Nisan
This article is about the Hebrew calendar and Assyrian calendar month. For the Gregorian calendar month Nisan in Turkey, see April. For the character from Manchu folklore, see Tale of the Nisan Shaman. For the Japanese automaker, see Nissan Motor Company.
← Adar Nisan (נִיסָן) Iyar → | ||||
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Passover, the Festival of the Unleavened Bread, begins on the 15th of Nisan and commemorates the Israelites' liberation from Egyptian slavery. | ||||
Month Number: | 1 | |||
Number of Days: | 30 | |||
Season: | Spring | |||
Gregorian Equivalent: | March–April |
Nisan (or Nissan; Hebrew: נִיסָן, Standard Nisan Tiberian Nîsān) on the Assyrian calendar is the first month, and on the Hebrew calendar is the first month of the ecclesiastical year and the seventh month (eighth, in leap year) of the civil year. The name of the month is of Assyrian-Babylonian origin; in the Torah it is called the month of the Aviv. Assyrians today refer to the month as the "month of happiness." It is a spring month of 30 days. (Nisan usually falls in March–April) on the Gregorian calendar. In the Book of Esther in the Tanakh it is referred to as Nisan. Karaite Jews interpret it as referring to the month in which barley was ripe.
Holidays and observances
- 1 Nisan – Kha b-Nisan – the first day of the Assyrian New Year
- 14 Nisan – Fast of the Firstborn – on 12 Nisan when the 14th falls on Sabbath
- 15–21 Nisan – Passover – also 22 Nisan outside of Israel
- 26 Nisan – traditional yahrzeit of Joshua[1]
- 27 Nisan – Yom HaShoah – on 26 Nisan or 28 Nisan when the 27th falls on Friday or Sunday respectively, interfering with Shabbat
In Jewish history and tradition
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- 1 Nisan (3761 BCE) – Creation of the Universe according to Rabbi Joshua's opinion in the Talmud (Rosh Hashanah 10b-11a)..
- 1 Nisan (c. 1638 BCE) – Death of Abraham according to the Talmud
- 1 Nisan (c. 1533 BCE) – Death of Isaac according to the Talmud
- 1 Nisan (c. 1506 BCE) – Death of Jacob according to the Talmud
- 1 Nisan (c. 1456 BCE) – First mitzvah is given to the Jewish people (Exodus 12:1–2)
- 1 Nisan (c. 1455 BCE) – Mishkan inaugurated; death of Nadav and Avihu
- 1 Nisan (1772 CE) – Birth of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov
- 1 Nisan (1892 CE) – Death of Rabbi Elimelech Szapira of Grodzhisk
- 2 Nisan (1920 CE) – Death of Rabbi Sholom DovBer Schneersohn ("Rashab"), the fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe. His last words are recorded as, "I'm going to heaven; I leave you the writings."
- 3 Nisan (1492 CE) – The Alhambra Decree orders the expulsion of Spanish Jews from Castile and Aragon (but not Navarre).
- 7 Nisan (c. 1416 BCE) – Joshua sends two spies to Jericho.
- 10 Nisan (c. 1417 BCE) – Death of Miriam, 39 years after the Exodus.
- 10 Nisan (c. 1416 BCE) – Israelites cross Jordan river into Canaan (Joshua 4)
- 11 Nisan (1270 CE) – Death of Nachmanides
- 11 Nisan Birth of 7th Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson
- 13 Nisan (474 BCE) – Haman's decree to annihilate the Jews is passed.
- 13 Nisan (1575 CE) – Death of Rabbi Joseph Caro, author of the Shulchan Aruch.
- 13 Nisan (1866 CE) – Death of Tzemach Tzedek, the third Rebbe of Chabad.
- 14 Nisan (1135 CE) – Birth of Maimonides
- 14 Nisan (1943 CE) – Warsaw Ghetto uprising begins. The uprising would last until Iyar 3, and is now commemorated in Israel on 27 Nisan.
- 15 Nisan (c. 1713 BCE) – Birth of Isaac
- 15 Nisan (c. 1456 BCE) – The Exodus from Egypt
- 16 Nisan (c. 1273 BCE) – The Children of Israel stop eating Manna, six days after entering the Holy Land.
- 16 Nisan (474 BCE) – Esther appears unsummoned before Achashverosh
- 17 Nisan (c. 24th century BCE) – Noah's Ark came to rest on mountains of Ararat[2]
- 17 Nisan (474 BCE) – Haman hanged after Queen Esther's second drinking party.
- 21 Nisan (c. 1456 BCE) – The sea splits, allowing Israel to escape the Egyptian army.
- 26 Nisan (c. 1386 BCE) – Death of Joshua
- 28 Nisan (c. 1415 BCE) – Conquest of Jericho by Joshua (Book of Joshua ch. 6).
- 29 Nisan (1620 CE) – Death of Rabbi Chaim Vital, a Kabbalist and a disciple of Rabbi Isaac Luria.
- 29 Nisan (1699 CE) – In Bamberg, Germany during a commercial crisis in 1699, the populace rose up against the Jews, and one Jew saved himself by throwing prunes from a gable-window down upon the mob. That event, the 29th of Nisan, called "Zwetschgen-Ta'anit" (Prune-Fast), was commemorated by a fast and a Purim festivity until the extermination of the Jewish community there.[3]
Other uses
- In the Akkadian of Akkad, Assyria and Babylonia nisānu, which derives from Sumerian nisag "First fruits".
- "Nisan" is also the name for the month of April in Arabic (Arabic: نيسان), a later Semitic language (see Arabic names of calendar months), in Kurdish and modern Turkish.
- In the story of Xenogears, "Nisan" is the name of a country, named after the Hebrew month.
See also
References
- ↑ http://www.ou.org/judaism-101/bh-yom-yom/nissan/
- ↑ (Nisan before Torah, Genesis 8:4, Exodus 12:1)
- ↑ "Bamberg". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
External links
- Resources on the Month of Nisan
- Jewish Encyclopedia: Nisan
- Strong's Concordance: Nisan
- This Month in Jewish History
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