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   » » Wiki: Cheshvan
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Marcheshvan (: , Standard , Tiberian ; from Akkadian , literally, 'eighth month'), generally shortened to Cheshvan (, Standard Tiberian ), is the second month of the civil year (which starts on 1 ), and the eighth month of the ecclesiastical year (which starts on 1 ) on the .

In a regular () year, Marcheshvan has 29 days, but because of the Rosh Hashanah postponement rules, in some years, an additional day is added to Marcheshvan to make the year a "full" () year. Marcheshvan occurs in October–November in the Gregorian calendar.

The , before the , refers to the month as Bul (). In Sidon, the reference to is also made on the Sarcophagus of Eshmunazar II dated to the early 5th century BC.


Etymology
Compared to its Akkadian , the name displays the same of ungeminated to found in other month names (Tammuz traditionally contains mem with ). Uniquely to this name the initial has also changed to , giving the overall effect of a metathesis. In the modern form, with the connection to the w-r-ḥ ('moon', 'month') and š-m-n ('eight') no longer apparent, the first two letters מַר ( mar) have been re-interpreted as the Hebrew word for 'bitter', alluding to the fact that the month has no holidays or fasts. In other contexts, the word is attributed to mean droplet, associating this month with the season.


Events
  • 7 Marcheshvan: The prayer ('deliver dew and rain') is added to the prayers in . If no rain has fallen by the 17th of the month, special prayers are added for rain.
  • Fast of Behav: According to the custom of most Eastern Ashkenazic communities, on the first after Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan, a prayer is recited on behalf of all those who are going to fast on Bahab. Bahab, or in Hebrew , stands for 2, 5, 2, i.e., Monday (2nd day of the week), Thursday (5th day), and another Monday. On the Monday, Thursday, and second Monday after the Sabbath, it is customary in many communities (mostly Ashkenazic, although there were some Sephardic communities who adopted this custom as well) to fast and/or to recite penitential prayers called . According to the Western Ashkenazic rite, as well as some Eastern Ashkenazic communities (especially Hungarian communities), the second Monday of Bahab is the Monday before , the Thursday is the Thursday preceding that, the first Monday is the Monday preceding that, and the Sabbath in which the prayer is recited is the Sabbath preceding that. Bahab is also observed at the beginning of ; in Iyar it is observed at the beginning of the month in both Eastern and Western Ashkenazic rites.
  • Sigd: The community celebrates on the 29th day of Marcheshvan, 50 days from , analogous to counting 50 days from to . Israel officially recognized Sigd as a national holiday in 2008, and it is observed annually on 29 Cheshvan.


In Jewish history and tradition
  • 8 Marcheshvan (A.D.66) – Jewish nationalists defeat the Romans at the famous Beth Horon Pass, killing 5,300 footmen and 380 horsemen , Wars 2.19.9:551-555
  • 11 Marcheshvan ( 2105 BCE) – Methuselah dies at age 969
  • 11 Marcheshvan ( 1553 BCE) – Death of while giving birth to
  • 12 Marcheshvan (1995) – Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin; now a national memorial day
  • 15 Marcheshvan – King 's alternative feast of for the people of the northern Kingdom ()
  • 15 Marcheshvan (165 BCE) – Death of (Mattathias), who began the revolt in the city of
  • 16 Marcheshvan (1938) – /Pogromnacht: 1,400 synagogues and numerous copies of the Tanakh are purposefully and systematically set on fire and allowed to burn in Nazi GermanyConfino, Alon. "Why the Nazis Burned the Hebrew Bible", Commentary, vol. 137, no. 6, June 2014, pp. 30–34. EBSCOhost.
  • 16 Marcheshvan (1994) – Death of Reb Shlomo Carlebach
  • 17 Marcheshvan ( 960 BCE) – First Temple completed by King (it was not inaugurated until the following however)
  • 20 Marcheshvan (1860) - Birth of Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn, the 5th Rebbe.
  • 23 Marcheshvan (164 BCE) – Hasmonean holiday commemorating the removal from the of altar stones which were defiled by the Greeks


See also


External links

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