Difference between revisions of "Era notations test page"
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In post-Severan times (after 235 AD), the small number of pagan senators interested in becoming pontiffs led to a change in the pattern of office holding. In Republican and Imperial times no more than one family member of a gens was member of the [[College of Pontiffs]], nor did one person hold more than one priesthood in this collegium. However, these rules were loosened in the later part of the 3rd century A.D. In periods of joint rule, at first only one of the emperors bore this title, as it occurred for the first time during the joint reign of [[Marcus Aurelius]] and [[Lucius Verus]] (161–169 AD), when only Marcus Aurelius was ''pontifex maximus'', but later two ''pontifices maximi'' could serve together, as [[Pupienus]] and [[Balbinus]] did in 238 AD—a situation unthinkable in Republican times. | |||
123 BC | 123 BC | ||
Line 7: | Line 9: | ||
AD 14 - 35 | AD 14 - 35 | ||
some dates with slash: 24/45 AD | |||
some CE dates with slash: 24/45 CE | |||
another example: AD 34/35 | |||
14 - 35 AD | 14 - 35 AD | ||
Line 15: | Line 23: | ||
CE 35 | CE 35 | ||
23 AD | |||
25 CE | |||
another date: 345 CE something | |||
Decades: | Decades: | ||
Line 48: | Line 62: | ||
2nd century CE | 2nd century CE | ||
third century AD | |||
fifth century CE | |||
1st and 2nd centuries AD | 1st and 2nd centuries AD | ||
Line 56: | Line 74: | ||
1st and 2nd c. CE | 1st and 2nd c. CE | ||
first and second centuries AD | |||
second and third centuries CE | |||
1st/2nd centuries CE | |||
1st/2nd centuries AD | |||
Millennia: | Millennia: | ||
Line 71: | Line 97: | ||
2nd millennium CE | 2nd millennium CE | ||
first millennium AD | |||
third millennium CE | |||
2nd and 3rd millennia CE | 2nd and 3rd millennia CE | ||
2nd and 3rd millennia AD | 2nd and 3rd millennia AD | ||
first and second millennia CE | |||
first and second millennia AD | |||
2nd/3rd millennia CE | |||
2nd/3rd millennia AD |
Latest revision as of 16:51, 31 October 2023
In post-Severan times (after 235 AD), the small number of pagan senators interested in becoming pontiffs led to a change in the pattern of office holding. In Republican and Imperial times no more than one family member of a gens was member of the College of Pontiffs, nor did one person hold more than one priesthood in this collegium. However, these rules were loosened in the later part of the 3rd century A.D. In periods of joint rule, at first only one of the emperors bore this title, as it occurred for the first time during the joint reign of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus (161–169 AD), when only Marcus Aurelius was pontifex maximus, but later two pontifices maximi could serve together, as Pupienus and Balbinus did in 238 AD—a situation unthinkable in Republican times.
123 BC
123 BCE
AD examples: AD 14
AD 14 - 35
some dates with slash: 24/45 AD
some CE dates with slash: 24/45 CE
another example: AD 34/35
14 - 35 AD
14 - 35 CE
CE 14 - 35
CE 35
23 AD
25 CE
another date: 345 CE something
Decades: 520s BC
120's BCE
520s CE
520's CE
540s AD
540's AD
Centuries:
1st century BC
2nd century BCE
3rd and 2nd centuries BC
3rd and 2nd c. BC
3rd and 2nd centuries BCE
3rd and 2nd c. BCE
1st century AD
2nd century CE
third century AD
fifth century CE
1st and 2nd centuries AD
1st and 2nd c. AD
1st and 2nd centuries CE
1st and 2nd c. CE
first and second centuries AD
second and third centuries CE
1st/2nd centuries CE
1st/2nd centuries AD
Millennia:
1st millennium BC
2nd millennium BCE
3rd and 2nd millennia BC
3rd and 2nd millennia BCE
1st millennium AD
2nd millennium CE
first millennium AD
third millennium CE
2nd and 3rd millennia CE
2nd and 3rd millennia AD
first and second millennia CE
first and second millennia AD
2nd/3rd millennia CE
2nd/3rd millennia AD