'every living substance that I have made will I destroy' make the global scope explicit. The Flood is God's judgment on a world where 'the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually' (Gen. 6:5). Noah's entry into the ark — carrying the seeds of the new world — is an act of faith in God's word against all visible evidence. Genesis 7:1–4; Hebrews 11:7.\n\n\nPeople:\nNoah, Shem, Ham, Japheth\nEvents:\nflood, rain, warning, destruction, judgment\nCreatures/Life:\nliving substance, animals, birds, creatures, mankind","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":10,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Iyar-10","originalDate":"AM-1656-Iyar-10","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Iyar-10","id":1771624121772.1982,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:48:41.772Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T20:52:57.024Z"}],"AM-4250-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Council of Nicaea","time":"","eventDate":"325-03-21","details":"The First Ecumenical Council was convened by Constantine I at Nicaea (modern Iznik, Turkey) in 325 AD to settle the Arian controversy — whether the Son was co-eternal with the Father or a created being. The council affirmed the full divinity of Christ and produced the Nicene Creed ('of one substance with the Father'). It also standardised the calculation of Easter and addressed church governance. Eusebius of Caesarea was among the 318 bishops present. The Nicene Creed remains the foundational doctrinal statement of the majority of Christian denominations. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4250,"gregorianDate":"325-03-21","originalDate":"325-03-21","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800033000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:33.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:33.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-4250-Nisan-1"}],"2023-07-25":[],"AM-2519-Av-1":[{"title":"The High Priest Is Gathered to His People: The Death of Aaron","time":"","eventDate":"-1406-07-19","details":"Month 5, Day 1 — Numbers 33:38\n\"The High Priest Is Gathered to His People: The Death of Aaron\"\nOn the first day of the fifth month of the fortieth year after the Exodus, Aaron the High Priest dies on the top of Mount Hor at the age of 123 years. Moses and Aaron's son Eleazar go up the mountain with him; Moses removes Aaron's priestly garments and places them on Eleazar, who becomes the new High Priest. Aaron dies on the mountain and Moses and Eleazar come back down. All the congregation mourns Aaron for thirty days. (Numbers 20:22-29; 33:38-39)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Av","amDay":1,"amYear":2519,"gregorianDate":"-1406-07-19","originalDate":"-1406-07-19","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2519-Av-1","id":1771699496827.764,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T18:44:56.827Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T18:44:56.827Z"}],"AM-5950-Tevet-16":[],"AM-3054-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoshaphat Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-871-03-22","details":"[1Ki 22:41-42 KJV] 41 And Jehoshaphat the son of Asa began to reign over Judah in the fourth year of Ahab king of Israel. 42 Jehoshaphat [was] thirty and five years old when he began to reign; and he reigned twenty and five years in Jerusalem. And his mother's name [was] Azubah the daughter of Shilhi.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3054,"gregorianDate":"-871-03-22","originalDate":"-871-03-22","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771304289154.5964,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3054-Nisan-2","id":1771303996894.413,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:53:16.894Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:28:52.074Z","endEventDate":"-847-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3078}],"AM-5950-Adar-8":[],"-468-03-25":[],"AM-1787-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Reu","time":"","eventDate":"-2138-03-21","details":"Reu (Hebrew: friend / shepherd) was born to Peleg at 30. He lived 239 years and begat Serug at 32. He is the seventh generation after the Flood and the fourth generation after the Babel dispersal. His name appears in the genealogy of Jesus in Luke 3:35. The progressive shortening of lifespans after the Flood is notable in his generation: Reu and Peleg both lived 239 years — roughly one-quarter of the pre-Flood average of ~900 years. Genesis 11:18–21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1787,"gregorianDate":"-2138-03-21","originalDate":"-2138-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943401158.1028,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943368995.488,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:42:48.995Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:25:19.569Z","anchorDate":"AM-1787-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1899-03-26","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2026}],"AM-1656-Shevat-25":[{"title":"Gen 8:12 And he stayed yet other seven days; and sent forth the dove; which returned not again unto him any more.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-25","details":"On 25 Shevat 1656 AM, Noah sends the dove a third time. It does not return — it has found a place to land and live. The earth is habitable again. The three sendings of the dove: (1) returns immediately — no dry land anywhere; (2) returns with olive leaf — some vegetation, not yet habitable; (3) does not return — the earth is restored. This three-stage pattern of testing, partial confirmation, and full confirmation recurs throughout Scripture (e.g. the three-day resurrection sequence). Noah has waited patiently through seven-day intervals of faith. Genesis 8:12.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Shevat","amDay":25,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-25","originalDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-25","id":1771624209220.011,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:50:09.220Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z"}],"AM-3225-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Isaiah names Cyrus — Persian liberation foretold","time":"","eventDate":"-700-03-13","details":"Isaiah names Cyrus by name ~200 years before he conquered Babylon: 'who says of Cyrus, he is my shepherd' (Isa. 44:28); 'Thus says the LORD to his anointed, to Cyrus' (Isa. 45:1). Written ~701 BC; fulfilled in 539 BC (fall of Babylon) and 537 BC (Cyrus decree). One of the most precisely datable predictive prophecies in Scripture. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3225,"gregorianDate":"-700-03-13","originalDate":"-700-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700003000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:03:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:03:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3225-Nisan-1"}],"2017-01-20":[],"AM-3073-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3191-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3406-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3229-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Manasseh Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-696-03-21","details":"Manasseh became king at 12 and reigned 55 years — the longest reign in Judah. He rebuilt the high places his father Hezekiah had destroyed, erected altars to Baal and Asherah poles, worshipped the starry hosts, placed an Asherah pole in the Temple, practiced child sacrifice in the Valley of Hinnom, and shed 'very much innocent blood, till he had filled Jerusalem from one end to another' (2 Kgs 21:16). His sin was so great that God declared it the reason Judah would ultimately be destroyed despite everything David had done (2 Kgs 21:10–15). The Chronicler records that Manasseh was taken captive to Babylon by the Assyrians, humbled himself and prayed, was restored to Jerusalem, and removed the foreign gods — but the damage was done (2 Chr. 33:10–17). 2 Kings 21:1–18; 2 Chronicles 33.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3229,"gregorianDate":"-696-03-21","originalDate":"-696-03-21","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364085907.176,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364059848.1313,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:34:19.848Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:14:54.513Z","endEventDate":"-641-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3284,"anchorDate":"AM-3229-Nisan-2"}],"2025-12-29":[],"2025-01-06":[],"2076-01-28":[],"AM-0-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Adam","time":"","eventDate":"AM-0-Nisan-2","details":"[Gen 5:3 KJV] 3 And Adam lived an hundred and thirty years, and begat [a son] in his own likeness, after his image; and called his name Seth:","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":0,"gregorianDate":"AM-0-Nisan-2","originalDate":"AM-0-Nisan-2","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770930137101.5864,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771379319480.3364,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T01:48:39.480Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T19:08:34.576Z","anchorDate":"AM-0-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-2995-03-22","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":930}],"2025-03-04":[],"-1444-03-08":[],"2025-07-23":[],"2024-03-16":[],"AM-1656-Shevat-1":[],"AM-2481-Nisan-1":[{"title":"The House of God Opens Its Doors","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-03-18","details":"Month 1, Day 1\n\"The House of God Opens Its Doors\"\nMoses erects the Tabernacle exactly one year after leaving Egypt. The Ark, table, lampstand, altars, and laver are all set in their places. The cloud of glory fills the Tabernacle and Moses cannot enter because of it. From this day forward the cloud rests on the Tabernacle by day and fire is in it by night, guiding Israel on all their journeys. (Exodus 40:17-38)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-03-18","originalDate":"-1444-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Nisan-1","id":1771650442656.489,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:07:22.656Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:08:46.280Z"},{"title":"Set Apart: The Consecration of Aaron and His Sons","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-03-18","details":"Month 1, Days 1–7\n\"Set Apart: The Consecration of Aaron and His Sons\"\nMoses washes, robes, and anoints Aaron as High Priest and consecrates his sons Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar as priests. The Tabernacle and all its furnishings are anointed with holy oil. Various offerings are made including a sin offering, burnt offering, and the ram of consecration. Aaron and his sons are commanded to remain at the entrance of the Tabernacle for the full seven days of consecration, not departing day or night. (Leviticus 8)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-03-18","originalDate":"-1444-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Nisan-1","id":1771650506231.731,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:08:26.231Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:08:26.231Z"}],"AM-2023-Nisan-15":[{"title":"God's promise to Abraham","time":"","eventDate":"-1902-04-03","details":"At age 75 Abraham left Haran for Canaan in response to God's call (Gen. 12:4). God appeared to him at Shechem and promised: 'Unto thy seed will I give this land' (Gen. 12:7). Later, in a covenant ceremony, God passed between the divided animals as a smoking furnace and burning lamp — taking the oath upon himself alone — and promised Abraham's descendants the land from the river of Egypt to the Euphrates (Gen. 15:17–21). This Abrahamic Covenant is the foundation of all subsequent biblical covenants and the theological root of Israel's title to the land. Confirmed to Isaac (Gen. 26:3) and Jacob (Gen. 28:13). Genesis 12–15.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":15,"amYear":2023,"gregorianDate":"-1902-04-02","originalDate":"-1902-04-02","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2023-Nisan-15","id":1770853728950.1118,"createdAt":"2026-02-11T23:48:48.950Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-12T00:04:29.464Z"}],"AM-5872-Cheshvan-29":[],"AM-3286-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Josiah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-639-03-20","details":"Josiah became king at 8 and reigned 31 years — one of Judah's greatest reformers. At 16 he began to seek God; at 20 he began purging Judah and Jerusalem of high places, Asherah poles and idols; at 26 the Book of the Law (likely Deuteronomy) was found in the Temple during repairs (2 Kgs 22:8). When it was read to him he tore his clothes in grief. The prophetess Huldah confirmed God's judgment on Judah but promised Josiah would die in peace before seeing it (22:20). He renewed the covenant, destroyed every trace of pagan worship from Dan to Beersheba, held a Passover unequalled since the judges, and outlawed mediums and spiritists. He died at Megiddo in 609 BC attempting to block Pharaoh Necho's advance — fulfilling Huldah's prophecy that he would die before the catastrophe. 2 Kings 22–23; 2 Chronicles 34–35.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3286,"gregorianDate":"-639-03-20","originalDate":"-639-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771364142425.8408,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771364109180.193,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:35:09.180Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:14:04.620Z","endEventDate":"-608-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3317,"anchorDate":"AM-3286-Nisan-2"}],"AM-325-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5951-Nisan-1":[],"AM-2480-Sivan-8":[],"AM-3761-Kislev-25":[],"AM-2-Nisan-0":[],"AM-3078-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Jehoram Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-847-03-20","details":"[2Ki 8:16-17 KJV] 16 And in the fifth year of Joram the son of Ahab king of Israel, Jehoshaphat [being] then king of Judah, Jehoram the son of Jehoshaphat king of Judah began to reign. 17 Thirty and two years old was he when he began to reign; and he reigned eight years in Jerusalem.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3078,"gregorianDate":"-847-03-20","originalDate":"-847-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771304550062.371,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-3078-Nisan-2","id":1771304289154.5964,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T04:58:09.154Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:27:49.719Z","endEventDate":"-840-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3085}],"AM-1658-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Arphaxad","time":"","eventDate":"-2267-03-20","details":"Arphaxad was born to Shem two years after the Flood (Gen. 11:10), making him the first person recorded as born in the post-Flood world. He lived 438 years and begat Salah (or Shelah) at 35. His name may mean 'fortress of the Chaldeans' — connecting him geographically to Mesopotamia. He is the beginning of the genealogy that leads from Shem to Abraham (Gen. 11:10–26). Luke 3:36 includes him in the genealogy of Jesus. Genesis 11:10–13.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":1658,"gregorianDate":"-2267-03-20","originalDate":"-2267-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1770943215480.1475,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1770943179873.8748,"createdAt":"2026-02-13T00:39:39.873Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-11T03:24:30.619Z","anchorDate":"AM-1658-Nisan-2","endEventDate":"-1829-03-23","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":3,"endAMYear":2096}],"AM-3299-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Jeremiah's call — Babylon rising","time":"","eventDate":"-626-03-13","details":"Jeremiah receives his call in the 13th year of Josiah (~627 BC; Jer. 1:2). He is the primary prophetic voice through the Assyrian-to-Babylonian transition. His 70-years oracle (Jer. 25) is anchored to 605 BC (Carchemish). Oracles against the nations (chs. 46–51) march sequentially through the empire-landscape with datable anchors. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3299,"gregorianDate":"-626-03-13","originalDate":"-626-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700004000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:04:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:04:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3299-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Babylonian Empire — rise to dominance","time":"","eventDate":"-626-03-20","details":"Nebopolassar founds the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 627 BC, shaking off Assyrian control. Babylon rises to replace Assyria as the dominant world power. This is the empire referenced as the head of gold in Daniel 2, the lion in Daniel 7, and the first of the great empires. Its dominance runs until the fall of Babylon to Cyrus in 539 BC. Anchor: Babylonian Chronicle (ABC 2).","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3299,"gregorianDate":"-626-03-20","originalDate":"-626-03-20","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773600004000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T12:04:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T12:04:00.000Z","endEventDate":"-539-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":3386,"anchorDate":"AM-3299-Nisan-1"}],"2076-01-27":[],"AM-2048-Nisan-15":[],"AM-3054-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3017-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Nadab Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-908-03-25","details":"Nadab son of Jeroboam reigned two years over Israel. He did evil in God's sight, walking in the sins of his father (1 Kgs 15:25–26). He was killed in a conspiracy by Baasha son of Ahijah while Israel was besieging the Philistine city of Gibbethon. Baasha then killed all the house of Jeroboam — fulfilling the prophecy of Ahijah the Shilonite that not one of Jeroboam's male descendants would survive (1 Kgs 14:10–14). The dynasty of Jeroboam ended with Nadab after just two kings. The pattern of northern kings killing their predecessors and destroying their dynasties recurs throughout the history of Israel's monarchy. 1 Kings 15:25–31.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3017,"gregorianDate":"-908-03-25","originalDate":"-908-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771403527112.0562,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771403489650.1487,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T08:31:29.650Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:30:54.371Z","endEventDate":"-907-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3018,"anchorDate":"AM-3017-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3041-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Adar-17":[],"AM-1656-Shevat-18":[{"title":"Gen 8:10 And he stayed yet other seven days; and again he sent forth the dove out of the ark;","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-18","details":"Seven days after the first dove returned with nothing (18 Shevat 1656 AM), Noah sends the dove again. This time it returns with a freshly plucked olive leaf — the first vegetation visible, the first sign of life restored to the earth's surface. The olive branch has become the universal symbol of peace and restoration. The seven-day intervals mirror the creation week — Noah's three sendings of the dove (raven, dove 1, dove 2, dove 3) echo a new creation sequence. The dove with the olive leaf is a type of the Holy Spirit descending at Jesus's baptism. Genesis 8:10–11.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Shevat","amDay":18,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-18","originalDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Shevat-18","id":1771624197453.292,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:49:57.453Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z"}],"AM-1656-Iyar-17":[{"title":"Gen 7:11 In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.","time":"","eventDate":"-2269-05-07","details":"On the 17th day of the 2nd month of Noah's 600th year (AM 1656) the global Flood begins. Two simultaneous mechanisms: 'all the fountains of the great deep broken up' — catastrophic subterranean water release and tectonic rupture — and 'the windows of heaven were opened' — unprecedented atmospheric precipitation. This is the most precisely dated catastrophe in the biblical record. The DSS solar calendar anchors the Flood chronology to a Monday (Iyar 17 always falls on Monday in the 364-day calendar, where Nisan 1 = Thursday). Genesis 7:11; cf. 2 Peter 3:6.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":17,"amYear":1656,"gregorianDate":"-2269-05-06","originalDate":"-2269-05-06","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771090727359.0002,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1656-Iyar-17","id":1771624132488.7212,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:48:52.488Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z"}],"-1477-04-05":[],"AM-2521-Nisan-10":[],"AM-2440-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Moses flees to Midian","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2440-Nisan-1","details":"At age 40 Moses killed an Egyptian he saw beating a Hebrew, hid the body, and fled to Midian when Pharaoh sought to execute him (Ex. 2:11–15; Acts 7:23–29). In Midian he married Zipporah, daughter of Jethro the priest of Midian, and kept his flock for 40 years (Acts 7:30). This 40-year Midian period is Moses's preparation before his call at the burning bush. He would have been 80 years old at the time of the Exodus (~1446 BC). Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2440,"gregorianDate":"AM-2440-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-2440-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800006000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:06.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T19:52:13.596Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2440-Nisan-1"}],"2025-12-23":[],"AM-3338-Av-8":[],"AM-5993-Tishri-2":[],"AM-3130-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Amaziah Reigns Over Judah","time":"","eventDate":"-795-03-25","details":"Amaziah became king at 25 and reigned 29 years. He executed his father Joash's assassins but not their children — in accordance with the law of Moses (Deut. 24:16). He defeated 10,000 Edomites in the Valley of Salt and captured Sela (Petra), but hired 100,000 Israelite mercenaries against God's counsel and dismissed them (paying the fee). He then provoked Jehoash of Israel to battle at Beth Shemesh and was defeated and taken captive; Jerusalem's wall was broken down. He recovered and outlived Jehoash by 15 years, but conspirators arose against him and he fled to Lachish where he was killed. His import of Edomite gods and worship was the key sin the Chronicler records. 2 Kings 14:1–20; 2 Chronicles 25.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":3130,"gregorianDate":"-795-03-25","originalDate":"-795-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771363939461.4004,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771363906139.255,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T21:31:46.139Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:25:04.998Z","endEventDate":"-766-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":3159,"anchorDate":"AM-3130-Nisan-2"}],"AM-2697-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2876-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Saul Anointed King","time":"","eventDate":"-1049-03-19","details":"Samuel privately anointed Saul — a Benjaminite, the tallest man in Israel — with oil at Ramah after God told him 'this is the man who shall reign over my people' (1 Sam. 9:17; 10:1). Later, at Mizpah, the lot publicly fell on Saul and Samuel proclaimed him king before all Israel: 'See ye him whom the LORD hath chosen, that there is none like him among all the people' (1 Sam. 10:24). Saul's reign is the fulfilment of Israel's demand for a king 'like all the nations' (1 Sam. 8:5), which God granted while warning of the cost. Paul dates Saul's reign at 40 years (Acts 13:21). 1 Samuel 9–10; Acts 13:21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2876,"gregorianDate":"-1049-03-19","originalDate":"-1049-03-19","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454106880.9824,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:35:06.880Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:53:54.737Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2876-Nisan-2"},{"title":"Saul Reigns Over Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1049-03-19","details":"Saul reigned 40 years (Acts 13:21) over a united Israel. Early in his reign he showed promise — the Spirit of God came upon him and he led Israel to victory over the Ammonites (1 Sam. 11). But his reign was marked by two great acts of disobedience: he offered a burnt offering impatiently before Samuel arrived at Gilgal (1 Sam. 13:8–14), and he failed to destroy the Amalekites as commanded, sparing their king Agag and the best livestock (1 Sam. 15). Samuel told him: 'to obey is better than sacrifice' (15:22) and announced that God had rejected him as king. The Spirit of the LORD departed from Saul and an evil spirit troubled him; David was brought to court to play the harp. Saul died in battle on Mount Gilboa with his sons, falling on his own sword (1 Sam. 31). 1 Samuel 11–31; Acts 13:21.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2876,"gregorianDate":"-1049-03-19","originalDate":"-1049-03-19","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771454292929.9282,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771454166773.4976,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:36:06.773Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:54:02.837Z","endEventDate":"-1009-03-25","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2916,"anchorDate":"AM-2876-Nisan-2"}],"AM-5950-Tevet-19":[],"70-07-27":[],"AM-3284-Nisan-3":[],"AM-2480-Iyar-16":[{"title":"Manna Sent from Heaven","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2480-Iyar-16","details":"On **15 Iyar AM 2480** — one month after leaving Egypt — the whole congregation of Israel arrived at the wilderness of Sin on a **Saturday** and complained of hunger (Ex. 16:3). God spoke to Moses that day and promised bread from heaven. That evening quail covered the camp. The next morning — **16 Iyar, a Sunday** — a fine, flake-like substance lay on the ground: manna, described as white like coriander seed, tasting like wafers with honey (Ex. 16:31). God gave precise instructions: gather one omer per person per day; gather double on the sixth day; gather none on the Sabbath. Any kept overnight bred worms — except the Sabbath portion.\n\nManna fell every morning for exactly 40 years, ceasing the day Israel ate from the Promised Land (Josh. 5:12). Jesus identifies himself as 'the true bread from heaven' (John 6:32–35). Exodus 16:1–36.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":16,"amYear":2480,"gregorianDate":"AM-2480-Iyar-16","originalDate":"AM-2480-Iyar-16","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2480-Iyar-16","id":1771623768099.4346,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:42:48.099Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T21:12:13.959Z"}],"AM-3184-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5871-Sivan-27":[],"AM-1656-Adar-1":[],"AM-3595-Nisan-2":[],"-1404-04-01":[],"1946-06-13":[],"AM-3133-Nisan-3":[],"AM-5950-Tevet-30":[],"AM-3174-Nisan-3":[],"AM-3957-Tishri-10":[],"AM-3995-Nisan-17":[],"AM-5948-Tishri-17":[{"title":"Hamas Attack Israel ","time":"","eventDate":"AM-5948-Tishri-17","details":"On 7 October 2023 — a Saturday, the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War, and the Jewish holiday of Shemini Atzeret — Hamas launched the largest terrorist attack in Israeli history. Approximately 3,000 Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters broke through the Gaza border fence at 29 locations, attacking military bases, kibbutzim and the Nova music festival. 1,200 Israelis were killed — the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust — and 253 were taken hostage into Gaza. The attack triggered Operation Swords of Iron, Israel's military response in Gaza. The war involved extensive Israeli ground operations, international hostage negotiations, Hezbollah exchanges on the northern border, and Houthi missile attacks from Yemen. The attack and its aftermath significantly reshaped Middle Eastern geopolitics and renewed global debates about Israel's security and the Palestinian question.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":17,"amYear":5948,"gregorianDate":"AM-5948-Tishri-17","originalDate":"AM-5948-Tishri-17","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5948-Tishri-17","id":1771624962016.1492,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T22:02:42.016Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-20T04:30:33.084Z"}],"2076-02-01":[],"AM-5183-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Mongol sack of Baghdad — Abbasid Caliphate falls","time":"","eventDate":"1258-03-28","details":"Hulagu Khan's Mongol forces sacked Baghdad in February 1258, executing Caliph Al-Musta'sim and destroying the Abbasid Caliphate — the Islamic empire that had ruled from 750 AD. Estimates of the dead range from 200,000 to 1,000,000 (Rashid al-Din). The House of Wisdom, the greatest library and intellectual centre of the medieval world, was destroyed — its books thrown into the Tigris river, reportedly turning it black with ink. The Mongol advance was stopped at the Battle of Ain Jalut (1260 AD) by the Egyptian Mamluks, who then controlled the Holy Land. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":5183,"gregorianDate":"1258-03-27","originalDate":"1258-03-27","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800038000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:38.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:38.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-5183-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3957-Nisan-14":[{"title":"Wednesday daytime: Trials, crucifixion, burial before sunset","time":"","eventDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-14","details":"14 Nisan — Wednesday daytime. Following the arrest in Gethsemane at night, Jesus was brought before Annas, then Caiaphas, then the Sanhedrin at dawn. He was sent to Pilate, who sent him to Herod Antipas, who returned him to Pilate. Pilate declared him innocent three times but yielded to the crowd's demand. Jesus was crucified at 'the third hour' (9 AM; Mark 15:25) on the hill of Golgotha outside Jerusalem. Darkness covered the land from the sixth to the ninth hour (noon to 3 PM). At the ninth hour Jesus cried 'Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani' and gave up his spirit (Mark 15:34–37). Joseph of Arimathea obtained the body and buried it in a new tomb before sunset — before the High Sabbath of 15 Nisan began. The DSS solar calendar places 14 Nisan on a Wednesday in the passion year, consistent with three full days and nights in the tomb. Matthew 26–27; Mark 14–15; Luke 22–23; John 18–19.\n\n\nEvents:\ntrial, crucifixion, cross, death, burial, flogging, scourging, crown of thorns, Via Dolorosa, Golgotha, Calvary, Passion Week, Atonement, Sacrifice, Passover","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":14,"amYear":3957,"gregorianDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-14","originalDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3957-Nisan-14","id":1771531378869.1604,"createdAt":"2026-02-19T20:02:58.869Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-31T18:00:51.383Z"}],"AM-1657-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Gen 8:13 And it came to pass in the six hundredth and first year, in the first month, the first day of the month, the waters were dried up from off the earth: and Noah removed the covering of the ark, and looked, and, behold, the face of the ground was dry.","time":"","eventDate":"AM-1657-Nisan-1","details":"On the first day of the first month of Noah's 601st year — New Year's Day — the waters had dried from the surface of the earth. Noah removed the covering of the ark and looked out. The flood had begun on the 17th day of the second month of his 600th year, and though a new year had turned, Noah and his family remained inside the ark. Yet God does not permit Noah to leave until the land is completely dry — 56 more days remain. Genesis 8:13.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":1657,"gregorianDate":"AM-1657-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-1657-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-1657-Nisan-1","id":1771624259924.4382,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:50:59.924Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.176Z"}],"AM-2480-Nisan-13":[],"2025-12-12":[],"2025-12-26":[],"AM-5950-Adar-6":[],"AM-4049-Tevet-13":[],"AM-5944-Adar-25":[],"AM-5937-Cheshvan-27":[],"AM-3316-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Habakkuk prophesies — why does evil prosper","time":"","eventDate":"-609-03-13","details":"Habakkuk prophesied at the transition from Assyrian to Babylonian dominance (~610–598 BC). He opens with an unprecedented complaint: he cries to God about injustice in Judah and God answers by raising up the even more violent Babylonians as his instrument of judgment. Habakkuk's second complaint — 'how can a holy God use a wicked nation?' — receives the foundational answer: 'the just shall live by his faith' (Hab. 2:4), cited three times in the New Testament (Rom. 1:17; Gal. 3:11; Heb. 10:38). Date approximate; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3316,"gregorianDate":"-609-03-13","originalDate":"-609-03-13","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800017000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:17.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:17.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3316-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2960-Iyar-2":[{"title":"First Temple under Construction ","time":"","eventDate":"-965-04-19","details":"[2Ch 3:1-2 KJV] 1 Then Solomon began to build the house of the LORD at Jerusalem in mount Moriah, where [the LORD] appeared unto David his father, in the place that David had prepared in the threshingfloor of Ornan the Jebusite. 2 And he began to build in the second [day] of the second month, in the fourth year of his reign.\n\n[1Ki 6:1 KJV] 1 And it came to pass in the four hundred and eightieth year after the children of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon's reign over Israel, in the month Zif, which [is] the second month, that he began to build the house of the LORD.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Iyar","amDay":2,"amYear":2960,"gregorianDate":"-965-04-19","originalDate":"-965-04-19","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"anchorDate":"AM-2960-Iyar-2","id":1771290279823.7915,"createdAt":"2026-02-17T01:04:39.823Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-30T16:53:33.177Z","endEventDate":"-958-09-29","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Tishri","endAMDay":8,"endAMYear":2967}],"2025-04-03":[],"2026-03-23":[],"-1999-05-26":[],"AM-2807-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Tola Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1118-03-20","details":"Tola son of Puah, son of Dodo, of the tribe of Issachar, arose after Abimelech to save Israel. He judged Israel for 23 years from Shamir in the hill country of Ephraim (Judges 10:1–2). His account is brief — two verses — with no military exploit recorded. The brief accounts of the minor judges (Tola, Jair, Ibzan, Elon, Abdon) form a structural counterpart to the major judges; together they demonstrate that the office of judge was not purely military but also judicial and administrative. Judges 10:1–2.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2807,"gregorianDate":"-1118-03-20","originalDate":"-1118-03-20","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771453841052.0483,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453812590.4531,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:30:12.590Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:57:14.916Z","endEventDate":"-1095-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2830,"anchorDate":"AM-2807-Nisan-2"}],"-3690-03-25":[],"AM-4020-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Revelation written — seven-empire sequence completed","time":"","eventDate":"95-03-18","details":"The Book of Revelation (~95 AD under Domitian) completes the most comprehensive empire sequence in Scripture. Revelation 17:9–11 identifies seven successive world powers: five fallen (Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Greece), one is (Rome), one yet to come. This extends Daniel's four-empire schema backward to Egypt and forward beyond Rome. Combined with Daniel and Jeremiah, it creates a complete datable empire chronology. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":4020,"gregorianDate":"95-03-18","originalDate":"95-03-18","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700011000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:11:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:11:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-4020-Nisan-1"}],"AM-2832-Nisan-2":[{"title":"Eli Judges Israel","time":"","eventDate":"-1093-03-25","details":"Eli served as both high priest and judge of Israel for 40 years at Shiloh, where the Tabernacle and the Ark of the Covenant resided (1 Sam. 4:18). His priesthood was fatally compromised by his failure to restrain his wicked sons Hophni and Phinehas, who abused the sacrificial system and committed immorality with women at the Tabernacle entrance (1 Sam. 2:12–17, 22). God sent a man of God with a prophecy of judgment on his house and later called the young Samuel with the same message. In the battle against the Philistines at Aphek, the Ark was captured, Hophni and Phinehas were killed, and on hearing the news Eli fell backward off his seat, broke his neck and died (1 Sam. 4:18). Samuel succeeded him. 1 Samuel 1–4.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":2,"amYear":2832,"gregorianDate":"-1093-03-25","originalDate":"-1093-03-25","linkedEvents":[{"id":1771454038463.2283,"isRepeating":false}],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1771453999360.085,"createdAt":"2026-02-18T22:33:19.360Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T01:56:30.814Z","endEventDate":"-1053-03-24","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":2,"endAMYear":2872,"anchorDate":"AM-2832-Nisan-2"}],"AM-3321-Nisan-3":[],"-398-NaN-05":[],"AM-2309-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Death of Joseph — new king arises","time":"","eventDate":"-1616-03-06","details":"Joseph died at 110 years old and was embalmed and placed in a coffin in Egypt (Gen. 50:26). Genesis 1:8 records that 'there arose a new king over Egypt who knew not Joseph' — the political protection Israel had enjoyed under Joseph's influence was gone. This transition is the hinge point that leads to Israel's enslavement. The new dynasty is widely identified with the rise of the native Egyptian Eighteenth Dynasty or the expulsion of the Hyksos. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2309,"gregorianDate":"-1616-03-06","originalDate":"-1616-03-06","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800002000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:02.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:02.000Z","endEventDate":"-1445-03-07","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":2480,"anchorDate":"AM-2309-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Israel enslaved in Egypt (span)","time":"","eventDate":"AM-2309-Nisan-1","details":"Following Joseph's death and the rise of a Pharaoh 'who knew not Joseph' (Ex. 1:8), the Israelites were subjected to forced labour — building the store cities of Pithom and Rameses (Ex. 1:11). The enslavement intensified progressively. Exodus 12:40 records that Israel's sojourn in Egypt was 430 years; Genesis 15:13 rounds this to 400 years of affliction. The slavery period spans from approximately the death of Joseph (~1617 BC) to the Exodus (~1446 BC). Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":2309,"gregorianDate":"AM-2309-Nisan-1","originalDate":"AM-2309-Nisan-1","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800003000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:03.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-21T03:36:22.851Z","endEventDate":"-1445-03-20","endTime":null,"endAMMonth":"Nisan","endAMDay":1,"endAMYear":2480,"anchorDate":"AM-2309-Nisan-1"}],"AM-3758-Nisan-2":[],"AM-2481-Nisan-8":[{"title":"Fire from Heaven: The Priesthood Begins","time":"","eventDate":"-1444-03-25","details":"Month 1, Day 8\n\"Fire from Heaven: The Priesthood Begins\"\nOn the eighth day Aaron makes his first official sacrifices as High Priest — a sin offering, burnt offering, and peace offering for himself and for the people. When Aaron lifts his hands and blesses the people, fire comes out from before the Lord and consumes the burnt offering on the altar. The people shout for joy and fall on their faces in worship. Later that same day Aaron's sons Nadab and Abihu offer unauthorized fire before the Lord and fire comes out from the Lord and kills them both. Moses tells the grieving Aaron not to mourn publicly and Aaron remains silent. (Leviticus 9–10)","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":8,"amYear":2481,"gregorianDate":"-1444-03-25","originalDate":"-1444-03-25","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-2481-Nisan-8","id":1771650567167.643,"createdAt":"2026-02-21T05:09:27.167Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-21T05:09:27.167Z"}],"AM-5507-Tevet-10":[],"AM-5898-Tishri-17":[{"title":"Yom Kippur War","time":"","eventDate":"1973-10-06","details":"The Yom Kippur War (6–25 October 1973; also called the Ramadan War or October War) was launched by Egypt and Syria on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, when the Israeli military was at its lowest state of readiness and most soldiers were fasting and in synagogue. The surprise attacks initially overwhelmed Israeli defences — Syrian forces penetrated the Golan Heights and Egyptian forces crossed the Suez Canal. Israel mobilised rapidly; the tide turned within 72 hours. By the ceasefire Israel had pushed Syrian forces back beyond the 1967 lines, crossed the Suez Canal and surrounded the Egyptian Third Army. The war led to the 1978 Camp David Accords and the 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty — the first Arab-Israel peace agreement. It also triggered the global oil crisis when Arab OPEC members embargoed oil to Israel's supporters.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":true,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Tishri","amDay":17,"amYear":5898,"gregorianDate":"1973-10-06","originalDate":"1973-10-06","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"isRepeating":false,"anchorDate":"AM-5898-Tishri-17","id":1771624651869.2886,"createdAt":"2026-02-20T21:57:31.869Z","updatedAt":"2026-02-22T00:26:31.484Z"}],"2025-10-10":[],"AM-5993-Tevet-14":[],"AM-3758-Nisan-1":[],"1977-01-20":[],"AM-5925-Av-7":[],"AM-3405-Nisan-1":[{"title":"Zechariah's visions — Darius I, year 2","time":"","eventDate":"-520-03-14","details":"Zechariah dates himself to the 8th month of Darius I year 2 (Zech. 1:1) = 521 BC — confirmed by Haggai and the Temple rebuilding sequence (Ezra 5–6). His four horsemen (ch. 1), four chariots (ch. 6), and four horns (ch. 2) correlate with Daniel's four empires. The sequence Babylon → Persia → Greece (→ Rome) is implicit. Date in proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3405,"gregorianDate":"-520-03-14","originalDate":"-520-03-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773700008000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T13:08:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T13:08:00.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3405-Nisan-1"},{"title":"Haggai prophesies — rebuild the Temple","time":"","eventDate":"-520-03-14","details":"Haggai delivered four precisely dated oracles in the second year of Darius I (521 BC; Hag. 1:1) — the most tightly dated prophetic book in the Bible. He rebuked the returned exiles for living in panelled houses while the Temple remained unbuilt, challenged their economic hardship as a consequence of neglecting God's house, and promised that the glory of the latter Temple would surpass the former (2:9). His preaching directly caused Zerubbabel and Joshua the high priest to resume building (Ezra 5:1–2). Contemporary with Zechariah. Date confirmed; proleptic Gregorian calendar.","reminder":null,"hideUntilReminder":false,"calendarScope":"dss-only","trackTime":false,"showCountdown":false,"countdownDays":0,"countdownStartAtZero":false,"showCountdownBefore":false,"countdownBeforeDays":0,"countdownBeforeStartAtZero":false,"createdWithCalendarType":"am","amMonth":"Nisan","amDay":1,"amYear":3405,"gregorianDate":"-520-03-14","originalDate":"-520-03-14","linkedEvents":[],"linkedEventsStartAtOne":false,"id":1773800019000,"createdAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:19.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-03-13T14:00:19.000Z","endEventDate":null,"endTime":null,"endAMMonth":null,"endAMDay":null,"endAMYear":null,"anchorDate":"AM-3405-Nisan-1"}],"2025-06-01":[],"AM-5950-Nisan-0":[],"2025-12-01":[],"AM-5946-Iyar-18":[],"AM-1-Nisan-1":[],"AM-2996-Nisan-3":[]},"repeatingEvents":[],"customHolidays":[]}