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Calendar era

A calendar era is the period of time elapsed since one epoch of a calendar and, if it exists, before the next one.[1] For example, it is the year 2023 as per the Gregorian calendar, which numbers its years in the Western Christian era (the Coptic Orthodox and Ethiopian Orthodox churches have their own Christian eras).

2023 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar2023
MMXXIII
Ab urbe condita2776
Armenian calendar1472
ԹՎ ՌՆՀԲ
Assyrian calendar6773
Baháʼí calendar179–180
Balinese saka calendar1944–1945
Bengali calendar1430
Berber calendar2973
British Regnal yearCha. 3 – 2 Cha. 3
Buddhist calendar2567
Burmese calendar1385
Byzantine calendar7531–7532
Chinese calendar壬寅年 (Water Tiger)
4719 or 4659
    — to —
癸卯年 (Water Rabbit)
4720 or 4660
Coptic calendar1739–1740
Discordian calendar3189
Ethiopian calendar2015–2016
Hebrew calendar5783–5784
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat2079–2080
 - Shaka Samvat1944–1945
 - Kali Yuga5123–5124
Holocene calendar12023
Igbo calendar1023–1024
Iranian calendar1401–1402
Islamic calendar1444–1445
Japanese calendarReiwa 5
(令和5年)
Javanese calendar1956–1957
Juche calendar112
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4356
Minguo calendarROC 112
民國112年
Nanakshahi calendar555
Thai solar calendar2566
Tibetan calendar阳水虎年
(male Water-Tiger)
2149 or 1768 or 996
    — to —
阴水兔年
(female Water-Rabbit)
2150 or 1769 or 997
Unix time1672531200 – 1704067199

In antiquity, regnal years were counted from the accession of a monarch. This makes the chronology of the ancient Near East very difficult to reconstruct, based on disparate and scattered king lists, such as the Sumerian King List and the Babylonian Canon of Kings. In East Asia, reckoning by era names chosen by ruling monarchs ceased in the 20th century except for Japan, where they are still used.

Ancient dating systems

Assyrian eponyms

For over a thousand years, ancient Assyria used a system of eponyms to identify each year. Each year at the Akitu festival (celebrating the Mesopotamian new year), one of a small group of high officials (including the king in later periods) would be chosen by lot to serve as the limmu for the year, which meant that he would preside over the Akitu festival and the year would bear his name. The earliest attested limmu eponyms are from the Assyrian trading colony at Karum Kanesh in Anatolia, dating to the very beginning of the 2nd millennium BC,[2] and they continued in use until the end of the Neo-Assyrian Period, ca. 612 BC.

Assyrian scribes compiled limmu lists, including an unbroken sequence of almost 250 eponyms from the early 1st millennium BC. This is an invaluable chronological aid, because a solar eclipse was recorded as having taken place in the limmu of Bur-Sagale, governor of Guzana. Astronomers have identified this eclipse as one that took place on 15 June 763 BC, which has allowed absolute dates of 892 to 648 BC to be assigned to that sequence of eponyms.[3] This list of absolute dates has allowed many of the events of the Neo-Assyrian Period to be dated to a specific year, avoiding the chronological debates that characterize earlier periods of Mesopotamian history.

Olympiad dating

Among the ancient Greek historians and scholars, a common method of indicating the passage of years was based on the Olympic Games, first held in 776 BC. The Olympic Games provided the various independent city-states with a mutually recognizable system of dates. Olympiad dating was not used in everyday life. This system was in use from the 3rd century BC. The modern Olympic Games (or Summer Olympic Games beginning 1896) do not continue the four year periods from ancient Greece: the 669th Olympiad would have begun in the summer of 1897, but the modern Olympics were first held in 1896.[4]: 769 

Indiction cycles

Another common system was the indiction cycle (15 indictions made up an agricultural tax cycle in Roman Egypt, an indiction being a year in duration). Documents and events began to be dated by the year of the cycle (e.g., "fifth indiction", "tenth indiction") in the 4th century, and this system was used long after the tax ceased to be collected. It was used in Gaul, in Egypt until the Islamic conquest, and in the Eastern Roman Empire until its conquest in 1453.

The rule for computing the indiction from the AD year number, which he had just invented, was stated by Dionysius Exiguus: add 3 and divide by 15; the remainder is the indiction, with 0 understood to be the fifteenth indiction.[4]: 770  Thus the indiction of 2001 was 9.[5] The beginning of the year for the indiction varied.[4]: 769–71 

Seleucid era

The Seleucid era was used in much of the Middle East from the 4th century BC to the 6th century AD, and continued until the 10th century AD among Oriental Christians. The era is computed from the epoch 312 BC: in August of that year Seleucus I Nicator captured Babylon and began his reign over the Asian portions of Alexander the Great's empire. Thus depending on whether the calendar year is taken as starting on 1 Tishri or on 1 Nisan (respectively the start of the Jewish civil and ecclesiastical years) the Seleucid era begins either in 311 BC (the Jewish reckoning) or in 312 BC (the Greek reckoning: October–September).

Ancient Rome

Consular dating

An early and common practice was Roman 'consular' dating. This involved naming both consules ordinarii who had taken up this office on 1 January (since 153 BC) of the relevant civil year.[4]: 6  Sometimes one or both consuls might not be appointed until November or December of the previous year, and news of the appointment may not have reached parts of the Roman empire for several months into the current year; thus we find the occasional inscription where the year is defined as "after the consulate" of a pair of consuls.

The use of consular dating ended in AD 541 when the emperor Justinian I discontinued appointing consuls. The last consul nominated was Anicius Faustus Albinus Basilius. Soon afterwards, imperial regnal dating was adopted in its place.

Dating from the founding of Rome

Another method of dating, rarely used, was ab urbe condita (Latin: "from the founding of the City", where "city" meant Rome) or anno urbis conditae (Latin: "in the year of the founded city), abbreviated AUC.

Several epochs were in use by Roman historians. Modern historians usually adopt the epoch of Varro, which we place in 753 BC.

The system was introduced by Marcus Terentius Varro in the 1st century BC. The first day of its year was Founder's Day (21 April), although most modern historians assume that it coincides with the modern historical year (1 January to 31 December). It was rarely used in the Roman calendar and in the early Julian calendar – naming the two consuls that held office in a particular year was dominant. AD 2023 is thus approximately the same as AUC 2776 (2023 + 753).

About AD 400, the Iberian historian Orosius used the AUC era. Pope Boniface IV (about AD 600) may have been the first to use both the AUC era and the Anno Domini era (he put AD 607 = AUC 1360).[citation needed]

Regnal years of Roman emperors

Another system that is less commonly found than might be thought was the use of the regnal year of the Roman emperor. At first, Augustus indicated the year of his reign by counting how many times he had held the office of consul, and how many times the Roman Senate had granted him Tribunican powers, carefully observing the fiction that his powers came from these offices granted to him, rather than from his own person or the many legions under his control. His successors followed his practice until the memory of the Roman Republic faded (about AD 200), when they began to use their regnal year openly.

Dating from the Roman conquest

Some regions of the Roman Empire dated their calendars from the date of Roman conquest, or the establishment of Roman rule.

The Spanish era counted the years from 38 BC, probably the date of a new tax imposed by the Roman Republic on the subdued population of Iberia. The date marked the establishment of Roman rule in Spain and was used in official documents in Portugal, Aragon, Valencia, and in Castile, into the 14th century. This system of calibrating years fell to disuse in 1381 and was replaced by today's Anno Domini.[6]

Throughout the Roman and Byzantine periods, the Decapolis and other Hellenized cities of Syria and Palestine used the Pompeian era, counting dates from the Roman general Pompey's conquest of the region in 63 BC.

Maya

A different form of calendar was used to track longer periods of time, and for the inscription of calendar dates (i.e., identifying when one event occurred in relation to others). This form, known as the Long Count, is based upon the number of elapsed days since a mythological starting-point. According to the calibration between the Long Count and Western calendars accepted by the great majority of Maya researchers (known as the GMT correlation), this starting-point is equivalent to 11 August, 3114 BC in the proleptic Gregorian calendar or 6 September in the Julian calendar (−3113 astronomical).

Other dating systems

A great many local systems or eras were also important, for example the year from the foundation of one particular city, the regnal year of the neighboring Persian emperor, and eventually even the year of the reigning Caliph.

Late Antiquity and Middle Ages

Most of the traditional calendar eras in use today were introduced at the time of transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages, roughly between the 6th and 10th centuries.

Christian era

  • The Etos Kosmou of the Byzantine Calendar places Creation at the beginning of its year 1, namely 5509 BC. Its first known use occurred in the 7th century AD, although its precursors were developed about AD 400. The year 7509 of this era began in September 2000.
  • The Era of Martyrs or Era of Diocletian is reckoned from the beginning of the reign of Roman Emperor Diocletian; the first year of this era was 284/5. It was not the custom to use regnal years in Rome, but it was the custom in Roman Egypt, which the emperor ruled through a prefect (the king of Egypt). The year number changed on the first day of the Egyptian month Thoth (29 August three years out of four, 30 August the year before a Roman leap year.) Diocletian abolished the special status of Egypt, which thereafter followed the normal Roman calendar: consular years beginning on 1 January. This era was used in the Easter tables prepared in Alexandria long after the abdication of Diocletian, even though Diocletian was a notorious persecutor of Christians. The Era of Diocletian was retained by the Coptic Church and used for general purposes, but by 643 the name had been changed to Era of the Martyrs.[4]: 766–7 
  • The Incarnation Era is used by Ethiopia. Its epoch is 29 August, AD 8 in the Julian calendar.
  • The Armenian calendar has its era fixed at AD 552.

Dionysian "Common Era"

The era based on the Incarnation of Christ was introduced by Dionysius Exiguus in 525 and is in continued use with various reforms and derivations. The distinction between the Incarnation being the conception or the Nativity of Jesus was not drawn until the late ninth century.[4]: 881  The beginning of the numbered year varied from place to place: when, in 1600, Scotland adopted 1 January as the date the year number changes, this was already the case in much of continental Europe. England adopted this practice in 1752.[4]: 7 

  • A.D. (or AD) – for the Latin Anno Domini, meaning "in the year of (our) Lord". This is the dominant or Western Christian Era; AD is used in the Gregorian calendar. Anno Salutis, meaning "in the year of salvation" is identical. Originally intended to number years from the Incarnation of Jesus, according to modern thinking the calculation was a few years off. Years preceding AD 1 are numbered using the BC era, avoiding zero or negative numbers. AD was also used in the medieval Julian calendar, but the first day of the year was either 1 March, Easter, 25 March, 1 September, or 25 December, not 1 January. To distinguish between the Julian and Gregorian calendars, O.S. and N.S. were often added to the date, especially during the 17th and 18th centuries, when both calendars were in common use. Old Style (O.S.) was used for the Julian calendar and for years not beginning on 1 January. New Style (N.S.) was used for the Gregorian calendar and for Julian calendar years beginning on 1 January. Many countries switched to using 1 January as the start of the numbered year at the same time as they switched from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, but others switched earlier or later.
  • B.C. (or BC) – meaning "Before Christ". Used for years before AD 1, counting backwards so the year n BC is n years before AD 1. Thus there is no year 0.
  • C.E. (or CE) and B.C.E. (or BCE) – meaning "Common Era" and "Before the Common Era", numerically equivalent to AD and BC, respectively (in writing, "AD" precedes the year number, but "CE" follows the year: AD 1 = 1 CE.)[7] The Latin equivalent vulgaris aera was used as early as 1615 by Johannes Kepler.[8] The English abbreviations C.E. and B.C.E. were introduced in the 19th century by Jewish intellectuals, wishing to avoid the abbreviation for dominus "lord" in implicit reference to Christ.[9] By the later 20th century, the abbreviations had come into wider usage by authors who wished to emphasize secularism.[10]
Dionysian-derived

Islamic

Hindu

  • Hindu calendar, counting from the start of the Kali Yuga, with its epoch on 18 February, 3102 BC Julian (23 January, 3102 BC Gregorian), based on Aryabhata (6th century).
  • Vikrama Samvat, 56-57 BC, introduced about the 12th century.
  • S.E. or (SE) – for the Saka Era, used in some Hindu calendars and in the Indian national calendar, with an epoch near the vernal equinox of year 78 (its year 0); its usage spread to Southeast Asia before year 1000. This era is also used (together with the Gregorian calendar) in the Indian national calendar, the official civil calendar used in communiques issued by the Government of India.
  • Lakshmana Era, established by the Bengali ruler Lakshmana Sena with an epoch of 1118–1119. It was used for at least 400 years in Bihar and Bengal.

Southeast Asia

The Hindu Saka Era influences the calendars of southeast Asian indianized kingdoms.

  • B.E. – for the Buddhist Era, introduced by Vajiravudh in 1912, which has an epoch (origin) of 544 BC. This year is called year 1 in Sri Lanka and Burma, but year 0 in Thailand, Laos and Cambodia. Thus the year 2500 B.E. occurred in 1956 in the former countries, but in 1957 in the latter. In Thailand in 1888 King Chulalongkorn decreed a National Thai Era, dating from the founding of Bangkok on 6 April 1782. In 1912 New Year's Day was shifted to 1 April. In 1941 Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram decided to count the years since 543 BC. This is the Thai solar calendar using the Thai Buddhist Era aligned to the western solar calendar.
  • BE for Burmese Era – from Burmese calendar originally with an epochal year 0 date of 22 March 638; from which derived CS for Chula Sakarat era; variously known as LE Lesser Era; ME Minor Era – the Major or Great Era being the Saka Era of the Indian national calendar
B.E. of the Bahá'í calendar is below.

Bahá'í

  • B.E. – The Bahá'í calendar dates from the year of the declaration of the Báb. Years are counted in the Bahá'í Era (BE), which starts its year 1 from 21 March 1844.

Jewish

  • A.M. (or AM) – for the Latin Anno Mundi, meaning "in the year of the world", has its epoch in the year 3761 BC. This was first used to number the years of the modern Hebrew calendar in 1178 by Maimonides. Precursors with epochs one or two years later were used since the 3rd century, all based on the Seder Olam Rabba of the 2nd century. The year beginning in the northern autumn of 2000 was 5761 AM.

Zoroastrian

Modern

Political

  • The Republican Era of the French Republican Calendar was dated from 22 September 1792, the day of the proclamation of the French First Republic. It was used in Revolutionary France from 24 October 1793 (on the Gregorian calendar) to 31 December 1805.
  • The Positivist calendar of 1844 takes 1789 as its epoch.
  • The Republican era is used by the Republic of China (now usually known as "Taiwan") since 1912, which is the first year of the republic. Coincidentally, this is the same as the Juche era used in North Korea, the year of the birth of its founder Kim Il-Sung.
  • The Era Fascista 'Fascist Era' was instituted by the Italian Fascists and used Roman numerals to denote the number of years since the March on Rome in 1922. Therefore, 1934, for example, was XII E.F. (era fascista). This era was abolished with the fall of fascism in Italy on 25 July 1943, but restored in the northern part of the country during the Italian Social Republic. The Gregorian calendar remained in simultaneous use and a double numbering was adopted: the year of the Common era was presented in Arabic numerals and the year of the fascist era in Roman numerals. The year of the Fascist calendar began on 29 October, so, for example, 27 October 1933 was XI E.F. but 30 October 1933 was XII E.F.
  • China traditionally reckoned by the regnal year of its emperors, see Chinese era name. Most Chinese do not assign numbers to the years of the Chinese calendar, but the few who do, like expatriate Chinese, use a continuous count of years from the reign of the legendary Yellow Emperor, using 2698 BC as year 1. Western writers begin this count at either 2637 BC or 2697 BC (see Chinese calendar). Thus, the Chinese years 4637, 4697, or 4698 began in early 2000.
  • In Korea, from 1952 until 1961 years were numbered via Dangi years, where 2333 BC was regarded as the first such year.
  • The Assyrian calendar, introduced in the 1950s, has its era fixed at 4750 BC.
  • The Japanese calendar dates from the accession of the current Emperor of Japan. The current emperor took the throne in May 2019, which became Reiwa 1, and which was until then Heisei 31.
  • The United States government sometimes uses a calendar of the era of its Independence, fixed on 4 July 1776, together with the Anno Domini civil calendar. For instance, its Constitution is dated "the Seventeenth Day of September in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and Eighty seven and of the Independence of the United States of America the Twelfth."[12] Presidential proclamations are also dated in this way.[13]

Religious

Practical

See also

References

  1. ^ Richards, E. G. (2013). "Calendars". In Urban, Sean E.; Seidelmann, P. Kenneth (eds.). Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac (3 ed.). Mill Valley, CA: Univ Science Books. ISBN 978-1-891389-85-6.
  2. ^ "CDLI: The Old and Middle Assyrian limmu officials". Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative. from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
  3. ^ Millard, Alan (1994). The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire, 910-612 BC (State Archives of Assyria Studies, Vol. 2). Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project. ISBN 978-9514567155.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Blackburn, Bonnie; Holford-Strevens, Leofranc (2003). The Oxford Companion to the Year (corrected printing ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-214231-3.
  5. ^ Nautical Almanac Office of the United States Naval Observatory and Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office (2000). The Nautical Almanac for the year 2001. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. p. B2. Bibcode:2000naal.book.....N.
  6. ^ Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard, Shalshelet Ha-Kabbalah, Jerusalem 1962, p. 271 (Hebrew)
  7. ^ Associated Press Stylebook. New York: Basic Books. 2007. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-465-00489-8.. "Because the full phrase would read in the year of the Lord 96, the abbreviation A.D. goes before the figure for the year: A.D. 96."
  8. ^ A 1635 English edition of that book has the title page in English – so far, the earliest-found usage of "Vulgar Era" in English. The English phrase "common Era" appears at least as early as 1708.[citation needed] In Latin, "Common Era" is written as Vulgaris Aera. It also occasionally appears as æra vulgaris, aera vulgaris, anni vulgaris, vulgaris aera Christiana, and anni vulgatae nostrae aerae Christianas.
  9. ^ Use of "C.E." and "B.C.E.": Morris Jacob Raphall. Post-Biblical History of The Jews (1856). Explicit use of "b.c.e." for "before the common era": Max Stern, Lemaʼan Yilmedu: A Second Hebrew Reader for Jewish Schools and Private Instruction (1881), p. 37.
  10. ^ Sumser, John (2016). The Conflict Between Secular and Religious Narratives in the United States: Wittgenstein, Social Construction, and Communication. p. 69. ISBN 9781498522090. from the original on 18 January 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  11. ^ Cesare, E. (1993). Correspondence. Nature. 336: 716. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ "U.S. Constitution". from the original on 19 August 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  13. ^ "Presidential Actions". The White House. Washington, DC. from the original on 18 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  14. ^ Sappell, J.; Welkos, R. W. (28 June 1990). "Costly Strategy Continues to Turn Out Bestsellers". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 27 October 2013. Retrieved 25 December 2011.

calendar, calendar, period, time, elapsed, since, epoch, calendar, exists, before, next, example, year, 2023, gregorian, calendar, which, numbers, years, western, christian, coptic, orthodox, ethiopian, orthodox, churches, have, their, christian, eras, 2023, v. A calendar era is the period of time elapsed since one epoch of a calendar and if it exists before the next one 1 For example it is the year 2023 as per the Gregorian calendar which numbers its years in the Western Christian era the Coptic Orthodox and Ethiopian Orthodox churches have their own Christian eras 2023 in various calendarsGregorian calendar2023MMXXIIIAb urbe condita2776Armenian calendar1472ԹՎ ՌՆՀԲAssyrian calendar6773Bahaʼi calendar179 180Balinese saka calendar1944 1945Bengali calendar1430Berber calendar2973British Regnal year1 Cha 3 2 Cha 3Buddhist calendar2567Burmese calendar1385Byzantine calendar7531 7532Chinese calendar壬寅年 Water Tiger 4719 or 4659 to 癸卯年 Water Rabbit 4720 or 4660Coptic calendar1739 1740Discordian calendar3189Ethiopian calendar2015 2016Hebrew calendar5783 5784Hindu calendars Vikram Samvat2079 2080 Shaka Samvat1944 1945 Kali Yuga5123 5124Holocene calendar12023Igbo calendar1023 1024Iranian calendar1401 1402Islamic calendar1444 1445Japanese calendarReiwa 5 令和5年 Javanese calendar1956 1957Juche calendar112Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 daysKorean calendar4356Minguo calendarROC 112民國112年Nanakshahi calendar555Thai solar calendar2566Tibetan calendar阳水虎年 male Water Tiger 2149 or 1768 or 996 to 阴水兔年 female Water Rabbit 2150 or 1769 or 997Unix time1672531200 1704067199In antiquity regnal years were counted from the accession of a monarch This makes the chronology of the ancient Near East very difficult to reconstruct based on disparate and scattered king lists such as the Sumerian King List and the Babylonian Canon of Kings In East Asia reckoning by era names chosen by ruling monarchs ceased in the 20th century except for Japan where they are still used Contents 1 Ancient dating systems 1 1 Assyrian eponyms 1 2 Olympiad dating 1 3 Indiction cycles 1 4 Seleucid era 1 5 Ancient Rome 1 5 1 Consular dating 1 5 2 Dating from the founding of Rome 1 5 3 Regnal years of Roman emperors 1 5 4 Dating from the Roman conquest 1 6 Maya 1 7 Other dating systems 2 Late Antiquity and Middle Ages 2 1 Christian era 2 1 1 Dionysian Common Era 2 1 1 1 Dionysian derived 2 2 Islamic 2 3 Hindu 2 4 Southeast Asia 2 5 Baha i 2 6 Jewish 2 7 Zoroastrian 3 Modern 3 1 Political 3 2 Religious 3 3 Practical 4 See also 5 ReferencesAncient dating systems EditAssyrian eponyms Edit Main article Eponym dating system For over a thousand years ancient Assyria used a system of eponyms to identify each year Each year at the Akitu festival celebrating the Mesopotamian new year one of a small group of high officials including the king in later periods would be chosen by lot to serve as the limmu for the year which meant that he would preside over the Akitu festival and the year would bear his name The earliest attested limmu eponyms are from the Assyrian trading colony at Karum Kanesh in Anatolia dating to the very beginning of the 2nd millennium BC 2 and they continued in use until the end of the Neo Assyrian Period ca 612 BC Assyrian scribes compiled limmu lists including an unbroken sequence of almost 250 eponyms from the early 1st millennium BC This is an invaluable chronological aid because a solar eclipse was recorded as having taken place in the limmu of Bur Sagale governor of Guzana Astronomers have identified this eclipse as one that took place on 15 June 763 BC which has allowed absolute dates of 892 to 648 BC to be assigned to that sequence of eponyms 3 This list of absolute dates has allowed many of the events of the Neo Assyrian Period to be dated to a specific year avoiding the chronological debates that characterize earlier periods of Mesopotamian history Olympiad dating Edit Among the ancient Greek historians and scholars a common method of indicating the passage of years was based on the Olympic Games first held in 776 BC The Olympic Games provided the various independent city states with a mutually recognizable system of dates Olympiad dating was not used in everyday life This system was in use from the 3rd century BC The modern Olympic Games or Summer Olympic Games beginning 1896 do not continue the four year periods from ancient Greece the 669th Olympiad would have begun in the summer of 1897 but the modern Olympics were first held in 1896 4 769 Indiction cycles Edit Another common system was the indiction cycle 15 indictions made up an agricultural tax cycle in Roman Egypt an indiction being a year in duration Documents and events began to be dated by the year of the cycle e g fifth indiction tenth indiction in the 4th century and this system was used long after the tax ceased to be collected It was used in Gaul in Egypt until the Islamic conquest and in the Eastern Roman Empire until its conquest in 1453 The rule for computing the indiction from the AD year number which he had just invented was stated by Dionysius Exiguus add 3 and divide by 15 the remainder is the indiction with 0 understood to be the fifteenth indiction 4 770 Thus the indiction of 2001 was 9 5 The beginning of the year for the indiction varied 4 769 71 Seleucid era Edit Main article Seleucid era The Seleucid era was used in much of the Middle East from the 4th century BC to the 6th century AD and continued until the 10th century AD among Oriental Christians The era is computed from the epoch 312 BC in August of that year Seleucus I Nicator captured Babylon and began his reign over the Asian portions of Alexander the Great s empire Thus depending on whether the calendar year is taken as starting on 1 Tishri or on 1 Nisan respectively the start of the Jewish civil and ecclesiastical years the Seleucid era begins either in 311 BC the Jewish reckoning or in 312 BC the Greek reckoning October September Ancient Rome Edit Consular dating Edit An early and common practice was Roman consular dating This involved naming both consules ordinarii who had taken up this office on 1 January since 153 BC of the relevant civil year 4 6 Sometimes one or both consuls might not be appointed until November or December of the previous year and news of the appointment may not have reached parts of the Roman empire for several months into the current year thus we find the occasional inscription where the year is defined as after the consulate of a pair of consuls The use of consular dating ended in AD 541 when the emperor Justinian I discontinued appointing consuls The last consul nominated was Anicius Faustus Albinus Basilius Soon afterwards imperial regnal dating was adopted in its place Dating from the founding of Rome Edit Another method of dating rarely used was ab urbe condita Latin from the founding of the City where city meant Rome or anno urbis conditae Latin in the year of the founded city abbreviated AUC Several epochs were in use by Roman historians Modern historians usually adopt the epoch of Varro which we place in 753 BC The system was introduced by Marcus Terentius Varro in the 1st century BC The first day of its year was Founder s Day 21 April although most modern historians assume that it coincides with the modern historical year 1 January to 31 December It was rarely used in the Roman calendar and in the early Julian calendar naming the two consuls that held office in a particular year was dominant AD 2023 is thus approximately the same as AUC 2776 2023 753 About AD 400 the Iberian historian Orosius used the AUC era Pope Boniface IV about AD 600 may have been the first to use both the AUC era and the Anno Domini era he put AD 607 AUC 1360 citation needed Regnal years of Roman emperors Edit Another system that is less commonly found than might be thought was the use of the regnal year of the Roman emperor At first Augustus indicated the year of his reign by counting how many times he had held the office of consul and how many times the Roman Senate had granted him Tribunican powers carefully observing the fiction that his powers came from these offices granted to him rather than from his own person or the many legions under his control His successors followed his practice until the memory of the Roman Republic faded about AD 200 when they began to use their regnal year openly Dating from the Roman conquest Edit Some regions of the Roman Empire dated their calendars from the date of Roman conquest or the establishment of Roman rule The Spanish era counted the years from 38 BC probably the date of a new tax imposed by the Roman Republic on the subdued population of Iberia The date marked the establishment of Roman rule in Spain and was used in official documents in Portugal Aragon Valencia and in Castile into the 14th century This system of calibrating years fell to disuse in 1381 and was replaced by today s Anno Domini 6 Throughout the Roman and Byzantine periods the Decapolis and other Hellenized cities of Syria and Palestine used the Pompeian era counting dates from the Roman general Pompey s conquest of the region in 63 BC Maya Edit A different form of calendar was used to track longer periods of time and for the inscription of calendar dates i e identifying when one event occurred in relation to others This form known as the Long Count is based upon the number of elapsed days since a mythological starting point According to the calibration between the Long Count and Western calendars accepted by the great majority of Maya researchers known as the GMT correlation this starting point is equivalent to 11 August 3114 BC in the proleptic Gregorian calendar or 6 September in the Julian calendar 3113 astronomical Other dating systems Edit A great many local systems or eras were also important for example the year from the foundation of one particular city the regnal year of the neighboring Persian emperor and eventually even the year of the reigning Caliph Late Antiquity and Middle Ages EditMost of the traditional calendar eras in use today were introduced at the time of transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages roughly between the 6th and 10th centuries Christian era Edit The Etos Kosmou of the Byzantine Calendar places Creation at the beginning of its year 1 namely 5509 BC Its first known use occurred in the 7th century AD although its precursors were developed about AD 400 The year 7509 of this era began in September 2000 The Era of Martyrs or Era of Diocletian is reckoned from the beginning of the reign of Roman Emperor Diocletian the first year of this era was 284 5 It was not the custom to use regnal years in Rome but it was the custom in Roman Egypt which the emperor ruled through a prefect the king of Egypt The year number changed on the first day of the Egyptian month Thoth 29 August three years out of four 30 August the year before a Roman leap year Diocletian abolished the special status of Egypt which thereafter followed the normal Roman calendar consular years beginning on 1 January This era was used in the Easter tables prepared in Alexandria long after the abdication of Diocletian even though Diocletian was a notorious persecutor of Christians The Era of Diocletian was retained by the Coptic Church and used for general purposes but by 643 the name had been changed to Era of the Martyrs 4 766 7 The Incarnation Era is used by Ethiopia Its epoch is 29 August AD 8 in the Julian calendar The Armenian calendar has its era fixed at AD 552 Dionysian Common Era Edit Main articles Anno Domini and Common Era The era based on the Incarnation of Christ was introduced by Dionysius Exiguus in 525 and is in continued use with various reforms and derivations The distinction between the Incarnation being the conception or the Nativity of Jesus was not drawn until the late ninth century 4 881 The beginning of the numbered year varied from place to place when in 1600 Scotland adopted 1 January as the date the year number changes this was already the case in much of continental Europe England adopted this practice in 1752 4 7 A D or AD for the Latin Anno Domini meaning in the year of our Lord This is the dominant or Western Christian Era AD is used in the Gregorian calendar Anno Salutis meaning in the year of salvation is identical Originally intended to number years from the Incarnation of Jesus according to modern thinking the calculation was a few years off Years preceding AD 1 are numbered using the BC era avoiding zero or negative numbers AD was also used in the medieval Julian calendar but the first day of the year was either 1 March Easter 25 March 1 September or 25 December not 1 January To distinguish between the Julian and Gregorian calendars O S and N S were often added to the date especially during the 17th and 18th centuries when both calendars were in common use Old Style O S was used for the Julian calendar and for years not beginning on 1 January New Style N S was used for the Gregorian calendar and for Julian calendar years beginning on 1 January Many countries switched to using 1 January as the start of the numbered year at the same time as they switched from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar but others switched earlier or later B C or BC meaning Before Christ Used for years before AD 1 counting backwards so the year n BC is n years before AD 1 Thus there is no year 0 C E or CE and B C E or BCE meaning Common Era and Before the Common Era numerically equivalent to AD and BC respectively in writing AD precedes the year number but CE follows the year AD 1 1 CE 7 The Latin equivalent vulgaris aera was used as early as 1615 by Johannes Kepler 8 The English abbreviations C E and B C E were introduced in the 19th century by Jewish intellectuals wishing to avoid the abbreviation for dominus lord in implicit reference to Christ 9 By the later 20th century the abbreviations had come into wider usage by authors who wished to emphasize secularism 10 Dionysian derived Edit Astronomical year numbering equates its year 0 with 1 BC and counts negative years from 2 BC backward 1 backward so 100 BC is 99 The human era also named Holocene era proposed by Cesare Emiliani adds 10 000 to AD years so that AD 1 would be the year 10 001 11 Anno Lucis of Freemasonry adds 4000 years to the AD year Islamic Edit A H or AH for the Latinized Anno Hegirae meaning in the year of the Hijra Muhammad s emigration from Mecca to Medina in September 622 which occurred in its first year used in the Islamic calendar Since the Islamic calendar is a purely lunar calendar of about 354 or 355 days its year count increases faster than that of solar and lunisolar calendars citation needed S H or SH citation needed is used by the Iranian calendar to denote the number of solar years since the Hijra The year beginning at the vernal equinox equals the number of the Gregorian year beginning at the preceding 1 January minus 621 citation needed Hindu Edit Hindu calendar counting from the start of the Kali Yuga with its epoch on 18 February 3102 BC Julian 23 January 3102 BC Gregorian based on Aryabhata 6th century Vikrama Samvat 56 57 BC introduced about the 12th century S E or SE for the Saka Era used in some Hindu calendars and in the Indian national calendar with an epoch near the vernal equinox of year 78 its year 0 its usage spread to Southeast Asia before year 1000 This era is also used together with the Gregorian calendar in the Indian national calendar the official civil calendar used in communiques issued by the Government of India Lakshmana Era established by the Bengali ruler Lakshmana Sena with an epoch of 1118 1119 It was used for at least 400 years in Bihar and Bengal Southeast Asia Edit The Hindu Saka Era influences the calendars of southeast Asian indianized kingdoms B E for the Buddhist Era introduced by Vajiravudh in 1912 which has an epoch origin of 544 BC This year is called year 1 in Sri Lanka and Burma but year 0 in Thailand Laos and Cambodia Thus the year 2500 B E occurred in 1956 in the former countries but in 1957 in the latter In Thailand in 1888 King Chulalongkorn decreed a National Thai Era dating from the founding of Bangkok on 6 April 1782 In 1912 New Year s Day was shifted to 1 April In 1941 Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram decided to count the years since 543 BC This is the Thai solar calendar using the Thai Buddhist Era aligned to the western solar calendar BE for Burmese Era from Burmese calendar originally with an epochal year 0 date of 22 March 638 from which derived CS for Chula Sakarat era variously known as LE Lesser Era ME Minor Era the Major or Great Era being the Saka Era of the Indian national calendarB E of the Baha i calendar is below Baha i Edit B E The Baha i calendar dates from the year of the declaration of the Bab Years are counted in the Baha i Era BE which starts its year 1 from 21 March 1844 Jewish Edit A M or AM for the Latin Anno Mundi meaning in the year of the world has its epoch in the year 3761 BC This was first used to number the years of the modern Hebrew calendar in 1178 by Maimonides Precursors with epochs one or two years later were used since the 3rd century all based on the Seder Olam Rabba of the 2nd century The year beginning in the northern autumn of 2000 was 5761 AM Zoroastrian Edit The Zoroastrian calendar used regnal years since the reform by Ardeshir I but after the fall of the Sassanid Empire the ascension of the last Sassanid ruler Yazdegerd III of Persia crowned 16 June 632 continued to be used as the reference year abbreviated Y Z or Yazdegerd era Modern EditMain article List of calendars Political Edit The Republican Era of the French Republican Calendar was dated from 22 September 1792 the day of the proclamation of the French First Republic It was used in Revolutionary France from 24 October 1793 on the Gregorian calendar to 31 December 1805 The Positivist calendar of 1844 takes 1789 as its epoch The Republican era is used by the Republic of China now usually known as Taiwan since 1912 which is the first year of the republic Coincidentally this is the same as the Juche era used in North Korea the year of the birth of its founder Kim Il Sung The Era Fascista Fascist Era was instituted by the Italian Fascists and used Roman numerals to denote the number of years since the March on Rome in 1922 Therefore 1934 for example was XII E F era fascista This era was abolished with the fall of fascism in Italy on 25 July 1943 but restored in the northern part of the country during the Italian Social Republic The Gregorian calendar remained in simultaneous use and a double numbering was adopted the year of the Common era was presented in Arabic numerals and the year of the fascist era in Roman numerals The year of the Fascist calendar began on 29 October so for example 27 October 1933 was XI E F but 30 October 1933 was XII E F China traditionally reckoned by the regnal year of its emperors see Chinese era name Most Chinese do not assign numbers to the years of the Chinese calendar but the few who do like expatriate Chinese use a continuous count of years from the reign of the legendary Yellow Emperor using 2698 BC as year 1 Western writers begin this count at either 2637 BC or 2697 BC see Chinese calendar Thus the Chinese years 4637 4697 or 4698 began in early 2000 In Korea from 1952 until 1961 years were numbered via Dangi years where 2333 BC was regarded as the first such year The Assyrian calendar introduced in the 1950s has its era fixed at 4750 BC The Japanese calendar dates from the accession of the current Emperor of Japan The current emperor took the throne in May 2019 which became Reiwa 1 and which was until then Heisei 31 The United States government sometimes uses a calendar of the era of its Independence fixed on 4 July 1776 together with the Anno Domini civil calendar For instance its Constitution is dated the Seventeenth Day of September in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and Eighty seven and of the Independence of the United States of America the Twelfth 12 Presidential proclamations are also dated in this way 13 Religious Edit A D After Dianetics In Scientology years are numbered relative to the first publication of the book Dianetics The Modern Science of Mental Health 1950 14 Y O L D In the Discordian calendar the standard designation for the year number is YOLD Year of Our Lady of Discord The calendar begins counting from 1 January 1166 BC in the Discordian year 0 ostensibly the date of origin of the Curse of Greyface An alternate designation A D D has been occasionally seen Anno Domina Discordia a Latin translation of YOLD but presumably also a play on attention deficit disorder citation needed e v Era vulgaris From Latin meaning common era usually stylized in lowercase Used by some followers of Aleister Crowley to designate the era from the Thelemic calendar which is used by some Thelemites to designate a number of years since Crowley s inauguration of the so called Aeon of Horus which occurred on 20 March 1904 and coincides with both the Thelemic new year and a holiday known as the Equinox of the Gods The abbreviation A N for Aerae Novae New Era in Latin is also used for dates in the Thelemic calendar citation needed Practical Edit B P for Before Present specifically the number of radiocarbon years before 1950 Julian day number for counting days not years its era fixed at noon 1 January 4713 BC in the proleptic Julian calendar This equals 24 November 4714 BC in the proleptic Gregorian calendar From noon of this day to noon of the next day was day 0 Multiples of 7 are Mondays Negative values can also be used Apart from the choice of the zero point and name this Julian day and Julian date are not related to the Julian calendar It does not count years so strictly speaking it has no era but it does have an epoch Today noon to noon UTC the value is 2460041 Unix time for counting elapsed seconds since the Unix epoch set at 00 00 00 or midnight UTC of 1 January 1970 though there are problems with Unix implementation of Coordinated Universal Time UTC Holocene calendarSee also EditCalendar reform Common Era Julian day List of calendarsReferences Edit Richards E G 2013 Calendars In Urban Sean E Seidelmann P Kenneth eds Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac 3 ed Mill Valley CA Univ Science Books ISBN 978 1 891389 85 6 CDLI The Old and Middle Assyrian limmu officials Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 18 May 2016 Millard Alan 1994 The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire 910 612 BC State Archives of Assyria Studies Vol 2 Helsinki Neo Assyrian Text Corpus Project ISBN 978 9514567155 a b c d e f g Blackburn Bonnie Holford Strevens Leofranc 2003 The Oxford Companion to the Year corrected printing ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 214231 3 Nautical Almanac Office of the United States Naval Observatory and Her Majesty s Nautical Almanac Office 2000 The Nautical Almanac for the year 2001 Washington DC Government Printing Office p B2 Bibcode 2000naal book N Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard Shalshelet Ha Kabbalah Jerusalem 1962 p 271 Hebrew Associated Press Stylebook New York Basic Books 2007 p 6 ISBN 978 0 465 00489 8 Because the full phrase would read in the year of the Lord 96 the abbreviation A D goes before the figure for the year A D 96 A 1635 English edition of that book has the title page in English so far the earliest found usage of Vulgar Era in English The English phrase common Era appears at least as early as 1708 citation needed In Latin Common Era is written as Vulgaris Aera It also occasionally appears as aera vulgaris aera vulgaris anni vulgaris vulgaris aera Christiana and anni vulgatae nostrae aerae Christianas Use of C E and B C E Morris Jacob Raphall Post Biblical History of The Jews 1856 Explicit use of b c e for before the common era Max Stern Lemaʼan Yilmedu A Second Hebrew Reader for Jewish Schools and Private Instruction 1881 p 37 Sumser John 2016 The Conflict Between Secular and Religious Narratives in the United States Wittgenstein Social Construction and Communication p 69 ISBN 9781498522090 Archived from the original on 18 January 2021 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Cesare E 1993 Correspondence Nature 336 716 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help U S Constitution Archived from the original on 19 August 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2017 Presidential Actions The White House Washington DC Archived from the original on 18 January 2021 Retrieved 11 January 2020 Sappell J Welkos R W 28 June 1990 Costly Strategy Continues to Turn Out Bestsellers Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 27 October 2013 Retrieved 25 December 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calendar era amp oldid 1130731030, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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