orlando123
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OK, thanks. Interesting theory, and in any case, as I say - the maths seem to work. However I have read that the idea of a kind of prehistoric matriarchal age when we all worshipped a great Earth goddess and we venerated women and their ability to give birth and so forth and that this was replaced by worship of male sky gods, became popular in Victorian times, but is doubted by most historians these days. I understand there's not much evidence for widespread matriarchy or veneration of the feminine, and most prehistoric tribes were probably polytheistic, with various gods and goddesses and varying customs and were often fairly male dominated as in more recent times (which I think is partly explained by biological factors like women spending a lot of time pregnant, giving birth, caring for young children, and having the problem of monthly periods etc; and being physically less strong in an age when jobs outside the home often required this -- rather than a simplistic idea of evil patriarchyyou often hear about). Theories like a great matriarchal age moving into a patriarchal one sound nice, and are especially beloved of certain feminists/neo-Wiccans etc, but IMO real history is often less clear-cut. The Wikipedia article on Matriarchy discusses this (not that I just took my opinion from there). On a tangent, such people as I just referred to also like to wildy talk about "the burning times" as a period when 8 million women were burned for being independent-minded proto-feminists; when in fact most witches were hanged, and in Europe, Prof Ronald Hutton (probably the expert on the history of witchcraft) says it was more like 40,000 in total; also he says they were mainly unpopular women who their neighbours denounced and who they often genuinely thought were casting spells on them, in a superstitious age (and there were quite a lot of men killed as well).
PS I'm not saying any of the above necessarily means your interesting explanation of the way the ancient Hebrews came by their huge ages for their legendary founders is wrong (or that the choice of stating ages by months wasn't due to the month being an important time scale at that time - after all it must be convenient, especially if you had no writing etc - you just look up and see what the moon looks like to see how far you are through the month) although I am not so sure about the matriarchy aspect. Also (if the matriarchy thing was correct in this particular context) the OT was not written in anything like the kind of periods you are talking about and I find it surprising if the writers had inherited legends, with precise ages attached, dating back another 8,000 years or so!
Come to think of it though, isn't it also a bit odd that prehistoric people might add up all the months in their lives to arrive at huge age figures? Why would they bother? And would they even have the maths?
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