
This paper examines the prophetic image of the woman who flees into the wilderness in Revelation 12, situating it within Daniel's chronological framework of 1,260 / 1,290 / 1,335 days, the wilderness typology of the Old Testament, the historicist tradition that converts symbolic days into literal years, and the broader prophetic arc of apostasy and restoration traced by Isaiah, Malachi, the Book of Mormon, and Joseph Smith. Three distinct historicist date-chains are presented and compared — 538→1798, 539→1829, and 721 BC → 570 AD → 1830 AD — with the argument that, regardless of preferred calculation, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries constitute a coherent post-wilderness window in which the prophetic motifs of restoration coalesce. The 1830 organization of the Church of Christ functions, on this reading, as the visible emergence of the woman from her wilderness.
