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I am trying to figure out the Julian (ancient Roman) calendar date (year only-no month or day) with the year 24 A.D. (or CE)? An archaeologist friend suggested one website but when I tried to calculate it, it gave me the number of days (like 2, 475,890 days)!
What I'm trying to figure is if something happened in 24 A.D. (CE) what year would it be in the Julian calendar i.e. 24 AD = 478(?) Julian year. If someone could even show me where I can find an actual picture of a timeline, that would be great! Any help would be greatly appreciated...
Thanks.

2006-11-01 05:19:18 · 1 answers · asked by TheFlowerLady 5 in Arts & Humanities History

1 answers

Calendar converter:
http://www.calendarhome.com/converter/
more,
http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Time/ancient.html
http://webexhibits.org/calendars/calendar-ancient.html
http://webexhibits.org/calendars/year.html
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/astronomy/Calendar.html

2006-11-01 05:44:16 · answer #1 · answered by Jazz 3 · 0 0

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