hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
United States (United States) 28 0 Browse Search
James T. Butler 24 0 Browse Search
House 16 0 Browse Search
Henry S. Foote 12 2 Browse Search
France (France) 12 0 Browse Search
Canada (Canada) 12 0 Browse Search
Adam 10 0 Browse Search
England (United Kingdom) 10 0 Browse Search
Lincoln 9 1 Browse Search
Jules Gerard 8 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 18, 1865., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 22 total hits in 10 results.

year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 525 has been doubted, because it has been assumed that a gothic cycle could only begin when First Tooth, the new-year's day of the Egyptians, coincided with the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, and therefore the gothic cycle of the Old Chronicle must have commenced on the 20th of July, B. C. 1322; but Mr. Osburn, in his Monumental History of Egypt, has shown that, at the beginning of the Egyptian calendar, First Thoth was the day of the full moon after the star Sirius appeared in the evening, after the setting of the sun; and by calculation, it is certain that such a coincidence happened in the month of December, B. C. 1986. By using the luna solar cycle of seven hundred years, composed by multiplying the solar cycle of twenty-eight years by the lunar cycle of twenty-five years, the period of
lar cycles of seven hundred years2,100 years. Deduct the years of the world from the creation of Adam to the end of the Deluge1,657 years. the remainder is the period found in the Old Chronicle443 yent with the Bible Chronology, as contained in Brown's Ordo Saclorum, which dates the creation of Adam B. C. 4102, and the beginning of the Deluge B. C. 2446. Cambyses conquered Egypt,B. C. emy, of Mendes, having expressly stated that the Old Chronicle began with the seventeenth year of Adam, the difference is at once accounted for. but the Old Chronicle is composed of twenty-five cears each2,100 1 gothic cycle1,461 4 cycles3,561 Add the period before the seventeenth year of Adam16 Making the year of the world3,577 The first year of Adam, being B. C. 4,102, A. M. 3,577r of Adam, being B. C. 4,102, A. M. 3,577, is equal to B. C. 525, the era of Cambyses. This exact agreement of dates is worthy of examination by those persons who are interested in the subject.
. A new calendar was then adapted, B. C. 1986, as is shown by the following calculations; and a gothic cycle then began, which ended in the year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 52h the Bible Chronology, as contained in Brown's Ordo Saclorum, which dates the creation of Adam B. C. 4102, and the beginning of the Deluge B. C. 2446. Cambyses conquered Egypt,B. C. 525 add a gothic cycle1,461 years. the beginning of the calendar,B. C. 1,968 add a part of a cynic cycle443 years. Mizraim, fathercle1,461 4 cycles3,561 Add the period before the seventeenth year of Adam16 Making the year of the world3,577 The first year of Adam, being B. C. 4,102, A. M. 3,577, is equal to B. C. 525, the era of Cambyses. This exact agreement of dates is worthy of examination by those persons who are interested in the subject.
Sarah Brown (search for this): article 9
the solar cycle of twenty-eight years by the lunar cycle of twenty-five years, the period of four hundred and forty-three years is thus explained: from the sum of three luna solar cycles of seven hundred years2,100 years. Deduct the years of the world from the creation of Adam to the end of the Deluge1,657 years. the remainder is the period found in the Old Chronicle443 years. these dates and periods produce a remarkable agreement with the Bible Chronology, as contained in Brown's Ordo Saclorum, which dates the creation of Adam B. C. 4102, and the beginning of the Deluge B. C. 2446. Cambyses conquered Egypt,B. C. 525 add a gothic cycle1,461 years. the beginning of the calendar,B. C. 1,968 add a part of a cynic cycle443 years. Mizraim, father of the Egyptians, B. C. 2,429 years, or sixteen years after the deluge had ended. the year of the world, at the end of three lunisolar cycles of seven hundred years each, is equal to B. C. 2,002, sixteen
ended in the year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 525 has been doubted, because it has been assumed that a gothic cycle could only begin when First Tooth, the new-year's day of the Egyptians, coincided with the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, and therefore the gothic cycle of the Old Chronicle must have commenced on the 20th of July, B. C. 1322; but Mr. Osburn, in his Monumental History of Egypt, has shown that, at the beginning of the Egyptian calendar, First Thoth was the day of the full moon after the star Sirius appeared in the evening, after the setting of the sun; and by calculation, it is certain that such a coincidence happened in the month of December, B. C. 1986. By using the luna solar cycle of seven hundred years, composed by multiplying the solar cycle of twenty-eight years by the lunar cycle of twenty-five years,
s day of the Egyptians, coincided with the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, and therefore the gothic cycle of the Old Chronicle must have commenced on the 20th of July, B. C. 1322; but Mr. Osburn, in his Monumental History of Egypt, has shown that, at the beginning of the Egyptian calendar, First Thoth was the day of the full moon after the star Sirius appeared in the evening, after the setting of the sun; and by calculation, it is certain that such a coincidence happened in the month of December, B. C. 1986. By using the luna solar cycle of seven hundred years, composed by multiplying the solar cycle of twenty-eight years by the lunar cycle of twenty-five years, the period of four hundred and forty-three years is thus explained: from the sum of three luna solar cycles of seven hundred years2,100 years. Deduct the years of the world from the creation of Adam to the end of the Deluge1,657 years. the remainder is the period found in the Old Chronicle443 years. t
years. Deduct the years of the world from the creation of Adam to the end of the Deluge1,657 years. the remainder is the period found in the Old Chronicle443 years. these dates and periods produce a remarkable agreement with the Bible Chronology, as contained in Brown's Ordo Saclorum, which dates the creation of Adam B. C. 4102, and the beginning of the Deluge B. C. 2446. Cambyses conquered Egypt,B. C. 525 add a gothic cycle1,461 years. the beginning of the calendar,B. C. 1,968 add a part of a cynic cycle443 years. Mizraim, father of the Egyptians, B. C. 2,429 years, or sixteen years after the deluge had ended. the year of the world, at the end of three lunisolar cycles of seven hundred years each, is equal to B. C. 2,002, sixteen years prior to B. C. 1986; but Ptolemy, of Mendes, having expressly stated that the Old Chronicle began with the seventeenth year of Adam, the difference is at once accounted for. but the Old Chronicle is composed of twen
ing fifteen generations, which precedes the record of the historic kings of Egypt. A new calendar was then adapted, B. C. 1986, as is shown by the following calculations; and a gothic cycle then began, which ended in the year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 525 has been doubted, because it has been assumed that a gothic cycle could only begin whthe setting of the sun; and by calculation, it is certain that such a coincidence happened in the month of December, B. C. 1986. By using the luna solar cycle of seven hundred years, composed by multiplying the solar cycle of twenty-eight years d, at the end of three lunisolar cycles of seven hundred years each, is equal to B. C. 2,002, sixteen years prior to B. C. 1986; but Ptolemy, of Mendes, having expressly stated that the Old Chronicle began with the seventeenth year of Adam, the diffe
apted, B. C. 1986, as is shown by the following calculations; and a gothic cycle then began, which ended in the year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 525 has been doubted, because it has been assumed that a gothic cycle could only begin when First Tooth, the new-year's day of the Egyptians, coincided with the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, ates the creation of Adam B. C. 4102, and the beginning of the Deluge B. C. 2446. Cambyses conquered Egypt,B. C. 525 add a gothic cycle1,461 years. the beginning of the calendar,B. C. 1,968 add a part of a cynic cycle443 years. Mi Adam16 Making the year of the world3,577 The first year of Adam, being B. C. 4,102, A. M. 3,577, is equal to B. C. 525, the era of Cambyses. This exact agreement of dates is worthy of examination by those persons who are interested in t
July 20th (search for this): article 9
n began, which ended in the year B. C. 525, when Cambyses, the Persian, conquered Egypt, fourteen hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years later than B. C. 1986. The Statement that a gothic cycle ended in the year B. C. 525 has been doubted, because it has been assumed that a gothic cycle could only begin when First Tooth, the new-year's day of the Egyptians, coincided with the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, and therefore the gothic cycle of the Old Chronicle must have commenced on the 20th of July, B. C. 1322; but Mr. Osburn, in his Monumental History of Egypt, has shown that, at the beginning of the Egyptian calendar, First Thoth was the day of the full moon after the star Sirius appeared in the evening, after the setting of the sun; and by calculation, it is certain that such a coincidence happened in the month of December, B. C. 1986. By using the luna solar cycle of seven hundred years, composed by multiplying the solar cycle of twenty-eight years by the lunar cycle of twe