OK. Which one of you is Jimmy Akin?
I know he is around here somewhere.
Here is a quick cut and past from one of his blog posts:
Kings don’t tend to come into office on New Year’s Day, and so they often serve a partial year before the next calendar year begins (regardless of which calendar is used). They also don’t die on the last day of the year, typically, so they also serve a partial year at the end of their reigns. This creates complications for historians, because ancient authors sometimes count these additional part-years (especially the one at the beginning of the reign) as a full year. Or they ignore the calendar year and treat the time that a king came into office as a kind of birthday and reckon his reign in years from that point.
*What scheme was Josephus using?
Advocates of the idea that Herod died in 4 B.C. argue that he was named king in 40 B.C. To square that with a 37-year reign ending in 4. B.C., they must count the part year at the beginning of his reign and the part year at the end of it as years. That’s the only way the math will work out.
The problem is that this is not how Josephus would have reckoned the years. Biblical chronology scholar Andrew E. Steinmann comments:*
Code:
"[T]here is no evidence for this [inclusive way of reckoning the partial years]--and every other reign in this period, including those of the Jewish high priests, are reckoned non-inclusively by Josephus." (From Abraham to Paul, 223)
In other words, Josephus does not count the partial first year when dating reigns in this period."
:loud buzzer:
That is completely wrong, Jimmy.
In Wars, Josephus clearly states the first year of Vespasian;s reign at A.D. 69- which began in December.
Then he goes on to talk about the second year of Vespasian’s reign when Titus finally conquered Jerusalem in A.D. 70.
Clearly, a single year could be referred to as the the last year of reign of one king, or the first year in the reign of another king.
That makes sense. If not, if the first full year of Vespasian’s reign was called the “first” year of his reign, then how to we refer to an event that took place December of A.D. 69? The last year of the reign of Vitellius except that he was dead for December?
If you guys are serious about chronology and events in those times, you don’t start with the New Testament. You start with knowing Roman and Jewish history cold, and then turn to the New Testament and see how things fit in.
Know the forest, and then examine the trees.