Thus, the Jewish calendar is Luni-Solar.
It is in contrast to our civil calendar, the Gregorian,
which is purely solar, and in which the months have
completely lost their relation to the moon. But it is also
quite different from the Mohammedan calendar, an
absolutely lunar system, in which every month follows the
moon closely but wand3rs through all four seasons during
the period of 33 years.
Unlike these, which are either
altogether solar, or altogether lunar, the Jewish calendar
must meet two requirements, both solar and lunar. This
accounts for its relatively complicated structure. Since
the solar year of about 365 days is approximately 11 days
longer than 12 lunar months, the Jewish calendar is faced
with the problem of balancing the solar with the lunar
years.
In the early times of our history
the solution was found by the following practical
procedure: The beginnings of the months were determined by
direct observation of the new moon. Then those beginnings
of the months (Rosh Hodesh) were sanctified and announced
by the Sanhedrin, the Supreme Court in Jerusalem, after
witnesses had testified that they had seen the new
crescent and after their testimony had been thoroughly
examined, confirmed by calculation and duly accepted. The
Jewish communities were notified of the beginning of the
months (Rosh Hodesh) in earlier time by kindling of night
fires on the mountains, and later on by messengers.
A special committee of the
Sanhedrin, with its president as chairman, had the mandate
to regulate and balance the solar with the lunar years.
This so-called Calendar Council (Sod Haibbur) calculated
the beginnings of the seasons (Tekufoth) on the basis of
astronomical figures which had been handed down as a
tradition of old. Whenever, after two or three years, the
annual excess of 11 days had accumulated to approximately
30 days, a thirteenth month Adar II was inserted before
Nisan in order to assure that Nisan and Passover would
occur in Spring and not retrogress toward winter. However,
the astronomical calculation was not the only basis for
intercalation of a thirteenth month. The delay of the
actual arrival of spring was another decisive factor. The
Talmudic sources report that the Council intercalated a
year when the barley in the fields had not yet ripened,
when the fruit on the trees had not grown properly, when
the winter rains had not stopped, when the roads for
Passover pilgrims had not dried up, and when the young
pigeons had not become fledged. The Council on
intercalation considered the astronomical facts together
with the religious requirements of Passover and the
natural conditions of the country.
This method of observation and
intercalation was in use throughout the period of the
second temple (516 B.C.E - 70 C.E ), and about three
centuries after its destruction, as long as there was an
independent Sanhedrin. In the fourth century, however,
when oppression and persecution threatened the continued
existence of the Sanhedrin, the patriarch Hillel II took
an extraordinary step to preserve the unity of Israel. In
order to prevent the Jews scattered all over the surface
of the earth from celebrating their New Moons, festivals
and holidays at different times, he made public the system
of calendar calculation which up to then had been a
closely guarded secret. It had been used in the past only
to check the observations and testimonies of witnesses,
and to determine the beginnings of the spring season.
In accordance with this system,
Hillel II formally sanctified all months in advance, and
intercalated all future leap years until such time as a
new, recognized Sanhedrin would be established in Israel.
This is the permanent calendar according to which the New
Moons and Festivals are calculated and celebrated today by
the Jews all over the world. Like the former system of
observation, it is based on the Luni-Solar principle. It
also applies certain rules by which the astronomical facts
are combined with the religious requirements into an
admirable calendar system