(Not sure about this)
The length of February was finalized when Julius Caesar remade the Roman calendar and assigned the month 28 days and 29 days. In 713 B.C., February was officially added to the Roman calendar.
What was the calendar before then - seasons and star positions? The Saxons called February “Sol-monath” which means “cake month,” because they would offer cakes to the gods during February. But it wasn't called February before the Roman/Minoan!?!
The name of February comes from the Latin word “februum,” which means purification.
February was named after a purification ritual which was like an early Roman spring cleaning festival.
🌑*new moon*
According to Slate, the Roman 10-month calendar was based on the moon cycle, and therefore called a lunar calendar. The Roman calendar used at that time began in March and ended in December; were there months in between? Nobody knows for sure, but general consensus says the Romans largely wrote off the winter as unimportant to the harvest, and therefore never bothered to keep track. That system only worked so well. Over time, the seasons and the months with which they were associated began to drift. For this reason, the Romans needed a change, and the months of January and February were born.
The month of Mercedonius
From around 750 B.C., there were two new months on the Roman calendar: January and February, and early on, both those months were only 28 days long, according to Reader's Digest. Believing even numbers to be bad luck, Roman king Numa Pompilius added some days to January but left February as is. This solved the Roman problem of the old 10-month calendar for a while, but similar issues began to crop up, and it was back to the drawing board.
One solution to the season-to-month drift was an entirely new month called Mercedonius. But check this out: only Roman priests could decide when Mercedonius would occur in any given year, and otherwise, no one ever really knew what day it was. Consider that next time you schedule a dentist appointment.
Clearly, there had to be a better way. Here, Julius Caesar enters the story. His idea was to base the calendar off the cycles of the sun, and in doing so, devised the 365-day calendar that's much the same as the calendar we use today, minus Mercedonius, and with a few other important differences: the Romans slightly miscalculated the solar cycle, leading to one entire day disappearing each century in the relationship between the solar cycle and the calendar page, according to Britannica. This was fixed later on in the Gregorian calendar and with the modern-day leap year. Nevertheless, February still only had 28 days, possibly because Roman death rituals (?) and other types of purification rites were performed during this time, as Slate reports.
Read More: https://www.grunge.com/751673/the-strange-reason-february-only-has-28-days/
GO way back to 2013
👇Mercedonius- The Intercalary Month- VATICAN SORCERY! HOLY SHIT! 1260 years!!!!
Oh boy -Something big is going down in the spirit world . This whole Pope resignation has to do with the Devil wanting his due. It’s time to pay the piper. The Vatican Whore has had her time in the limelight and that Whore is gonna be put to death, but not until she births her “child”- Satan incarnate.
This whole boot of Pope Ratzinger (The dirty rat) has something to do with this Roman extension of the calendar. They need to do something with the days in the calendar to make something in the Spirit world fit their agenda. It has to align with the tropical calendar.. the heavenly alignments. They are reverting back to the pre-Julian calendar I think.
Any Math scholars out there??
The mensis intercalary has to do with the menstrual cycle of the woman. This is what YaHuWaH has told me. The woman was considered unclean for 30 days when she had her period and had to be put outside the camp. They must need to put this Pope out now to fulfill their spiritual mission to bring in the Antichrist. Their deal with the devil.
It has something to do with their ancient Roman dieties as well. Remember we talked about Romulus and the Gregorian calendar. Romulus was suceeded by a guy named Numo Pompilious - the first king of Rome. He actually established the first pope!
Numa Marcius, son of Marcus, was the first Pontifex Maximus of Ancient Rome! April 21st , 753 BC was his birthday and it was on that day that Rome was founded also!! 1260 years ago!!!! DO YOU HEAR ME!!! TIMES TIMES and a Half! 1260 years to the day. Remember I said that the Birthday was the highest Satanic Holiday. Something is set to happen on April 21st! It has to be! They have to get the extra month inserted now.
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