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Counting the Hours

When did people begin telling time? Many ancient societies divided day and night into units whose length or number varied with the seasons. What advantages did variable-length hours provide, and why did some Judeans prefer a fourteen-hour day? // Eshbal Ratzon

 

Zionist History by Numbers

How could the third wave of Zionist immigration to Palestine have preceded the second? It all depends on whether Ezra and Nehemiah are considered Zionists, and whether all immigrants count // Hizky Shoham

 

Eye on the Crescent

What happens when your calendar can change at a moment’s notice because the moon is lost in cloud? Where in the Muslim world can witnesses testify that they’ve seen the new moon? Who’d prefer to calculate the length of Ramadan in advance? And why are leap years useful? // Tehila Bigman

 

Place in the Sun

Me’a Shearim’s Moshe Shapira channeled his passion for praying at sunrise into a profession, giving Jerusalem its most accurate sundial – “the smiling clock”  // Tamar Hayardeni

[icon name=”file-text-o” class=”” unprefixed_class=””] Read the article in the digital version

 

A Day at the Museum

Stealing Time

The clocks in Jerusalem’s L. A. Mayer Museum for Islamic Art told revolutionary time, carriage time, and even royal time – until the entire collection disappeared overnight. A visit to time restored // Amit Assis

A Brief History of Time

Portrait of a People

Edouard Manet

From the Archive

Eliezer Mei-Zahav

 

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