For earlier dates, see A Jewish Calendar for Fifty Years by Jacques J. Lyons
nd Abraham de Sola (Montreal, 1854) which provides detailed correspondence
tables from 1853/54-1903/04.

Cheryl

-----Original Message-----
From: Roger Kohn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 2004 5:54 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: To Heb-Naco re: Index vol. of EJ (was: Parashah as
chronological designation?)


*-

If you book/serial was published between 1920 and 2020, the index volume of
Encyclopaedia Judaica gives the correspondence between parashiyot, gregorian
and Jewish calendar...

All the best,

- r.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
Roger Kohn
Cataloger, Hebraica Team
Library of Congress
LS/CAT/RCCD/HB (4384) 
LM 537
Washington, D.C. 20540-4384
(202) 707-3997

"Opinions expressed are those of the author, and are not official statements
by the Library of Congress."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 3/24/2004 4:36:08 PM >>>
If your book is old enough, than "Nieto's Jewish almanac and one hundred
years
from new year 5663/1902 to 5763/2002" will do: is has parashiyot as well as
Jewish and Gregorian years. That's the one by my desk-- it's likely that
there
are similar ones.

Rachel

Yossi Galron wrote:

> I had the problem a short time ago and was looking for a Hebrew calendar
> that would translate the Parashat ha-shavua to a Gregorian date.
>
> I had a book in which the Haskamah was dated by the name of the Parashah
> and year and I needed it to determine the Gregorian year of publication.
> I could not find any calendar in which you can input the Parashah and year
> and get a Gregorian date.
>
> Does any one about such a program? If not, maybe we can ask our Gurus at
> Yale to write such a program? :-)
>
> Yossi
>
> At 04:18 PM 3/24/2004, you wrote:
> Heb-NACOers,
>
> For those of you who catalog serials, would the parashat ha-shavua
indicate
> a chronological designation?  We have a weekly numbered publication that
> has the title of the weekly parashah on each issue.  In a way it seems to
> act like a chronological designation since the parashah comes at a
specific
> week in the Hebrew calendar.  Any thoughts on this?
>
> Thanks for your help.
>
> Caroline
>
> Caroline R. Miller
> Head, Monographic Cataloging and Authority Sections
> UCLA Library Cataloging Center
> Young Research Library
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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