Timeline Reboot?

So I'm currently procrastinating, and after tomorrow, I'll have three weeks with nothing much to do, and I thought I'd gauge interest in a reboot of a timeline I did a bit of work on a couple of years back. It's a based on Alexander the Great surviving a little longer, but it's not a wank of any specific state, but more of a Hellenic and Carthaginian cultural wank. I don't have any particular ideas how it's going to go, and will probably follow the general outline of my old timeline up to the point where I abandoned it.

Here's the old timeline if anyone's interested:

So what's the general opinion?
 
While reading over the timeline, I remembered having issues with dates, specifically converting between BC/AD and the calendar used in the timeline.

So I took the liberty of drawing up a potential calendar for use in the reboot. Does this look plausible?

A note on the calendar used by the Hellenic World: Alexander's ascension to the throne is defined as occuring in the Year 1, so to convert from AD, subtract 336.
Also, the Hellenistic Calendar, used in Y2000 (1764AD), is as follows:


There are 12 standard months of 29 days
4 weeks of 7 days
One holiday at the beginning of the month (referred to as the νέο φεγγάρι, or 'new moon', even though it no longer falls on the first day of the lunar month)
Names (and equivalent dates):

Δίος/Dios October 4th-November 1st
Ἀπελλαῖος/Apellaios November 2nd-November 30th
Αὐδυναῖος/Audunaios December 1st-December 29th
Περίτιος/Peritios December 30th-January 27th
Δύστρος/Dystros January 28th-February 25th
Ξανδικός/Xandikos February 26th-March 25th
Ἀρτεμιος/Artemios April 12th-May 10th
Δαίσιος/Daisios May 11th-June 8th
Πάνημος/Panēmos June 9th-July 7th
Λώιος/Lōios July 8th-August 5th
Γορπιαῖος/Gorpiaios August 6th-September 4th
Ὑπερβερετίος/Hyperberetios September 5th-October 3rd


There is also one intercalary month of 17 days
2 weeks of 7 days
A three day 'new year' holiday

Ξανδικός Ἐμβόλιμος/Xandikos Embolimos March 26th-April 11th

And one extra 'midyear holiday' added every 4 years
At the end of Ὑπερβερετίος/Hyperberetios
 
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