C.E. or c.e.
“common era”; an attempt to use a neutral term for the period traditionally labeled “AD” (Latin anno domini or “year of the Lord”) by Christians. Thus, 1992 CE is identical to AD 1992.
2006-07-20 10:45:21
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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CE means "Common Era" while BCE means "Before Common Era." Its sort of a politically correct way of saying BC (i.e., "Before Christ") and AD, plus it recognizes, I suppose, that Christ was likely NOT born in 1 AD or 1 BC.
Thus 1600 C.E. means the year 1600, i.e., 406 years ago. 1600 BCE would be the equivalent of 1600 BC in the older, less politically correct usage.
2006-07-20 17:53:53
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answer #2
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answered by DR 5
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It's the same as 1600 AD or 1600. CE stands for Common Era. (AD stands for Anno Domini which means in the year of our lord - referring to Jesus, of course).
2006-07-20 17:50:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Its the same as 1600 AD, just a non-religous way to say "Common Era" versus "Anno Domini" (year of the Lord).
2006-07-21 04:17:19
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answer #4
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answered by Ken W 3
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Year 1600 of the Christian Era - roughly 400 years ago.
2006-07-20 18:52:38
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answer #5
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answered by robert43041 7
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The "Common Era" (i.e. nowadays)
If you clicked on a link to this page it's probably because you're wondering what "CE" or "BCE" means. "CE" means "Common Era" (or alternatively, "Christian Era") and refers to the same dates as "AD" or "Anno Domini" does. (Except that "AD" goes before the year number and "CE" goes after it: e.g. "AD 1996" is the same year as "1996 CE".) Why does it matter? Why invent another abbreviation? Well, an awfull lot of people don't realize what AD stands for or means. "Anno Domini" is Latin for "in the year of Our Lord", referring to Our Lord Jesus Christ. That is, "AD 1996" literally means "in the 1996'th year since the birth of the Christ." Now not all the world is Christian, so it makes no sense for a Jew, a Moslem, a Hindu, a Witch, a Druid, or an atheist to refer to the date as being in the year of "their Lord" when they don't follow him.
So "CE" is a more considerate way of labelling dates in the Gregorian calendar without rubbing non-Christian's noses in the fact that so much of the world is using a calendar based on the alleged birth-year of the man we Christians believe to be the Messiah. (Note that there are other calendars in use -- the Gregorian calendar is not universal. So there are plenty of people with their own perfectly good calendars who have to keep track of dates in our calendar so they can do international business, or just to communicate with the folks in their own neighbourhood if they live in a country that uses the Gregorian calendar.)
It's also more accurate for Christians, since today's best guesses as to when Jesus of Nazareth was born differ by four to six years from the best guesses the folks who invented our calendar had. So it is highly unlikely that Jesus was born in the year 1 CE. Which means that if one insists on calling that year AD 1, one is probably off by about five years. Personally, being a bit of a traditionalist, I'll probably continue using AD on personal correspondence with other Christians or folks who I know won't care and on certain published (or web-published or posted) stuff intended primarly for a Christian audience or intended to present an intensely personal and religious topic. Even though I know it's off by four to six years. I'm going to try to consistently use CE the rest of the time (when I bother to use either), and if I slip up I expect to be called on it so I can fix it.
Before Common Era (i.e. a loooong time ago)
As most people know, "BC" stands for "before Christ", and is therefore subject to the exact same problems as "AD". That is to say, for non-Christians it's somewhat inconsiderate and for Christians it's wrong by four to six years. So the common alternative is "BCE", or "Before the Common Era", which has the wonderful advantage of looking a whole lot like "BC", which it replaces.
Is this "Politically Correct"?
Well, it's polite and it's more accurate. I don't think anybody wants to go around changing all the dates on medieval tax records to pretend our ancestors used religiously-neutral language, or anything like that. It's just more considerate towards non-Christians, and it means that Christians discussing the actual date of the birth of Jesus don't have to say silly things like "Christ was probably born around 4 years Before Christ." Instead we can say, "... around the year 4 BCE, possibly as early as 6 BCE."
So never mind the "political correctness" angle -- just look at it in terms of politeness, consideration, and accuracy.
2006-07-20 17:48:24
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answer #6
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answered by its_ok_im_here69 3
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1600 common era...
bc meant before christ
ad meant after death (this was all in latin)
it has become passe...
now the common phrasing is bce before common era and ce common era...what we are in now.
2006-07-20 17:46:37
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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