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Hanukkah, also known as the
Festival of Lights or Festival of
Dedication, is an eight day Jewish
holiday that starts on the 25th
day of Kislev, which generally is
in December, or sometimes, late
November. The festival is observed
in Jewish homes by the kindling of
lights on each of the festival's
eight nights, one on the first
night, two on the second night and
so on.
In Hebrew script, the word
Hanukkah is written חנכה . It is
most commonly transliterated to
English as Hanukkah or Chanukah.
Other variations are discussed
below.
Commemoration
The word Hanukkah means
"dedication." Spiritually,
Hanukkah commemorates the Miracle
of the Oil. At the re-dedication
of the Temple in Jerusalem
following the victory of the
Maccabees over the Seleucid
Empire, there was only enough
consecrated olive oil to fuel the
eternal flame in the Temple for
one day. Miraculously, the oil
burned for eight days - which was
the length of time it took to
press, prepare and consecrate new
oil.
Historically, Hanukkah
commemorates two events:
* The triumph of Judaism's
spiritual values as embodied in
its Torah (symbolized by the
Menorah, since the Torah is
compared to light) over
Hellenistic civilization
(considered darkness) which under
Antiochus IV, had attempted to
culturally assimilate the Jews
away from practicing Judaism's
commandments, by forcefully
installing Greek religious symbols
in the Second Temple.
* The victory of the Jews over the
armies of Antiochus IV. The
rebellion was begun by Mattathias
Maccabee and continued by Judah
Maccabee and his other sons. They
defeated overwhelming forces, and
re-dedicated the Second Temple.
The spiritual side of Judaism
shies away from commemorating
military victories, the Hasmoneans
later became corrupt, and civil
war between Jews is considered
deplorable, so Hanukkah does not
formally commemorate either of
these historical events. Instead,
the festival commemorates the
Miracle of the Oil and the
positive spiritual aspects about
the Temple's re-dedication. In
doing so, the oil becomes metaphor
for the miraculous survival of the
Jewish people through millennia of
trials and tribulations.
Historical sources
In the Talmud
The miracle of Hanukkah is
described in the Talmud. The
Gemara, in tractate Shabbat 21b
[1], says that after the occupiers
had been driven from the Temple,
the Maccabees discovered that
almost all of the ritual olive oil
had been profaned. They found only
a single container that was still
sealed by the High Priest, with
enough oil to keep the Menorah in
the Temple lit for a single day.
They used this, and miraculously,
that oil burned for eight days
(the time it took to have new oil
pressed and made ready).
The Talmud presents three
customs:
1. Lighting one light each night
per household,
2. One light each night for each
member of the household, or,
3. The most pious method, where
the number of candles changed each
night.
There was a dispute over how the
last option was to be performed:
either display eight lamps on the
first night of the festival, and
reduce the number on each
successive night; or begin with
one lamp the first night,
increasing the number till the
eighth night. The followers of
Shammai favored the former custom;
the followers of Hillel advocated
the latter. As is the case in most
such disputes, Jews today follow
Hillel. Except in times of danger,
the lights were to be placed
outside one's door or in the
window closest to the street.
Josephus believed that the lights
were symbolic of the liberty
obtained by the Jews on the day
that Hanukkah commemorates. Rashi,
in a note to Shabbat 21b, says
their purpose is to publicize the
miracle. Hanukkah is also
mentioned in the (older) Mishnah
(TB Megillah 30b).
In the Septuagint
The story of Hanukkah is preserved
in the books of 1 Maccabees and 2
Maccabees. A story similar in
character, and obviously older in
date, is the one alluded to in 2
Maccabees 1:18 et seq., according
to which the relighting of the
altar-fire by Nehemiah was due to
a miracle which occurred on the
twenty-fifth of Kislev, and which
appears to be given as the reason
for the selection of the same date
for the rededication of the altar
by Judah Maccabeus.
The Books of Maccabbes (Sifrei
HaMakaviyim) are not part of the
Tanakh (Hebrew Bible), but are
part of deuterocanonical
historical and religious material
preserved in the Septuagint. The
Tanakh ends with the consequences
following the events of Purim, and
had already been codified many
centuries earlier by the Men of
the Great Assembly (Anshei Knesset
HaGedolah).
Another source is the Megillat
Antiokhos — a text ascribed to the
Maccabees themselves by Saadia
Gaon, but according to some
scholars, perhaps written around
the first or second century CE.
Indeed, Saadia Gaon's theory is
highly unlikely, as Megillat
Antiokhos gives the timeframe for
the story in relation to the
destruction of the second Temple,
which occurred over 200 years
later, and could not possibly have
been known to the Maccabees.
The story
Main article: Hasmonean
Around 200 BCE Jews lived as an
autonomous people in the land of
Israel, also referred to as Judea,
which at that time was controlled
by the Seleucid king of Syria. The
Jewish people paid taxes to Syria
and accepted its legal authority,
and by and large were free to
follow their own faith, maintain
their own jobs, and engage in
trade.
By 175 BCE Antiochus IV Epiphanes
ascended to the Seleucid throne.
At first little changed, but under
his reign Jews were gradually
forced to violate the precepts of
their faith. Jews rebelled at
having to do this. Under the reign
of Antiochus IV, the Temple in
Jerusalem was looted, Jews were
massacred, and Judaism was
effectively outlawed.
In 167 BCE Antiochus ordered an
altar to Zeus erected in the
Temple. Mattathias, a Jewish
priest, and his five sons John,
Simon, Eleazar, Jonathan, and
Judah led a rebellion against
Antiochus. Judah became known as
Judah Maccabee ("Judah the
Hammer"). By 166 BCE Mattathias
had died, and Judah took his place
as leader. By 165 BCE the Jewish
revolt against the Seleucid
monarchy was successful. The
Temple was liberated and
rededicated.
The festival of Hanukkah was
instituted by Judah Maccabee and
his brothers to celebrate this
event. (1 Macc. iv. 59). After
having recovered Jerusalem and the
Temple, Judah ordered the Temple
to be cleansed, a new altar to be
built in place of the polluted one
and new holy vessels to be made.
According to the Talmud, oil was
needed for the menorah in the
Temple, which was supposed to burn
throughout the night every night.
But there was only enough oil to
burn for one day, yet
miraculously, it burned for eight
days, the time needed to prepare a
fresh supply of oil for the
menorah. An eight day festival was
declared to commemorate this
miracle.
Other versions of the story state
that an eight day celebration of
songs and sacrifices was
proclaimed upon rededication of
the altar, but do not mention the
miracle of the oil. (1 Macc. iv.
36). A number of historians
believe that the reason for the
eight day celebration was that the
first Hanukkah was in effect a
belated celebration of the
festival of Sukkot, the Feast of
Tabernacles (Macc. x. 6 and i. 9).
During the war the Jews were not
able to celebrate Sukkot properly.
The theory is based on the belief
that Sukkot also lasts for eight
days, and was a holiday in which
the lighting of lamps played a
prominent part during the Second
Temple period (Suk.v. 2-4).
However, Sukkot is in fact a
seven-day holiday, the eighth day
being a separate festival known as
Shemini Atzeret ("the Eighth Day
of the Assembly"); see Lev.
23:33-36, Num. 29:12; Deut.
16:13-15). The historian Josephus
([2] Jewish Antiquities xii. 7, §
7, #323) mentions the eight-day
festival and its customs, but does
not tell us the origin of the
eight day lighting custom. Given
that his audience was Hellenized
Romans, his silence on the origin
of the eight-day custom is more
likely due to its miraculous
nature than to it being inspired
by Sukkot. In any event, he does
report that lights were kindled in
the household and the popular name
of the festival was, therefore the
"Festival of Lights" ("And from
that time to this we celebrate
this festival, and call it
Lights").
It has been noted that Jewish
festivals are connected to the
harvesting of the Biblical seven
fruits which Israel was famed for.
Pesach is a celebration of the
barley harvest, Shavuot of the
wheat, Sukkot of the figs, dates,
pomegranates and grapes, and
Hanukkah of the olives. The olive
harvest is in November and olive
oil would be ready in time for
Hanukkah in December.
It has also been noted that the
number eight has special
significance in Jewish theology,
as representing transcendence and
the Jewish People's special role
in human history. Seven is the
number of days of creation, that
is, of completion of the material
cosmos. Eight, being one step
beyond seven, represents the
Infinite (as an eight turned on
its side). Hence, the Eighth Day
of the Assembly festival,
mentioned above, is according to
Jewish Law a festival for Jews
only (unlike Sukkoth, when all
peoples were welcome in
Jerusalem). Similarly, the rite of
circumcision, which brings a
Jewish male into God's Covenant,
is performed on the eighth day.
Hence, Hanukkah's eight days (in
celebration of monotheistic
morality's victory over
Hellenistic humanism) have great
symbolic importance for practicing
Jews.
Hanukkah rituals
(see
also Chanukiyah)
Hanukkah has relatively simple
religious rituals that are
performed during the eight nights
and days of the holiday. Some
aspects are practiced at home by
the family, other aspects are
communal. There are additions to
the regular daily prayer services
in the Siddur, the Jewish prayer
book. Jewish law does not require
one to refrain from activities on
Hanukkah that would fit the Jewish
definition of "work." So, children
do not get out of going to school
to celebrate the holiday, and
parents do not get a week's
vacation from employment, either.
Kindling the Hanukkah Lights
The primary ritual, according to
Jewish law and custom, is to light
a single light each night for
eight nights. As a
universally-practiced
"beautification" of the mitzvah,
an additional candle is added each
night, for a total of thirty-six
over the course of eight nights.
The lights can be candles or oil
lamps. Electric lights are
sometimes used and are acceptable
in places where open flame is not
permitted, such as a hospital
room. When a formal candelabra or
menorah is used, it is the special
secular menorah used for Hanukkah
- which holds eight candles, plus
the servant candle. (A religious
menorah holds only seven candles,
plus the servant candle).
Ashenazic Jews (central and east
European Jews) usually call the
eight-candled version a "Hanukkah
menorah." Some Sephardic Jews
(west European, Mediterranean and
Latin American Jews) just call it
"a hanukkah". In the State of
Israel, the secular menorah used
for Hanukkah is usually called a "hanukiah".
An
extra light is lit each night and
placed near the Hanukah lights.
The purpose of this is to adhere
to the prohibition of using the
Hanukkah lights for anything other
than publicizing - and meditating
on - the Hanukkah story (in
contrast to Sabbath candles which
are meant to be used for
illumination). Hence, if one were
to need extra illumination, the
extra "servant" candle would be
available and one would avoid
using the prohibited lights, as
derived from the Talmud (Tracate
Shabbat 21b-23a). Some use the
"guard" candle to light the
others.
The reason for the lights is not
for the "lighting of the house
within", but rather for the
"illumination of the house
without", so that passers-by
should see it and be reminded of
the holiday's miracle. Accordingly
lamps are set up at a prominent
window or near the door leading to
the street. It is customary
amongst some Ashkenazim to have a
separate menorah for each family
member (customs vary), whereas
most Sephardim light one hanukkah
for the whole household. Only when
there was danger of anti-semitic
persecution were lamps supposed to
be hidden from public view, as was
the case in Persia under the rule
of the fire-worshipers, or in
parts of Europe before and during
World War II. However, some
groups, e.g. Chabad-Lubavitch,
light lamps near an inside
doorway, not in public view.
When to light the lights
Hanukkah lights should burn for at
least one half hour after it gets
dark. The standard candles sold
for Hanukkah burn for half an
hour, so on most days this
requirement can be met by lighting
the candles when it is dark out.
Friday night presents a problem,
however. Candles must be lit
before the start of Shabbat and
inexpensive Hanukkah candles do
not burn long enough to meet the
requirement. A simple solution is
to use "tea lights" or Shabbat
candles, arranging them in a
straight line and setting the
shammus candle apart and above the
rest.
Blessings over the candles
Typically three blessings (Berakhot
singular Berakhah) are recited
during this eight-day festival. On
the first night of Hanukkah, Jews
recite all three blessings, on all
subsequent nights, they recite
only the first two. The blessings
are said before or after the
candles are lit depending on
tradition. On the first night of
Hanukkah one light (candle, lamp,
or electric) is lit on the right
side of the Menorah, on the
following night a second light is
placed to the left of the first
and is lit first proceeding from
left to right, and so on each
night.
The first blessing
Recited all eight nights just
prior to lighting the candles:
Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu
melech ha-olam, asher kid'shanu
b'mitzvotav v'tzivanu l'hadlik
neir (shel) chanukah.
Translation: "Praised are You,
Lord our God, King of the
Universe, Who sanctified us with
His commandments and commanded us
to kindle the Hanukkah lights."
The second blessing
Recited all eight nights just
prior to lighting the candles:
Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu
melech ha-olam, she-asah nisim la-avoteinu,
bayamim haheim, (u)baz'man hazeh.
Translation: "Praised are You,
Lord our God, King of the
universe, Who performed wondrous
deeds for our ancestors, in those
days, at this season."
The third blessing
Recited only on the first night
just prior to lighting the
candles:
Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu
melech ha-olam, shehecheyanu,
v'kiyemanu, vehigi-anu laz'man
hazeh.
Translation: "Praised are You,
Lord our God, King of the
universe, Who has kept us in life,
sustained us, and enabled us to
reach this season."
After kindling the lights
When the lights are kindled the
Hanerot Halalu prayer is
subsequently recited:
(Ashkenazic version):
Hanneirot hallalu anachnu madlikin
'al hannissim ve'al hanniflaot 'al
hatteshu'ot ve'al hammilchamot
she'asita laavoteinu bayyamim
haheim, (u)bazzeman hazeh 'al
yedei kohanekha hakkedoshim.
Vekhol-shemonat yemei Hanukkah
hanneirot hallalu kodesh heim,
ve-ein lanu reshut lehishtammesh
baheim ella lir'otam bilvad kedei
lehodot ul'halleil leshimcha
haggadol 'al nissekha ve'al
nifleotekha ve'al yeshu'otekha.
Translation: "We light these
lights For the miracles and the
wonders, for the redemption and
the battles that you made for our
forefathers, in those days at this
season, through your holy priests.
During all eight days of Hanukkah
these lights are sacred, and we
are not permitted to make them
serve except for to look at them
in order to express thanks and
praise to Your great Name for your
miracles, Your wonders and Your
salvations."
Singing of Maoz Tzur after
lighting
Each night immediately after the
lighting of the candles, while
remaining within eyeshot of the
candles, Ashkenazim (and, in
recent decades, some Sephardim and
Mizrahim in Western countries,
then usually sing the following
hymn written in Medieval Ashkenaz
(Germany). It lists a number of
events of persecution in Jewish
history, and praises God for
survival despite these tragedies.
Ma-oz Tzur Yeshu-ati, lecha na-eh
leshabei-ah. Tikon beit tefilati
vesham todah nezabei-ah. Le-et
tachin matbe-ach mitzar hamnabei-ah.
Az egmor beshir mizmor chanukat
hamizbei-ah.
Ra-ot sav'ah nafshi, b'yagon kochi
kilah. Chayai meir'ru b'koshi,
b'shibe-ud malchut eglah. Uv'yado
hag'dolah hotzi et has'gulah.
Cheil Par'oh vechol zaroh yardu ke-even
bim'tzulah.
D'vir kodsho hevi-ani vegam sham
lo shakateti. Uva noges v'higlani
ki zarim avad'ti. V'yein ra-al
masachti kimat she-avarti. Keitz
Bavel Zerubavel l'keitz shivim
noshati.
Kerot komat b'rosh bikesh Agagi
ben Hamdatah. V'nih'yata lo lefach
ul'mokesh vegavato nishbata. Rosh
y'mini niseita ve-oyev shemo
machita. Rov banav v'kinyanav al
ha-etz talita.
Y'vanim nikbetzu alai azai bimei
Chashmanim. Ufartzu chomot
migdalai vetimu kol hashmanim.
Uminotar kankanim na-aseh nes
lashoshanim. B'nei vinah yemei
sh'monah kavu shir urna-anim.
Chasof z'roa kodshecha v'karev
keitz hayeshu-a. Nekom nikmat dam
avadecha me-uma haresha-a. Ki
archa lanu hasha-a ve-ein keitz
limei hara-ah. Dechei admon
b'tzeil tzalmon hakeim lanu ro'im
shiv'ah.
Many Jews sing only the first
verse, repeating the lines to form
the Hanukkah melody. It is also
common to sing just the first and
fifth verses, the fifth dealing
specifically with Hanukkah.
Additions to the daily prayers
An addition is made to the "hoda'ah"
(thanksgiving) benediction in the
Amidah, called Al ha-Nissim
("On/about the Miracles"). This
addition refers to the victory
achieved over the Syrians by the
Hasmonean Mattathias and his sons.
(The erroneous designation of
Mattathias as son of Johanan the
high priest seems to rest upon the
late Hebrew apocryphal "Megillat
Antiokhos" or "Megillat Hanukkah,"
which has other names and dates
strangely mixed.) The liturgical
part inserted reads as follows:
Transliteration:
Al hanisim v'al hapurkan v'al
hag'vurot v'al hat'shuot, v'al
hamilchamot she-asita la-avoteinu
bayamim haheim bazman hazeh. Bimei
Matityahu ben Yochanan kohein
gadol chashmonai u-vanav,
k'she-amda malchut yavan har'sha-a
al amcha Yisrael l'hashkicham
toratecha ul'ha-aviram meichukei
r'tzonecha. V'ata b'rachamecha
harabim amadta lahem b'eit
tzaratam, ravta et rivam, danta et
dinam, nakamta et nikmatam,
masarta giborim b'yad chalashim
v'rabim b'yad chalashim v'rabim
b'yad m'atim, ut'mei-im b'yad
t'horim, ursha-im b'yad tzadikim
v'zeidim b'yad os'kei toratecha.
Ul-cha asita t'shu-a g'dola
ufurkan k'hayom hazeh. V'achar
kein ba-u vanecha lidvir beitecha
ufinu et heichalecha v'tiharu et
mikdsashecha v'hidliku neirot
b'chatzrot kodsecha v'kav'u
sh'monat y'mei Chanuka eilu
l'hodot ul'haleil l'shimcha
hagadol.
Translation:
We thank You also for the
miraculous deeds and for the
redemption and for the mighty
deeds and the saving acts wrought
by You, as well as for the wars
which You waged for our ancestors
in ancient days at this season. In
the days of the Hasmonean
Mattathias, son of Johanan the
high priest, and his sons, when
the iniquitous Greco-Syrian
kingdom rose up against Your
people Israel, to make them forget
Your Torah and to turn them away
from the ordinances of Your will,
then You in your abundant mercy
rose up for them in the time of
their trouble, pled their cause,
executed judgment, avenged their
wrong, and delivered the strong
into the hands of the weak, the
many into the hands of few, the
impure into the hands of the pure,
the wicked into the hands of the
righteous, and insolent ones into
the hands of those occupied with
Your Torah. Both unto Yourself did
you make a great and holy name in
Thy world, and unto Your people
did You achieve a great
deliverance and redemption.
Whereupon your children entered
the sanctuary of Your house,
cleansed Your temple, purified
Your sanctuary, kindled lights in
Your holy courts, and appointed
these eight days of Hanukkah in
order to give thanks and praises
unto Your holy name.
The same prayer is added to the
grace after meals. In addition,
the Hallel Psalms are sung during
each morning service and the
Tachanun penitential prayers are
omitted. Since Hanukkah lasts
eight days it includes at least
one, and sometimes two, Sabbaths.
The weekly Torah portion for the
first Sabbath is almost always
Miketz, telling of Joseph's dream
and his enslavement in Egypt.
Traditional Hanukkah foods
There is a custom to have Hanukkah
parties and to eat foods fried or
baked in oil, preferably olive
oil, as the original miracle of
the Hanukkah menorah involved the
discovery of the small flask of
oil used by the Jewish High Priest
(the Kohen Gadol). Many Ashkenazi
families make potato pancakes,
known as latkes in Yiddish. Many
Sephardim as well as Polish
Ashkenazim and Israelis have the
custom to eat all kinds of
doughnuts (bimuelos or sufganiyot)
which are deep-fried in kosher
(mainly non animal-fat) oils.
Hanukkah games: Dreidel and
Gelt
Dreidel
The dreidel (a four-sided
"top") is associated with
Hanukkah. It has four sides:
1. נ (Nun),
2. ג (Gimel),
3. ה (Hey),
4. ש (Shin) - In Israel פ (Pe)
These letters also stand for the
words Nes Gadol Haya Sham meaning
"a great miracle happened there,"
or, without the nikkud (vowel
marks), נס גדול היה שם. In Israel,
the fourth letter is פ-Pe instead
of shin, stading for "Po", meaning
"here", and the entire phrase is
therefore "A great miracle
happened here." This is done in
recognition that the miracle of
Hannukah occurred in the land of
Israel.
Before beginning, each player
starts with 10 or 15 coins (gelt),
and then each player puts one in
the pot. The dreidel stops and
lands with one of the symbols
facing up and the appropriate
action is taken, corresponding to
one of the following Yiddish
words:
-
Nun - nisht - "not" - the next
player spins
-
Gimel - gants - "all" - the
player takes the entire pot
-
Hey - halb - "half" - the player
takes half of the pot, rounding
up if there is an odd number
-
Shin - shtel ayn - "put in" -
the player puts one or two in
the pot
Another version differs in that
nun is "nem" - "take", while gimel
is "gib" - "give." The game may
last until one person has won
everything.
The game is played in part to
commemorate the jewish children of
that time. The Greeks had made a
law that the learning of Torah be
forbidden. The jewish children
would hide in caves, and leave a
lookout for Greek soldiers. When a
lookout gave a signal, the
children would put away the
scrolls they were learning from,
and take out top's (Dreidel's) and
spin them, as if they had been
playing a game.
Chanukkah Gelt
Chanukkah gelt ("Hanukkah money")
is used as part of a game on the
festival of Hanukkah. It is a term
used for the money used in playing
the game of dreidel.
Traditionally, gelt came in the
form of genuine coins, but most
modern games are played using
coins made of solid chocolate
wrapped in gold-colored foil.
Alternative spellings based on
transliterating Hebrew letters
As mentioned above, there is a
frequent confusion over the many
alternative spellings of Hanukkah
in the English language. The only
standard spelling of Hanukkah is
the hebrew five letters -
Chet(Ch,H,K) Nun Vav Kaf Hey -
plus the vowels, which are not
written in advanced Hebrew. Thus,
the most accurate transliteration
to English is 'Ch(a)n(u)k(a)h'.
But as 'ch' is pronounced
differently in English than it is
in the traditional Romanisation of
Hebrew (which was based upon
analogies to German and Latin
spelling), and the 'kaf' consonant
is part of a long syllable instead
of a short one, "Hanukkah"
(technically with a small dot
under the first 'H,' to show it is
pronounced like broad Latin and
German 'ch') emerged as an
alternative that is more
pronounceable to the Anglophone
eye.
spelling variations are due to
transliteration of Hebrew Chet Nun
Vav Kaf Hey
Enlarge
spelling variations are due to
transliteration of Hebrew Chet Nun
Vav Kaf Hey
-
Hanukkah (most common in the
United States)
-
Chanukah (common alternative in
the United States)
-
Hanukah (less common alternative
in the United States)
-
Chanuka (rare spelling; in
Hebrew, dropping the final 'h'
would change the gender of the
word)
-
Chanukkah
-
Hanuka (rare spelling; again,
the gender would be masculine
instead of feminine, in Hebrew)
-
Channukah
-
Hanukka (rare spelling)
-
Khanike (YIVO standard
transliteration from the Yiddish
and/or Ashkenazic pronunciation
of the Hebrew)
-
Jenok (rare)
Chronology
* 198 BCE: Armies of the Seleucid
King Antiochus III (Antiochus the
Great) oust Ptolemy V from Judea
and Samaria.
* 175 BCE: Antiochus IV
(Epiphanes) ascends the Seleucid
throne.
* 168 BCE: Under the reign of
Antiochus IV, the Temple is
looted, Jews are massacred, and
Judaism is outlawed.
* 167 BCE: Antiochus orders an
altar to Zeus erected in the
Temple. Mattathias, and his five
sons John, Simon, Eleazar,
Jonathan, and Judah lead a
rebellion against Antiochus. Judah
becomes known as Judah Maccabe
(Judah The Hammer).
* 166 BCE: Mattathias dies, and
Judah takes his place as leader.
The Hasmonean Jewish Kingdom
begins; It lasts until 63 BCE
* 165 BCE: The Jewish revolt
against the Seleucid monarchy is
successful. The Temple is
liberated and rededicated
(Hanukkah).
* 142 BCE: Establishment of the
Second Jewish Commonwealth. The
Seleucids recognize Jewish
autonomy. The Seleucid kings have
a formal overlordship, which the
Hasmoneans acknowledged. This
inaugurates a period of great
geographical expansion, population
growth, and religious, cultural
and social development.
* 139 BCE: The Roman Senate
recognizes Jewish autonomy.
* 130 BCE: Antiochus VII besieges
Jerusalem, but withdraws.
* 131 BCE: Antiochus VII dies.
Israel throws off Syrian rule
completely
* 96 BCE: An eight year civil war
begins.
* 83 BCE: Consolidation of the
Kingdom in territory east of the
Jordan River.
* 63 BCE: The Hasmonean Jewish
Kingdom comes to an end due to
rivalry between the brothers
Aristobulus II and Hyrcanus II,
both of whom appeal to the Roman
Republic to intervene and settle
the power struggle on their
behalf. The Roman general Gnaeus
Pompeius Magnus (Pompey the Great)
is dispatched to the area. Twelve
thousand Jews are massacred as
Romans enter Jerusalem. The
Priests of the Temple are struck
down at the Altar. Rome annexes
Judea.
Battles of the Maccabean revolt
Main article: Maccabees
There were a number of key battles
between the Maccabees and the
Seleucid Syrian-Greeks:
* Battle of Adasa (Judas Maccabeus
leads the Jews to victory against
the forces of Nicanor.)
* Battle of Beth Horon (Judas
Maccabeus defeats the forces of
Seron.)
* Battle of Beth Zur (Judas
Maccabeus defeats the army of
Lysias, recapturing Jerusalem.)
* Battle of Beth-zechariah (Elazar
the Maccabee is killed in battle.
Lysias has success in battle
against the Maccabess, but allows
them temporary freedom of
worship.)
* Battle of Emmaus (Judas
Maccabeus fights the forces of
Lysias and Georgias).
* Dathema (A Jewish fortress saved
by Judas Maccabeus.)
* Battle of Elasa (Judas Maccabeus
dies in battle against the army of
King Demetrius and Bacchides. He
is succeeded by Jonathan
Maccabaeus and Simon Maccabaeus
who continue to lead the Jews in
battle.)
When Hanukkah occurs
Further information: Jewish
holidays 2000-2050
The dates of Hanukkah are
determined by the Hebrew Calendar.
Hanukkah begins at the 25th day of
Kislev and concluding on the 2nd
or 3rd day of Tevet (Kislev can
have 29 or 30 days). The Jewish
day begins at sunset, whereas the
Gregorian Calendar begins the day
at midnight. So, the first day of
Hanukkah actually begins at sunset
of the day immediately before the
date noted on Gregorian calendars.
For example, in 2006 Gregorian
calendars will likely list
Hanukkah on Saturday, December 16,
but 25 Kislev actually begins at
sunset on December 15 and so the
first candle will be lit on that
Friday evening, shortly before
sunset since it is also the start
of Shabbat. Two candles will be
lit on Saturday night after dark
and the end of Shabbat. Three
candles will be lit after dark on
Sunday, and so on for the rest of
the week, except for the following
Friday, December 22, when the last
8 candles are lit, again shortly
before sunset. The holiday will
end after sundown on December 23.
Hanukkah's dates in the Gregorian
calendar
Hanukkah begins at sundown on the
evening before the date shown.
|
* Dec 3, 1980 |
* Dec 12, 1990 |
* Dec 22, 2000 |
* Dec 2, 2010 |
|
* Dec 21, 1981 |
* Dec 2, 1991 |
* Dec 10, 2001 |
* Dec 21, 2011 |
|
* Dec 11, 1982 |
* Dec 20, 1992 |
* Nov 30, 2002 |
* Dec 9, 2012 |
|
* Dec 1, 1983 |
* Dec 9, 1993 |
* Dec 20, 2003 |
* Nov 28, 2013 |
|
* Dec 19, 1984 |
* Nov 28, 1994 |
* Dec 8, 2004 |
* Dec 17, 2014 |
|
* Dec 8, 1985 |
* Dec 18, 1995 |
* Dec 26, 2005 |
* Dec 7, 2015 |
|
* Dec 27, 1986 |
* Dec 6, 1996 |
* Dec 16, 2006 |
* Dec 25, 2016 |
|
* Dec 16, 1987 |
* Dec 24, 1997 |
* Dec 5, 2007 |
* Dec 13, 2017 |
|
* Dec 4, 1988 |
* Dec 14, 1998 |
* Dec 22, 2008 |
* Dec 3, 2018 |
|
* Dec 23, 1989 |
* Dec 4, 1999 |
* Dec 12, 2009 |
* Dec 23, 2019 |
|