Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of Enos

 

Genesis 5:9

"And Enos lived ninety years, and begat Cainan:"

 

Several partitions in the year and different types of cycles existed simultaneously in a complex arrangement of calendar eschatology.  The 365-day-solar-year is divided according to a 260-Tzolken-sacred-year, and 100-days later, a 360-day-Tun-year.  Five days remained at the end of every 365-day-solar-year.  The 364-day-calendar-year includes a 4-day component marked by four principal stars to represent four 90-day quarters.  Solar-year variations reserve the final day for numerical matching with multiples of years.

The 365-year-solar-cycle had similar divisions influencing the Antediluvian Calendar.  A 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle was followed 100-years later by the 360-year-Tun-cycle.  The last 5-years of the 365-year-solar-cycle had both 4-year and single year elements.  Numerical matching X-number of days to X-number of years was the recurring theme.  Single terms containing X-number of days-and-years present the waterfall order of cascaded time.  Single terms also express pertinent types of years and cycles.

The primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos archives the next layer of lunar/solar progression according to Genesis 5:9.  The 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle is the left side of the equation graphed in figure 2.  Primary ages are the halfway, midpoint denominations of 260-Tzolken-days-and-years single terms.  Conversion of 130-Tun-years to 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years incorporates finding the total days of the primary age and dividing by 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years.  The 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year is a constant.  The primary 130-year age of Adam converts to 90-Tzolken-sacred-years in figure 2.

The second half 130-Tun-years are multiplied 360-day-Tun-years to equal 46,800-days (Eqn. 30).  The conversion finishes by dividing 260-day-Tzolken-year into the primary 46,800-day age (Eqn. 30 and Eqn. 31).  The converted result of Adam’s 130-Tun-years is 180-Tzolken-sacred-years of 260-days each.

Adam’s 130-year primary age halves the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Conversion to 180-Tzolken-sacred-year age halves 360-Tzolken-sacred-years in a 360-year-Tun-cycle that uses 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years (Eqn. 29).  The converted primary 180-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Adam with 260-days per Tzolken-sacred-year defines the right-hand side of the right graphic in figure 2.

Adam and Seth combine in a 365-year-solar-cycle.  The scriptures cite primary ages for Adam and Seth in 360-day-Tun-years.  The primary 130-Tun-year age of Adam represents half of a 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  The primary 130-year age of Adam gave human context to the solar, masculine side of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Twice Adam’s 130-Tun-years comprised the entire 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Seth’s primary 105-year age then completes the 365-year-solar-cycle.  Adam and Seth form a pair that employs 360-day-Tun-years.  Each year of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle had 360-days, plus five extra days.

A 365-year-solar-cycle was complete with the addition of Seth's primary 105-year age (Fig. 1).  The primary 105-year age of Seth reiterates the masculine, solar-side of lunar/solar separation time.  Five years were included with the primary 105-year age of Seth externally to a 360-year-Tun-cycle.  The basic 360-Tun-year-cycle, plus the last 5-Tun-years, has accounted for 365-years in the solar-cycle.  The 5-days-and-years single term determines the time remaining after the secondary 800-year Generation Cycle.

Sun Kingdoms' Calendars distinctively set aside 5-days per year as feast days.  The 5-day feast period came after the 360-day-Tun-year to complete the 365-day-solar-year.  Egyptian and Mayan Calendars grouped the last 5-days with chosen numerical matching philosophies.  A single term of 5-days-and-years arises to enumerate the Mayan 52-year Calendar Round and consistencies asserted in Egyptian mythology.  A single year numerical identity highlights the comparable 364-day-calendar-year.  Characteristic roles generate parallel use of a 364-year-calendar-cycle.  Documentation relating an Enochian sect and the mysterious Qumran community may be traceable to much older beginnings.  The Egyptian 1,460-year Sothic Cycle and the 364-day Ethiopian-calendar-year underscore slightly altered branches of solar calendar development.

Equations 28-31 solve for Y to convert from 90-Tzolken-sacred-year to 65-Tun-years.  Cross-multiplying 90-Tzolken-sacred-years by 360-day-Tun-years is equal to 23,400-days (Eqn. 29-30).  Dividing by 260-day-Tzolken-years equals 65-Tzolken-sacred-years for Y (Eqn. 31).  The 360-day-Tun-year and 360-year-Tun-cycle embody the rules for conversions.

The primary 130-Tun-year age of Adam converts to 180-Tzolken-sacred-years.  Seth’s primary 105-years are a solar-side age inserted between two halves of the 260-year Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  The converted primary 180-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Adam subtracts from 360-Tzolken-sacred-years (Eqn. 32).  The second half of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle further subdivides in half to answer the primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos.  The primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos at the time of fathering Cainan evaluates equally for 65-Tun-years of 360-days each (Eqn. 31).  Three quarters of the 260-year Tzolken-sacred-cycle are completed with the fifth 400-year Baktun cycle.

The next halfway division of 180-Tzolken-sacred-years occurs for Enos.  The 360-Tzolken-sacred-year cycle divides in half for 180-Tzolken-years.  The style of 360-day-Tun-years reminds one of the 364-day-calendar-year texts.  .  The upper quarter of the 260-year-sacred-cycle in figure 4 is the converted result from figure 3.  Figure 4 shows the green, third quarter primary 65-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos in contrast to the red fourth quarter.  The halving of layered primary ages is definite.

The Book of Enoch (I) advises regular computations for the 364-calendar-year should not include the last 4-days.  5-days.  Sun Kingdom’s Calendars omit the last 5-days from regular computations concerning 360-day-Tun-years under similar rules.  The 360-days-and-years single term appears for every ancient calendar system in one form or another.

 

 

1.      “These are the leaders of the chiefs of the thousands, those which preside over all creation, and over all the stars; with the four days which are added and never separated from the place allotted them, according to the complete computation of the year.”

 

2.      “And these serve four days, which are not computed in the computation of the year.”

 

CHAP. LXXIX; Verses 1-2:

The Book of Enoch (I), The Prophet

 

A half of a half is effectively the result for the primary age 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos.  The definitions for Tzolken-sacred-year or sacred-years in the Bible primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos are absent.

Figure 3 represents the right 180-Tzolken-sacred-years with two periods of 90-Tzolken-sacred-years each that Enos subdivides.  The lower right quarter is red, showing the mirrored 90-Tzolken-sacred-years as half of 180-Tzolken sacred-years

Alternation of 360-day-Tun-years to 260-day Tzolken-years adjusted the genealogy to segregate multiple derivatives of solar-side time splits.  The third-quarter 65-Tun-years of 360-days each equals the primary 90-Tzolken-years age of Enos in equation 33.  Seth’s 105-year primary age separates the Adam’s day half of a 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle from the night half.  More explicitly, the third quarter of the 260-year-Tzolken-cycle ends with 65-Tun-years for Enos that have 360-days each.

Quartering the 260-year-sacred-cycle, and the equally converted 360-Tzolken-sacred-year-cycle, proves the dual relationship of Adam and Enos.  Equation 33 follows from equation 28 above to summarize the next division of the primary age category by Enos.

Three quarters of the 260-year-sacred-cycle had elapsed to end the primary age calendar recording for Enos.  Solar-side separation of Seth divided the second 130-Tun-years for 65-years in opposition to the primary 130-Tun-year age of Adam (figure 3).  The third secondary age 400-year-Baktun-cycle coincides with the end of Seth’s 105-year primary age of solar-side time split.  An identical 105-year lunar-side time split mirrors the first solar-side 105-years to close the fourth 400-year-Batun-cycle.

The same reasoning tool earmarks the extra 1,820-days to be set apart during the five special years.  These five years were likely a holy concept that combines day-and-year numerical matching.  Five years of either 364-days or 365-days convert to 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in Seth's secondary age for 1820-days (Eqn. 13 and Eqn. 14).

Solar-side separation time for Seth halves the 260-Tun-cycle in the primary age category.  The primary age of Enos divides the next 130-Tun-year measurement at midpoint.  The second multiple of 130-years is separated for 65-Tun-years of 360-days.  The third quarter 65-years is equal to the figure 3 primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos.  At the bottom of figure 4, the relationship between figures 3 and 4 is finalized.  Enos indicates 90-Tzolken-years having 260-days each.  The primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos amounts to one quarter of 360-Tzolken-years in a Tun-cycle.  Similarly, 65-Tun-years with 360-day lengths specify one-fourth of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Primary ages for Adam (130 years) and Enos (65 years) use the 260-year-Tzolken-cycle.

The third quarter of the 260-year-Tzolken-cycle ends with the equivalent, converted primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos.  The secondary age fifth 400-year-Baktun-cycle concludes the first 400-year half of 815-years in the secondary age of Enos.  The secondary age category total is 2000 l/s calendar years at the end of the fifth 400-year-Baktun-cycle and 2400 l/s calendar years at the end of the sixth 400-year-Baktun-cycle.

The primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos reveals two halves of an equivalent 180-Tzolken-year period.  A converted 180-Tzolken-sacred-year interval identifies the equivalent period in figure 3.  The fifth 400-year-Baktun-cycle ends the primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos.  Converted amounts for Enos are 65-Tun-years within the 260-Tzolken-year-sacred-year-cycle.  The primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos quarters the 360-year-Tun-cycle in figure 3 or the equivalent 65-Tun-years in figure 4.  The last 15-Tzolken-sacred-years are in 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years.  Seth’s primary 105-year age is doubled for 210-years of solar-side time split to admit 15-Tzolken-sacred-years.

Primary 90-Tzolken-Sacred-Year Age of Enos

Figure 3

with 260 Day-Sacred Years

 


Primary 90 Sacred Year Age of Enos

Figure 3

 

 

Text Box: Genesis 5:9
"And Enos lived ninety years, and begat Cainan:"

Genesis 5:10
"And Enos lived after he begat Cainan eight hundred and fifteen years, and begat sons and daughters:"

The calendar computations for Enos demonstrate the 360-day-Tun-year or the midpoint between 354-day-lunar-years and 365-day-solar-years.  Enos is the next generation included for one-quarter of 360-Tzolken-sacred- years.  The primary age of Enos deals with the one half of the feminine, evening side of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Seth's solar-side time split divides 360-Tzolken-sacred-years in half to measure the evening side 180-Tzolken-sacred-years opposite to Adam.  Enos then subdivides 180-Tzolken-sacred years into light and dark halves to quarter an equivalent 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.

Enos assigns the third quarter of the 360-year-Tun-cycle in figure 3 to be the green quarter, daytime 90-Tzolken-years.  Notice the fourth quarter is marked 90-Tzolken-years in red at this point.  The web picture substitutes red for the dark half of 180-Tzolken-years.  The fifth and sixth 400-year-Baktun-cycles bring the secondary age category total to 2,400 l/s years.

Genesis 5:9 references Enos with a primary 90-year age, or more precisely, 90-Tzolken-years of 260-days each.  The practice of this calendar doubles the primary 105-year age of Seth to accomplish the primary 90-sacred-Tzolken-year age of Enos.  The primary 90-Tzolken-year age of Enos then doubles to reach the ages for Cainan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Converted Primary 65-Tun-Year Age of Enos

Figure 4


Once we clarify the framework of the ancient calendar system, it is easy to step forward through the Antediluvian genealogy.  Dual Tun and Tzolken patterns are evident.  Reminiscent of the Mayan Calendar, 360-Tzolken-sacred-years within a 360-Tun-year cycle were numerically matched with Tun-year multiples of 360-days.  Single numerical terms apply to describe 360-Tun-days and years and 260-Tzolken-sacred-days and years.  The configuration for the 5200-year Great Cycle is fashioned exactly like the 52-Calendar Round.  Primary ages for Adam, Enos, and Mahalaleel all involved one 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle that was tracked independently to the solar-side separations of Seth and later, Cainan and Jared.  The secondary age of six different characters completes one 5200-year Great Cycle.  Complexities surrounding ages recorded for the generations following Adam required substantial abilities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some Bibles quote Enos as Enosh.  Literal Hebrew meanings vary from mortal, to man or mankind.  Enos was among the first to call upon and invoke the name of YHWH.  The policy of quartering calendar cycles was known in the past.  Quarterly division of the 360-year-Tun-cycle, or the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle, ties Enos to the 360-day-Tun-year in the Mayan style.  Mahalaleel is the later numerical counterpart to Enos.  Many calendars and cultures followed suit in recognizing the 360-day midpoint length of year.  The extreme position in antiquity held by 360-days-and-years assigns an original link between humanity and God.  Enos lists ages in the third of seven sacred scrolls.

Enos and his cohorts engaged the arts of divination and control over the heavenly forces.  Four revolutions in nature were justified.  The mountains became barren; corpses began to putrefy; men became ungodly and had the faces of animals; and demons lost their fear of men.  Enos was the son of Seth, and the grandson of Adam.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Equations

 

29.     130-Tun-years

x 360-day-Tun-year

= 46,800 Days Primary Age of Adam

 

30.     90-Tzolken Years          =         Y-Tun-Years

260-Day-Tzolken Year           360-Day-Tun-Year

 

31.     Y = 90-Tzolken-Years x 360-Day-Tun-Year

260-Day-Tzolken-Year

 

32.     Y =  23,400 Days Primary Age of Enos

260-Day-Tzolken-Year

 

33.     Y = 65-Tun-Years

Converted Primary Age of Enos

 

34.     360-Tzolken-Sacred-Year-Cycle

- 180-Tzolken-Sacred-Years

= 180-Tzolken-Sacred-Years

 

35.     Primary 90-Tzolken-Year Age of Enos

with 260-Day-Tzolken-Years

= 1/4 of 360-Year-Tun-Cycle

with 260-Day-Tzolken-Years

= 1/4 of 260-Year-Tzolken-Sacred-Cycle

with 260-Day-Tzolken-Years

Not Sure

Uses a 364 Year-Solar-Cycle with 364 Day Calendar Year of Enoch

5 Years

x 365 Day-Solar-Year

= 1,820 Days Extra in 5 Years of 364 Days

Secondary 815-Year Age of Enos

 

Genesis 5:10

"And Enos lived after he begat Cainan eight hundred and fifteen years,

and begat sons and daughters:"

 

The first 800-year Generation Cycle relates to the daytime 130-year half of the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle.  Seth's ages separate the daytime half of a 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle from the nighttime 130-Tun-year half.  Solar-side separation time of Seth divides a 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle having 360-day-Tun-years and the secondary age 800-year Generation Cycles of Adam and Enos.  Seth’s 800-year Generation Cycle divides the first and second 400-year-Baktun-cycle from the fifth and sixth 400-year-Baktun-cycle.  The second 800-year Generation Cycle of Seth is between the first and third secondary age 800-year Generation Cycles of Adam and Enos.

The 800-year Generation Cycle for Adam holds secondary age place value and later repeats in the secondary ages of Seth and Enos.  An episode of 400-years signals the midpoint during the 800-year Generation Cycle.  Twice the 400-year-Baktun-cycle produces one 800-year Generation Cycle.  The secondary age category includes 13 different 400-year-Baktun-cycles.  The 400-year-Baktun-cycle is sequentially numbered from 1 to 13 to sum for the Mayan 5200-year Great Cycle.  The first half and midpoint of the character's secondary 800-year Generation Cycle finishes the character's primary age simultaneously.  Each primary age level correlates with an odd numbered 400-year-Baktun-cycle.

 

 

Extending the secondary age pattern to include Enos admits a third 800-year Generation Cycle to the secondary age category.  The secondary 815-year age of Enos includes two basic elements.  Doubling the last 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in the secondary 807-year age of Seth adds 7-Tzolken-sacred-years for 14-Tzolken-sacred-years of 260-days each (Eqn. 36).  At the end of Seth’s 807-year secondary age, some 1,820-days extra days were counted.

About 1,820-days comprise the additional 7-sacred-years to be added to 800-sacred-years in the 807-sacred-years of Seth's secondary age.  Enos doubles the remaining 1,820-days to get 3,640 days or 7-sacred-years more (Eqn. 29.  Twice the 7-Tzolken-sacred-years amounts to 14 of 15 extra 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years in the secondary age of Enos (Eqn. 29).  Only 260-days, or one extra sacred year is required to complete the 815-sacred years given for the secondary age of Enos.

The 800-year Generation Cycle repeats a third time in secondary 815-year age of Enos (Eqn. 37).  Already mentioned, 800-years per Generation Cycle are double the 400-year-Baktun-cycle related to the ancient Sun Kingdom's Calendars (Eqn. 25).  The 800-year Generation Cycle includes the fifth and sixth 400-year-Baktun-cycles in the secondary age category.

The second Generation Cycle of Seth adds 800-years to the secondary age category (Eqn. 27).  Tzolken-sacred-years having 260-days each form part of the secondary 807-sacred-year age of Seth.  Repetition of the 800-sacred year age present for Adam appears in the secondary 807-sacred-year age of Seth and again in the secondary 815-sacred-year age of Enos.  Seven sacred years or 1,820-days were extra to the primary age combination of Adam and Seth.  The 800-year Generation Cycle plus 7-Tzolken-sacred-years sum to arrive at the secondary 807-sacred-year age of Seth.

Based on the 800-year-Generation Cycle, 800-years restate for part of 815-years.  Between 1,820 and 1,825 extra days were counted during the 1,600-years attributed to the additive secondary ages of Adam and Seth.  About 1,820-days comprise 7-Tzolken-sacred-years additional to 800-sacred-years in the 807-sacred-years of Seth's secondary age.  The remaining 1,820-days double to get 3,640 total days or 7-sacred years more (Eqn. 29.  Figuring twice 1,820-days per 7-sacred-years, the total number becomes 3,640-days.  Twice the seven years amount to fourteen of fifteen extra sacred years by the secondary age category of Enos (Eqn. 29).  Only 260-days, or one extra sacred year is required to complete the 815-sacred years given for the secondary age of Enos.

A 360-days-and-years single term involving Enos yields two different refinements for the primary and secondary age categories.  To complete the secondary age category, the last 260-day sacred year in the 15-sacred year group develops from the 260-days and years sacred single term.  The time stream progresses from the primary age of Seth.  Recall from Ages of Adam, two 52-year Calendar Rounds had concluded 104-years of 360-days each for the primary 105-year age of Seth.  The last year of 105-years, using 360-day-Tun-years leaves 360-days to provide 100-days that are matched with 100-years.  A final 100-days-and-years single term is added as part of Seth's 105-days-and-years single term.  The Tzolken-sacred-260-days-and-years single term finishes the equivalent Tun-360-days-and-years single term and the final fifteenth Tolken-sacred-year for Enos (Eqn. 30).

 

 

 

 

 

The last 5-years multiply by a 364-day-calendar-year to produce 1,820-days.  A similar procedure multiplies 5-days per year by a 364-year-calendar-cycle for 1,820-days.  The total of 3,640-days in 14-Tzolken-sacred-years approximates the 364-days-and-years single term in the calculations for Enos.  The secondary age of Enos has 15-sacred-years that amount to 3,900-days total (Eqn. 31).  There are 3,900 extra days or 15-sacred-years more than the 800-year-Generation Cycle in the secondary 815-year age of Enos.

The secondary ages of Seth and Enos teamed together results in mirroring the primary 105-year age of Seth for 210-years (Eqn. 32).  Two Mesoamerican 52-year Calendar Rounds enumerate Seth's primary 105-year age.  Four Mesoamerican 52-year Calendar Rounds double the primary 105-year age of Seth for 210-Tun-year.  The last 10-Tzolken-sacred-years in Seth’s doubled primary age convert to 14-Tzolken-years.  The last 5-days-and-years single term constitutes leftover time beyond the 800-year secondary age of Enos.  The primary age level for each character is doubled with the second of two 400-year-Baktun-cycles.  Seth’s 210-years of solar-side time split accumulates for Enos.

The last fifteenth Tzolken-sacred-year in the secondary 815-year age of Enos is based upon using a 364-year-cycle with 364-day calendar years.  Calculations suggest that a 364-days-and-years single tern existed for the primary 105-year age of Seth.  A 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle adds the 104-year element of 364-days each to complete a 364-days-and-years single term.  This scenario substitutes a final 364-day-calendar-year for the last year of Seth’s primary 105-year age.  The final 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year is extracted from the last 364-day-calendar-year.  Remaining are 105-days that match Seth’s primary 105-year age in the primary 105-day-and-years single term.

The option of a 360-days-and-years single term may affect our methods involving the secondary 815-year age of Enos.  A 100-days and years single term is contingent with the difference between a Tzolken 260-days-and-years single term and the Tun 360-day-and-years single term.  The end result depends on the interpretation and is not necessarily incorrect.  Ten years of 360-days yields 3600-days that are divided by the 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year.  The answer of 13.8-Tzolken-sacred-year is close enough to 14 Tzolken-sacred-year for approximation.  A 360-day-and-years single term substitutes for the last year of 360-days.  The final fifteenth 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year is partitioned from the 360-day-Tun-year.  A single term of 100-days-and-years affirms 100-Tun-years in the primary 105-year age of Seth.

The 800-year Generation Cycle halved the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred cycle to get the primary 130-year age of Adam.  Seth’s addition doubled the 800-year Generation Cycle secondary age sum for 1,600-years.  The second 800-year-Generation Cycle is part of the secondary 807-year age of Seth.  Enos adds a third 800-year Generation cycle to the secondary age category to arrive at 2,400-l/s years.  Six steps of 400-year-Baktun-cycles are the likewise equivalent sum.

The fifth 400-year-Baktun-cycle increments the secondary age sum from 1,600-years to 2,000-years for Enos.  The midpoint age level of Enos is 2,000-years that halve the 130-years opposite to the primary 130-year age of Adam for 65-years.  The sixth Baktun cycle adds another 400-years to bring the total secondary age to 2,400-years for Enos.  Three Generation Cycle repetitions of 800-years add up 2,400-years to divide the third 130-years or the actual 180-Tzolken-sacred-year value in half.  Enos provides the first primary age alternation to 90-sacred-years, and sustains the secondary age category repetition of 800-sacred-years.

The name of Enos in the literal sense of mortal mankind strengthens the literal man meaning of Adam.  Masculine traits implied for the vertical sacred pillars consolidate early attitudes that bear similes with solar rising and setting positions.  The 360-day-Tun-year was imbedded so distantly remote that it defies chronology.  The centerline value between lunar years and solar years dominates the lunar/solar calendar.  Always 12-months of 30-days each was the mainstay calendar length of year whenever people began to count weeks.  The year of 360-days plus the sacred standing stones were joint requirements for the earliest worship.

In II Samuel 18:18, Absalom erected a pillar and said: "I have no son to keep my name in remembrance: and he called the pillar after his own name ...".  A leader's name had the purposes of identifying the city or village location, the leader himself and his male descendants to follow.  The standing stone aided to mark the years.  The ground sprouted the seed for the next crop and the seed of royalty.

Enos' ages serve to fuse sacred pillar concepts with the Tun 360-days-and-years single term.  Every quarter of the Tun 360-day-and-year single term benefits cascaded l/s calendar partitions and serves reason that supports solar-side separations.

Ascertainment of the derivative, solar-side separations shows the exchange between the agricultural 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year and the corresponding 360-day-Tun-year.  Through the era of Moses, any given extent of time mentioned in the Bible most likely subscribes to a subset of the dual calendar, which entertains the 50-year Jubilee Cycle for dating.  Ages for Enos yield the second derivative, solar side time split for Cainan's era.

 

 

The Bible gives the total lifetime of Enos in Genesis 5:11 as 915-years.  The scriptures sum the primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age of Enos to add with the secondary 815-year age of Enos.  Sacred year units are consistent to provide the life span linear summation for Enos.

 

 

Genesis 5:11

 

"And all the days of Enos were nine hundred and five years: and he died."

 

 

Enos is the second generation after Adam.  The primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age adds to the secondary 815 sacred year age to result in 905-years total (Eqn. 45).  Enos specified the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle and fathered the next generation of solar side separation time.  Cainan is the third generation following Adam and describes the second generation of lunar/solar time split.  The genealogical pattern of cascaded time advanced with the ages recorded for Enos.  The era of Enos followed Seth with the third 800-year Generation Cycle.  Extra time was dependent on lunar/solar observations and matching 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year units appended the secondary 800-year Generation Cycle age of Enos.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Equations

 

36.       7-Tzolken-Sacred-Year Secondary Age of Seth

x 2 Doubles Extra 7-Sacred Years of

Seth's 807-Year Secondary Age

= 14 Tzolken-Sacred Years

+   1 Tzolken-Sacred Year

=  815 Tzolken-Sacred Year Secondary Age of Enos

 

37.     1,820 Days Extra in 7-Sacred Years of

Seth's 807-Year Secondary Age

x 2 Doubles Extra 7-Sacred Years of

Seth's 807-Year Secondary Age

=  3,640 Days Extra in 14-Sacred Years that add with

 

38.     400 Sacred-Years factored from a 400-Year-Baktun-Cycle

x  2  Doubles the 400-Year-Baktun-Cycle

= 800 Sacred-Years factored from an 800-Year Generation Cycle

 

39.     800 Year Generation Cycle x 365 Days per Year

= 800 Years (260 Day Sacred Year) + 800 Years (105 Days)

= 800 Sacred Years + 84,000 Days

 

40.     800 Year Generation Cycle

x  2 Doubles the 800 Year Generation Cycle

= 1,600 Years in 2 Generation Cycles

 

41.     807 Sacred Year Secondary Age of Seth

x 2  Double the Secondary Age of Seth

=  814 Sacred Years

+      1 Sacred Year

=  815 Sacred Year Secondary Age of Enos

42.     1,820 Days Extra in 7-Sacred Years of

Seth's 807-Year Secondary Age

x 2 Doubles Extra 7-Sacred Years of Seth's 807-Year Secondary Age

=  3,640 Days Extra in 14-Sacred-Years that add with

800-Years in Secondary 815-Sacred-Year Age of

Enos

=  14 Sacred Years x 260-Day-Sacred-Year

=  14 Sacred Years that add with 800-Years in Secondary 815-Sacred-Year Age of Enos

 

43.     105 Year Primary Age of Seth

x 2 Doubles the Primary Age of Seth

= 210 Years Doubled Primary Age of Seth

 

44.     147.4 Sacred Years - 145.4 Sacred Years

= 520 Days Approximates 2-Sacred Years of Difference in Converted Primary Age Values of Seth

 

360 Sacred-Years

÷ 4

=   90 Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

 

180 Sacred Years

÷ 2

=   90 Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

 

46,800 Days Primary Age of Adam

÷ 2

= 23,400 Days Primary Age of Enos

 

90 Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

x 260 Day-Sacred-Year

=  23,400 Days Primary Age of Enos

a.  Primary 65-Year Age of 360-Day-Tun-Year

= 1/4 of 260-Year-Sacred-Cycle of 360-Day-Tun-Year

b.  Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of 260-Day-Sacred-Year

= 1/4 of 360-Sacred Year Cycle of 260-Day-Sacred-Year

360 Sacred-Years

÷ 4

=   90 Tzolken-Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

 

180 Tzolken-Sacred-Years

÷ 2 Time Split

=   90 Tzolken-Sacred Year Primary Age of Enos

 

46,800 Days Primary Age of Adam

÷ 2 Time Split

= 23,400 Days Primary Age of Enos

 

90 Tzolken-Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

x 260 Day-Sacred-Year

=  23,400 Days Primary Age of Enos

 

a.  Primary 65-Year Age of 360-Day-Tun-Year

= 1/4 of 260-Year-Sacred-Cycle of 360-Day-Tun-Year

b.  Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of 260-Day-Sacred-Year

= 1/4 of 360-Sacred Year Cycle of 260-Day-Sacred-Year

 

45.     90 Sacred-Year Primary Age of Enos

+  815 Sacred-Year Secondary Age of Enos

=  905 Sacred-Year Total for Life Span Linear Summation for Enos

 

(2 x 52-Year Calendar Round)

+ 260-Day-Sacred-Year)

=  104-Years Double Calendar Round

+ 260-Day-Sacred-Year

 

260 Day-Sacred-Year

x 15 Sacred Years remaining after 800-Years

= 3,900 Days Extra in 15-Sacred-Years Following 800-Sacred-Years in

Secondary 815-Sacred-YearAge of Enos

 

The secondary ages of Seth and Enos teamed together results in mirroring the primary 105-year age of Seth for 210-years (Eqn. 32).  The Tzolken-sacred-year conversion subtracts 145.4-sacred years from 147.4-sacred years for the difference of two sacred years (Eqn. 33).  Following two Mesoamerican 52-year Calendar Rounds, Seth's primary 105-year age includes one of 260-day Tzolken-sacred-year.