Date Query -- by Day Number

Query individual days when you already know the day's number.

Background

Three forms are provided on this page for day-by-number queries. Notes on each are at the bottom of the page.

Days by AA Number
AA Day Number:
Total answers:
Days between answers:

Days by Julian Day Number
Julian Day Number:
Total answers:
Days between answers:

Days by End Times Day Number
End Times Day Number:
Total answers:
Days between answers:

Notes

The first is for looking up dates by "AA Number." These are used throughout this site for audit purposes and show on nearly every date report. AA Numbers start with 1 assigned at the 1st day of the 1st month of the 1st year of Adam, so are called "After Adam Numbers." This theoretical epoch allows all dates since Adam to have a positive AA Number.

The second form is used for query of days by Julian Day Number. This is an open standard for identification of days by number. This is less handy for audit purposes since it is not positive across all dates of interest here. Julian day numbers are the preferred day numbering scheme if you are working with sources of dates beyond this website.

The third form allows query by ET Number. These are "End Times Numbers" and are formed by taking a biblical year since Adam, and running that through the standard Day-for-a-year math to derive a modern date.

In all cases negative numbers can be used to indicate days before the natural epoch of the scale. All scales have a day zero. All of the forms here are set to default to the current day as known on our servers.

In general, these different day numbering systems have different definitions of day-start. Julian days begin at noon using the GMT clock, while AAN days begin at sunset in Jerusalem. No attempt is made at this level to correct for these differences in day-start times.

These forms allow for a series of day separated by a regular amount to be displayed along with the first day. To use this feature enter the day number of interest, then the total number of answer and then the number of days between answers.

Use negative intervals for looking up dates earlier than the starting date.

Normal use of this form is to find the AA Number of a date in question using the other forms in this section of the site. The AA Number is given on the output forms. Next, that AA Number is entered here. This is usually followed by a number of entries and a difference between days.

Example

January 18, 1974 was the "seal date" for the tribe of Benjamin. On this date a "Disengagement of forces agreement" was signed at Kilometer post 101 outside Cairo ending the war between Israel and Egypt.

Seal dates are 12,000 days apart, and this date is 144,000 days from the starting epoch for the Seal Dates. To find the other Seal Dates, the AA Number for January 18, 1974 needs to be entered into the top form, with 13 total dates, -12,000 days apart.

The AA number for January 18, 1974 can be discovered using the Gregorian calendar tool page, link on the left.

You can try it for yourself. You should find that number is 4729223.

Enter it in the form above, with 13 total dates and -12,000 days between.

The result will turn out like this. Each of the other Seal dates, in order with their various calendar dates listed back to an epoch 12,000 days ahead of the first Seal. This Epoch is Dan's Seal date, but full discussion is beyond our scope here.

The Book of Psalms interweaves the same dates, but there are not 13 dates at 12,000 days, but 150 dates 1000 days apart.

So, you can take the AA Number of the Seal Date Epoch, which is also the date for the prophetic application of Psalm 1. Using the output of the Seal dates you can discover that the AA Number for Psalm 1 is 4585223. Enter this in the AA Number query form above, and ask for 150 dates, 1000 days appart. That list is a list of the prophetic fulfillment dates for each of the Psalms.

Using Wikipedia it is possible to find the related headlines that pattern after each date. In this case each Psalm describes a headline.