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Can I Get A Confirmation Of A Possible Error In The Listing On Numista Please?

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 Posted 08/30/2024  10:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dearborn to your friends list
oh! duh, ok - you kept confusing me with the calendar stuff.. my bad.. my old brain ain't what it used to be.
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 Posted 08/31/2024  06:59 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list
Sorry. It's just my knack of pointing out useless and irrelevant trivia, coming to the fore.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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 Posted 08/31/2024  4:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Marv65 to your friends list

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Fall for what? I'm actually being serious here

I was just kidding - I know nothing about Israeli coinage.
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 Posted 08/31/2024  10:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dearborn to your friends list

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I know nothing about Israeli coinage.

I didn't either until I started posting them up and had to learn how to read Hebrew numbers and letters (backwards)
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 Posted 09/01/2024  06:52 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tdziemia to your friends list
@dearborn, thanks for the heads up. I will see what I can find out. Probably one of the other admins is knowledgeable on the algorithm used for the date conversion (and meanwhile I will try to see if that error pops up consistently or just on this one coin)
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 Posted 09/01/2024  08:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add january1may to your friends list

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The year AD 2000 contains pieces of both the AM years 5760 and 5761. The larger piece is in 5760 (January to September), and so the more probable answer to the question "what Hebrew year is equivalent to AD 2000" is "5760" rather than "5761". But saying a coin dated AM 5761 was struck in AD 2000 is not, necessarily, an "error" in the sense of being wrong - it's just inconsistent with the rest of the date conversions for Israeli coins on Numista, as you have pointed out. I'm not defending Numista's inconsistency here, and I'm not saying it shouldn't be changed - I am merely attempting to explain how the inconsistency may have come about.
Indeed for Israeli NCLT coins, which bear dates in both the Hebrew and Gregorian calendars, you can sometimes see both conversion variants:
Can-I-Get-A-Confirmation-Of-A-Possible-Error-In-The-Listing-On-Numista-Please?
I agree that the jumping conversions for single dates are inconsistent, though. It's possible that those are the set release years? But then it probably needs a source.

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I'm reasonably certain that the Jewish people didn't randomly bounce the start and end of their calendars.
Hanukkah, specifically, does jump around between Gregorian years, but only rarely, and it cannot start in the new year.
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 Posted 09/07/2024  07:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tdziemia to your friends list
@dearborn, it looks like a modification was made to the date table a few months ago, which might have caused the problem.

In addition to the dates being inconsistent with other Numista listings, it's also at odds with Krause (which also has mistakes, of course, but probably not in this case).

You can either open the listing by clicking on the little edit icon at the upper right, and edit each of the affected date lines, or you can put an item in the Catalog sub-forum describing the problem.


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 Posted 09/17/2024  09:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dearborn to your friends list
Just a quick up-date
I guess my request for a fix worked and the changes have been made and now the dates are correct.
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 Posted 09/17/2024  10:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

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I guess my request for a fix worked and the changes have been made and now the dates are correct.
Fantastic!
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 Posted 09/17/2024  11:35 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add HondoB to your friends list
Excellent job, Dearborn!
Inordinately fascinated by bits of metal with strange markings and figures
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 Posted 09/19/2024  11:26 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add MachinMachinMan to your friends list

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I'm reasonably certain that the Jewish people didn't randomly bounce the start and end of their calendars.


The Jewish calendar is lunisolar—i.e., regulated by the positions of both the moon and the sun. It consists usually of 12 alternating lunar months of 29 and 30 days each (except for Heshvan and Kislev, which sometimes have either 29 or 30 days), and totals 353, 354, or 355 days per year.
Edited by MachinMachinMan
09/19/2024 11:27 am
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