Longest Jewish year












1















This year, 5779, is the longest possible year on the Jewish calendar. Not only is it a leap year, but Cheshvan and Kislev both have 30 days, for a total of 385 days. How often does that happen?










share|improve this question





























    1















    This year, 5779, is the longest possible year on the Jewish calendar. Not only is it a leap year, but Cheshvan and Kislev both have 30 days, for a total of 385 days. How often does that happen?










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1








      This year, 5779, is the longest possible year on the Jewish calendar. Not only is it a leap year, but Cheshvan and Kislev both have 30 days, for a total of 385 days. How often does that happen?










      share|improve this question
















      This year, 5779, is the longest possible year on the Jewish calendar. Not only is it a leap year, but Cheshvan and Kislev both have 30 days, for a total of 385 days. How often does that happen?







      calendar statistics






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 17 mins ago









      DonielF

      14.2k12380




      14.2k12380










      asked 2 hours ago









      Maurice MizrahiMaurice Mizrahi

      1,817215




      1,817215






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          It happens in 1371/8512 years, which is about 16.1%.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

            – Monica Cellio
            1 hour ago











          • Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

            – DonielF
            14 mins ago





















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          2














          It happens in 1371/8512 years, which is about 16.1%.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

            – Monica Cellio
            1 hour ago











          • Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

            – DonielF
            14 mins ago


















          2














          It happens in 1371/8512 years, which is about 16.1%.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

            – Monica Cellio
            1 hour ago











          • Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

            – DonielF
            14 mins ago
















          2












          2








          2







          It happens in 1371/8512 years, which is about 16.1%.






          share|improve this answer















          It happens in 1371/8512 years, which is about 16.1%.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago

























          answered 1 hour ago









          Double AADouble AA

          78k6188410




          78k6188410








          • 1





            Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

            – Monica Cellio
            1 hour ago











          • Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

            – DonielF
            14 mins ago
















          • 1





            Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

            – Monica Cellio
            1 hour ago











          • Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

            – DonielF
            14 mins ago










          1




          1





          Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

          – Monica Cellio
          1 hour ago





          Could you add something about how you arrived at (or sourced) that number?

          – Monica Cellio
          1 hour ago













          Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

          – DonielF
          14 mins ago







          Where do you get 1371/8512 from? My reading of the Tur’s chart gives 40/247, which is slightly off but still rounds to 16.1%. Where does the difference come from? (And what does 8512 represent? I know of 19 year cycles, 247 year cycles, and over 600K year cycles, but 8512 is new to me.)

          – DonielF
          14 mins ago





          Popular posts from this blog

          404 Error Contact Form 7 ajax form submitting

          How to know if a Active Directory user can login interactively

          Refactoring coordinates for Minecraft Pi buildings written in Python