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HANUKKAH , a Jewish festival, the " Feast of Dedication " (cf .See also: John x
.
22) or the " Feast of the
See also: Maccabees," beginning on the 25th See also: day of the ninth 'See also: month Kislev (See also: December), of the See also: Hebrew ecclesiastical See also: year, and lasting eight days
.
It was instituted in 165 B.c. in See also: commemoration of, and thanksgiving for, the See also: purification of the See also: temple at Jerusalem on this day by Judas Maccabaeus after its pollution by See also: Antiochus Epiphanes, See also: king of
See also: Syria, who in 168 B.C. set up a See also: pagan altar to See also: Zeus Olympius
.
The Talmudic See also: sources say that when the perpetual lamp of the temple was to be relighted only one See also: flask of See also: holy oil sufficient for the day remained, but this miraculously lasted for the eight days (cf. the See also: legend in 2 Macc. i
.
18)
.
In memory of this the Jews See also: burn both in synagogues and in houses on the first See also: night of the festival one See also: light, on the second two, and so on to the end (so the Hillelites), or See also: vice versa eight See also: lights on the first, and one less on each succeeding night (so the Shammaites)
.
From the prominence of the lights the festival is also known as the " Festival of Lights " or " See also: Illumination " (See also: Talmud)
.
It is said that the day chosen by Judas for the setting up of the new altar was the anniversary of that on which Antiochus had set up the pagan altar; hence it' is suggested (e.g. by See also: Wellhausen) that the 25th of Kislev was an old pagan festival, perhaps the day of the winter solstice
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For further details and illustrations of Hanukkah lamps see Jewish Encyc., s.v
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