what are they?
thks
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what are they?
thks
272 bc to 14 ad I believe.
If you are asking what they mean, BC is Before Christ and AD is Anno Domini (lit: in the year of our lord). Since it was a christian calender first and foremost, it uses Christ as a reference point.
Only it's out be four or five years, Jesus was born 3-5 BC.
Why does English use English (bc) then Latin (ad) instead of the same for both? I want consistency :)
Cuz instead of A.D., it'd be I.T.Y.O.O.L. (in the year of our lord)Quote:
Originally Posted by Hegix
Anno Domini was calculated, was it an English or French monk? In the 6th Century or so, can't remember, anyway. BC is fairly modern, the few mediaeval histories that pupported to go that far back talked about the reign of so-and-so Emperor.Quote:
Originally Posted by Hegix
So basically AD comes from a time when Latin was the most widely used Academic language and BC from the time when Britain was pre-eminant.
IIRC, the guy that made it was basing his count on years of Roman Emporer rule. And when he was doing Avgustus, he counted the years Avgvstvs ruled then went to the years before the Empire, but his source had a separate entry for the years the Octavian ruled. Same guy different names and entries = confusion and misdate.Quote:
Originally Posted by Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Quote:
Originally Posted by Teleklos Archelaou
Yes that answered that. 272 to 14 a.d.
So what happens after 14 b.c.?
wil there be added more dates in the future?
thanks
that's why modern histories use BCE and CE - before common era and common eraQuote:
Originally Posted by Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Nope. We've got too long a period as it is, we certainly won't be extending it. Too few factions and too few unit/model slots.
I seem to recall those also meaning Christian Era and Before Christian Era. :dizzy2:Quote:
Originally Posted by Intranetusa
Its common era. You can call it 'Christian' era but until 33 CE, Christianity didn't exist. It was just a bunch of Jews that thought Jesus was the Messiah. It wasn't until 33 CE when (If you belive in Christianity) that the Jewish law was nulled by the covenant between Jesus and his disciples for the Kingdom that the old testament always talks about.
BCE / CE doesn't have to do with inaccuracies with the Christian calendar, but rather an attempt to remove the Christian aspect of dating. One of those "removing Christ from modern culture" things. The whole thing is quite silly, seeing as the guessed date of Jesus is still the pivot date. Quite an esoteric arguement. I could argue both sides and change sides depending on my mood.
Exactly, that's the reason why they are trying to change it. They hate anything Christian, because: (a) They hate Christianity. (b) They claim it offends other religions.
Now those are pretty lame excuses for changing it. However, there is an irony that they can't remove the division of BC and AD, because otherwise famous dates like 1066 and 1415 would be different.
I always thought that AD meant after death:dizzy2: ....
I don't call it anything. I've never used CE or BCE in any paper I've written, nor in any conversation. I think if anything it's arrogant to call the time since the birth of a religious figure the "common" era (making the time before that the....uncommon era? :inquisitive: ). At least the AD/BC dating system has an overtly religious basis, rather than a sneakily implied one.Quote:
Originally Posted by antisocialmunky
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Era Wikipedia used to claim that CE and BCE have stood for Christian/Before Christian Era. They seem to have since changed to stating that's just a result of a popular misconception about the meanings of the acronym.
I used to think that when I was younger. Never even thought about what that would mean for the 30 odd years between his death and birth.Quote:
Originally Posted by Roman_Man#3
LOLQuote:
Originally Posted by Zim45
When I was kid I thought that too. But as a kid, I also thought "PM" meant "post-midday".Quote:
Originally Posted by Roman_Man#3
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ignoramus
Well I'm all for removing something from a dominant monotheistic religion, it would make dates weird...
well basing dates of history on something as ridiculous as religion is kinda silly anyway.
Better to base them on the date Hercules founded the Olympic Games! :grin: Rawr!
Well Christianity dictated nearly all events in western history from Constantine (though even events as early as Nero's rule involved Christianity) to at least the French Revolution. History (AD) without Christianity would be like history without war -- definately missing a huge chunk.Quote:
Originally Posted by Zaknafien
We should just add 4.5 billion to all of our years.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ignoramus
Happy New Year 4,500,002,007 everyone!!!
You'll see some new ways of dating things in the next build, for those of you interested in using dates in AAR's and such especially - but the date at the bottom right of the screen will remain as it is currently.
Sorry if yoiu took my comment as somewhat agressive. However, they can't exactly change the dating system now as others have mentioned. You're stuck with it being based off something religious whether you like it or not... kinda like wedding rings or clocks.Quote:
Originally Posted by Zim45
Zim, your so right! I for one am also sick of the 12 month years we have, its just so roman and european! The Peruvian Calender for the win (and a million pounds, Neddy)! And if you know that reference, you are a good man!
Foot
AD is from the first "Year of our Lord" if I was a Muslim then I'd be more offended by the idea that this was a "common" marker that I'm supposed to follow.
Other religions have their own callenders and the only reason we use the Christian one is because Christian powers have been on top for the last few hundred years.
We had enough trouble trying to get everyone to adopt the Gregorian calender for crying out loud, just because it was Catholic.
Go sue God for making the solar system as it is for that. :balloon2:Quote:
Originally Posted by Foot
Clocks?Quote:
Originally Posted by antisocialmunky
Wasn't that the ancient Greek way? Counting from Olympic Games dates? Like 5th century BOG (Before Olympic Games) :smile:Quote:
Originally Posted by Teleklos Archelaou
YES!!!!!
Holy WARRR
Wait what date is it today based off that Olympic game date thing... I wanna run by that format. :beam:
I wonder how many people I can annoy by using this olympic time format.
Clocks run on base 12 because 12 was easier to divide than 10, these days a lot of people see that as inconvenient.Quote:
Originally Posted by Enguerrand de Sarnéac
We should go to that metric time that France tired right after the French Revolution. Ten days a week. Thirty-six weeks a year (every other year-37).Quote:
Originally Posted by Foot
And metric time: ten hours a day, 100 minutes in each hour, 100 seconds a minute. And seconds are 86.4% the length of modern seconds.
I love base 12, it makes so much more sense. You can do half, third, quarter.Quote:
Originally Posted by Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Half of 12 is 6, half of 6 is 3, stop.
Third of 12 is 4. Still not a prime number.
Quarter of 12 is 3. 3 is still a useful number yet is small - also one of the only odd numbers that seems complete.
vs.
Half of 10 is 5, stop. Can't divide five, prime number.
Third, can't do...
Quarter, can't do...
A fifth of 10 is 2, and that's really just half backwards.
But we should use some sort of absolute. Like base pi. Or base c (speed of light). Or just a system of prime numbers.
:dizzy2: :dizzy2: :dizzy2:
12, 24, and 60 are the typical numbers dating as far back as the Babylonians at least. (Because of their numerical system.) And why should our days be devided in parts of 60? Exactly...
@MAA:
60 is the most efficient base number - mathematically speaking. However, we've got only 2 fingers. Another highly efficient number would be 2. (Multiplying, adding and substacting is way easier with 2 as base number - however dividing get's messy.)
Based on both usefulness and practicality I would say the best bases would be in order: 12, 60, 2, 24or36, 4, 9, 10, 5 (60, 24, & 36 are basically a more confusing 12, to me, though)
IMHO
(I really wanted to make pi equal 1 in a theoretical system. But if pi is 1, then diameter is a never ending decimal.)
Hmm.. from a holy war to a math quiz... jk
But who came up with the modern clock?
If you mean mechanical clocks, the first ones were made in Medieval monasteries to keep track of prayer times.
Considering most religious fundies believe in the literal intrepretation of the old testament...meaning the world was created by the Abrahamic God(s)Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheep
~7000 years ago.
How about because people think AD means "after death" and BC & AD aren't accurate anyways because Jesus wasn't born on the year 1. Also, BC & AD don't have the year 0, so we actually have to add a year...this is the year 2008 AD/CE technicallyQuote:
Originally Posted by Ignoramus
Quote:
Originally Posted by Intranetusa
God(s)??
What do you mean I thought only one?
Click to see funny Arab people!!
Technically, the Trinity of the father, the son, and the holy spirit is one God. However, I hear many people consider Hinduism a polytheistic religion, even though Hinduism has the same concept - many dieties that make up the face of one God, Brahaman.Quote:
Originally Posted by K COSSACK
So if you consider Hinduism polytheistic, that applies to Christianity as well.
Needless to say, this is up for debate...
5000 BC depending on your interpretation as the intepretation of day can be a literal day or a figrative day -> see Genesis 2:4.
Technically the Trinity of the father, the son, and the holy spirit is the result of religious fusion caused by the spread of Christianity as a state religion. The Trinities of gods in Asia and Europe were given a update to 'Christianize' them when the government officially sactioned Christianity as the de facto state religion.
That's why you have Mary mother of god and the divine Trinity of father son and holy spirit. That's why the birth of Christ was set to be in the middle of the Levant winter during the darkest days of winter and there is an Easter bunny - a old hold over from the fertility symbol days.
^ yup, 5000 BCE = ~ 7000 years ago
don't forget that Christmas is actually a pagan Celtic holiday. :)
Averni/Aedui with Christmas trees :)
Or the Roman Saturnalia. Evergreens were used in festivals all throughout the north and then some. It usually meant rebirth of the sun(hence it being on the darkest days of the year) or something.
Probably the Sumerians, who used base 12 and base 60. They put a slanted stick in the ground, noticed that the shadow moves in nearly a circle around the base. Then they put down numbers (1-12, being base 12) 12/0 being north. The sundial was born. When mechanical clocks were made, it was just easiest to make the 12 that was once north, now up.Quote:
Originally Posted by K COSSACK
I think the original "God(s)" comment meant Jewish God, Christian God, and Allah.
The Trinity is a big reason that countless people have died. The first interChristian holy wars were between Arian Christians (who believed God & Jesus were separate with Jesus under God) and the Athenisians(sp) (who believed that God/Jesus/Holy Spirit were the same being that manifest themselves in different ways). One of the reasons "The Vandals" are looked down on so much is because they were Arian and killed those they saw as heretics. Also in the early Frankish kingdom, there were conflicts between Arians and Athenisians (often called the first purely Christian wars).
Then there is the Trinity and Islam. Muhammad wrote that all those who followed one god were brothers to Muslums and that, while they were less than Muslums, they were not to be persicuted. Early Islamic kingdoms forced polytheistic peoples to convert, flee, or die. But Christians and Jews were allowed to live in Islamic countries as long as they paid a "non-Islam" tax. But there were tensions between the Turks and the Byzantines...then after the Crusades any hope of multirelgion cooperation died. But the Trinity played a part. Since Mohammad had said it was bad to kill monotheistic, Muslums got around this rule by saying that Christians were not monotheistic, following three gods. Thus, they were allowed to attack Christian kingdoms. Conflicts between Christians and Muslums have been costing lives for centuries, justified on one side by a technicallity. (Just to be fair, most Christian v Islam "holy wars" seem to have been started or instigated by Christians. Though countries that happened to be Islamic have done a good amount of conquering areas that were mostly Christian.)
This uncomfortable and esoteric arguement free of charge...
:egypt:
:bow: It's my fault. No sleep plus extra hours at work + hectic final semester of university = constant irritability.Quote:
Originally Posted by antisocialmunky
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rilder
Problem with counting in Olympiads is that there were no games between 393 and 1896. The ones in 1916, 1940 and 1944 were left out.
Now we have the 3rd year after the last Olympic games. If all games since 1896 would have been held 2007 would be
3rd year of the 108th Olympiade since reinstallment lol
" think the original "God(s)" comment meant Jewish God, Christian God, and Allah."
The Jewish God, Christian God, and Allah are the same God = Abrahamic God
I was just referring to the council of nicea's & later ideas of the Trinity. 3 beings in 1.
Whats so fair about that? Muslim didnt get a wag of the finger...Quote:
Originally Posted by MarcusAureliusAntoninus
I think I'll start dating my checks 108.3 now. Thanks! Looks like a radio station! Power 108.3 FM! :laugh4:
Caesar is the really messiah. All dates should be adjusted by 100 years to mark the momentous occasion of his birth.
... well, at least he is my messiah.
Why not start dating from the traditional date of founding of Rome, the Eternal City, as the Romans did ? Ab urbe condita or however they now put it.
Cause they're just one faction. If we really did go with another dating system, it'd be one that was common over more of the map at our starting time roughly. That wouldn't be A.U.C. for sure. It probably would be Olympiad dating or something like that, but that really wouldn't do either, so we just use dating most players will understand. We've had serious discussions over this and realized it's just not possible to change this part of the game engine (if you could alter dating based upon faction or culture, now *that* would be awesome).
Maybe someone should release a minimod for the roman campian changing the dates? If I rember there is a mod that enances rome alot. Which I'll play onece a) I get a unsolvable ctd or 2) I rule the world.
A good idea would be to count the turns instead of years (instead of 271BC, turn 4) Thus, it would eliminate inconcistencies like conquering the carthagineans with the romans in 250BC...
Hey... now that I think about it...
how do muslims and jews count their years??? :surprised:
It might be but the whole name signifies a certain Monotheistic god's son... as such I refuse to celebrate the bloody holiday, if it was true Celtic Pagan holliday I would celebrate it with vigour as such I don't. :shame:Quote:
Originally Posted by Intranetusa
I thought the Olympiad is the period between two Olympic games? So we would be in the third year of the 28th modern Olympiad.Quote:
Originally Posted by L.C.Cinna
Following the myth, Rome was founded in 753 BC, so for Romans we have the year 2760 a.u.c., at least following the Gregorian Calendar. Jews are in +/- 5500, muslums in about 1400, all counting since the appearence of their prophet.
Yeah, that sounds right CN. It's not 108 years it's 28 olympiads. Good catch.
Zaknifien, my respect for you just went into the toilet. As ridiculous as religion? If you were in any way smart you'd recognize that faith is important to the vast majority of people in the world, in one form or another, and always has been and always will be.
go cry about your anger with religion on the more appropriate forum that also wants the law to allow people to marry dogs and government to disappear. sigh...
Couldn't you record the 'faction' year like you do the 'this year in history?'
That would be fun and tedious.
yes Zaknifien, don't you know? "religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich." -Napoleon
Granted, you're upset, but it doesn't help your argument to cite some extreme example that most likely doesn't exist in real life. Honestly - marrying dogs and disappearance of government?Quote:
Originally Posted by Brightblade
Zaknifien is probebly just expressing his annoance of not having freedom from religon, and people assuming that anyplace where people do not want religion, is obviously a den of anarchy and inter-species sex.
(And although faith in something is not rediclous, look at the details of single relgions and you can find some rediclous things)
Brightblade, abou said it right granting extreme exaples just alienates you.
Yeah - isn't that what EB is about though?! :laugh4:Quote:
Originally Posted by antisocialmunky
Seriously though, I hadn't thought about adding the AUC into the year in history. That's a good idea. I've been putting consuls in there, but we should do that too.
Anyone else know of any other year-numbering systems used by our factions, that we could include this way?
Hehehe, glad I could help, maybe you need to stick me into the special thanks of the EB credits. First the wounded traits and then this :-p
You could use the Egyptian Calendar for Egypt - there's also an Ethiopian Calendar that is similiar, Iranian Calendar for Parthia and maybe Seleucia, and there is a Hindu Calander.
You did the wounded traits?
So It's your fault that Cornivls Asina Galicvs is lame?
:furious3: :laugh4:
Nah, I suggested a few traits dealing with generals for Roleplaying purposes(injury triggers and retirement) a while back that may make it into the next build. But I was joking about the Special thanks, I haven't really done jack for this mod.