ANCIENT-FUTURE SYNCHRONIZATION AT THE HEART OF TIME

<p>The<strong>&nbsp;Gregorian calendar</strong>&nbsp;is a just minor correction to the Julian. In the Julian calendar every fourth year is a leap year in which February has&nbsp;<strong>29</strong>, not&nbsp;<strong>28 days</strong>, but in the Gregorian, with the introduction of the&nbsp;<strong>&ldquo;Leap Year Rule&rdquo;</strong>, it was established that &ldquo;<em>years divisible by 100 are&nbsp;</em><strong><em>not</em></strong><em>&nbsp;leap years&nbsp;</em><strong><em>unless</em></strong><em>&nbsp;they are also divisible by 400&Prime;</em>. Therefore, the years&nbsp;<strong>1600</strong>,&nbsp;<strong>2000,</strong>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<strong>2400</strong>&nbsp;are leap years, while 1700, 1800, 1900,&nbsp;<strong>2100</strong>,&nbsp;<strong>2200,</strong>&nbsp;and 2300 are<strong>&nbsp;not leap years. In other words:&nbsp;</strong>three LEAP years are eliminated every 400 years to keep the calendar on track.</p> <p>The<strong>&nbsp;Ancient Maya count</strong>&nbsp;is an uninterrupted count of days based on the advanced vigesimal mathematical system known as the Long Count. This count of days starts on August 11, -3113, on Long Count marker 0.0.0.0.0. 4Ajaw &mdash; 8Cumku. This count is independent of the Gregorian calendar and keeps running in parallel to include the Leap Day anomaly.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@TheHarmonicFactor/ancient-future-synchronization-at-the-heart-of-time-c340b3f76c4f"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>
Tags: Ancient Future