Olympiad
dating:
Among
the ancient Greeks, a common method for indicating the passage of
years was based on the order of Olympic
Games, first held in 776
BC. The pan-Hellenic games provided the various independent
city-states a mutually recognizable system of dates. The first
Olympiad also marks the traditional beginning of Greek historical
civilization and record-keeping, and it continues to be regarded as
the end of Western prehistory and the beginning of its historical
epoch.
This
system was in use from the 4th century BC until the 3rd or 4th
century AD.
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).
An
early and common practice was Roman 'consular'
dating. This involved naming both consules
ordinarii who had taken up this office on January of the relevant civil year. 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.
Another
method of dating, rarely used, was anno
urbis conditae (Latin: "in the year of the founded city"
(abbreviated AUC), where "city" meant Rome). (It is often
incorrectly given that AUC stands for ab
urbe condita, which is the title of Titus
Livius's history of Rome.)
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 (April 21), although most modern historians assume
that it coincides with the modern historical year (January 1 to
December 31). 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 2013 is thus
approximately the same as AUC 2765 (2013 + 753 - 1, as there was no
year AD 0).
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).
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 August 11, 3114 BC in the proleptic Gregorian calendar
or 6 September in the Julian calendar (−3113 astronomical).
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