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Can Someone Put These Bce/ce Dates In Order

Can someone help me put these dates from BCE in order from earliest to latest?

5th century BCE
350 CE
500 CE
ninth century CE
819 CE
845 CE

I put ninth century ahead of the 800 CE dates since it encompasses all of the 800s. You might want to put it last depending upon why you're doing this.

How do i put these dates in order?

c.e. (common era) is the same as A.D. (anna domini), BCE (before commone era) is the same as bc.

44 B.C.E

509 BCE
264-241 BCE
218-202 BCE
149-146 BCE
60 B.C.E
44 B.C.E
43 BCE
31 BCE
27 BC-180 C.E
70-73 CE (actually within 27 bc - 180 ce)
312 C.E
330 C.E
476 C.E

Order of these BCE and CE dates?

No, I will not. But I will tell you how to do it....

The BCE dates will come first. They will start with the largest number and count "down" towards the years "1 BCE". So the earliest date would be 3000 BCE.

Once you reach the year "1 BCE", then the order reverse and it counts "up" from "1 CE" until it reaches the year 2012 CE in which we live.

To help you remeber the order, realized that the "B" in "BCE" stands for "Before CE". So all the "BCE" numbers come "Before" the "CE" numbers. And count down towards the start of "CE".

Can someone put these in order for me?

Mahavira, the 24th Jain Tirthankara (teacher or god) (6th Century BCE) was not the founder of Jainism. Earliest Historically dated teacher of Jainism is Parsva (23rd Tirthankara) dated 9th Century BCE. Jainism gives dates of other 22 Tirthankara as millions of years and hence cannot be reliable dated from Jain sources. But Vedas (1500 BCE) mention few of the Jain Tirthankaras. And some scholars believe that Jainism had some links with Indus Valley Civilisation (3000 BCE). As far as Hinduism is concerned, it is derieved from vedic religion (1500 BCE).

Hope that helps.

Who can put these dates in chronological order?

1. Roman Republic (508 BCE - 31 BCE) 167 BC - Records show 150,000 slaves sold in one day this year. Prisoners of war from conquered territories in France, Syria, North Africa. Largest instance of slavery in history
2. Greece (1200 BCE) - First instance of slavery in Greece, included prisoners of war. Essential for the system to work. Legally protected from abuse, but had no rights. Could buy freedom. Even the Athenian democracy had slaves.
3. Hittite Code (1400 BCE) - Slaves are inferior, but still considered human.
4. Israelites in Egypt (1500 BCE) - Old Testament records. Old Testament does not condemn slavery. Israelites work on buildings in fields.
5. Code of Hammurabi (1800 BCE) - Slaves could own property, marry, purchase freedom.
6. Sumer (3500 BCE) - First records of slavery are found in Sumer.
7. Islam in Africa (650 CE) - With the spread of Islam into Africa, slaves were bought, sold, and shipped from western Africa to northern Africa. The Koran, like the Bible, does not condemn slavery.
8. Crusades (1100 CE to 1200 CE) - Christians and Muslims enslave each other during wars. The Koran, like the Bible, does not condemn slavery.
9. The New World (1494 CE) - Native Americans are enslaved.
10. The New World (1503 CE) - First slaves sent to New World.

Please help me put these dates in order ? bce bc ad ?

BC = Before Christ
BCE = Before Common Era
AD = Anno Domini (In the year of our Lord)
CE = Common Era

From oldest to most recent...

4000 BCE
3700 BCE
1795-1750 BC
1279 BC
313 AD

History. Can someone put these dates in order Please?

735 B.C.E Traditional founding of Rome
494 B.C.E The first showdown between the plebeians and patricians came
287 B.C.E passage of lex Hortensia ended Struggle of the Orders
216 B.C.E blow at Cannae, won by Hannibal
202 B.C.Enear the town of Zama, Scipio defeated Hannibal
146 B.C.E after defeating Carthage, the Romans turned east.
133 B.C.E the king of Pergamum in Asia Minor willed his kingdom to Rome when he died.
133 B.C.E Tiberius Gracchus was elected tribune.
88 B.C.E soldiers looked to their commanders until Roman general Sulla made himself dictator.
59 B.C.E Pompey joined in a political alliance called the First Triumvirate.
44 B.C.E a group of conspirators assassinated Caesar and set off another round of civil war.
27 B.C.E the senate voted Octavian the name Augustus for his success
68 C.E Nero's inpet rule led to military rebellion and widespread disruption.
117 C.E. Hadrian became emperor , put on an organized, official basis.
226 C.E Parthians fell to the Sasanids
337 C.E. Constantine died a Christian
380 C.E the emperor Theodosius made Christianity the official reliogion of the the Roman Empire.
31 B.C.E Octavian defeated the combined forces of Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium in Greece
44 B.C.E Assassination of Julius Caesar
31 B.C.E Triumph of Augustus
380 B.C.E Christianity the official religion of the empire
31 B.C.E the emperor Augustus restored peace...extending Roman power and law as far east as the Euphrates River and created the structure called "Roman Empire".

750 B.C.E is dated about the Arrival of Etruscans

753 B.C.E Romulus and Remus founded Italy

390 B.C.E Roman setback when the Celts swept aside a Roman army and sacked Rome.

Can you put these dates in order for me please?? im bad with dates?

Cuneiform - 2450 BCE

Buddha - 563 BCE

Mayan Calendar - 200 BCE - CE 900

Hernando Cortes - 1590 CE

There is no date for "Jesus" - his existence has not been proven by credible sources.

What is the order of BCE, CE and AD on a timeline?

BC = Before Christ = any time before year 0
AD = Anno Domini (In the Year of our Lord) = any year after year 0 (year he was born)

Nowadays, to be PC and not Christian, AD = CE or Common Era
and
BC = BCE = Before Common Era

That's what historians do - they study things, they do their research, they pinpoint and cross-reference the milestones, and they come up with the estimates.If someone is said to be born right after some event, let's say that battle, and then this person becomes famous and is said to have been aged 25 in year when some other event happened and which have been at the same time as another verifiable event, you do a simple calculation and come up with a number for the year.Then, you just backtrack those events, referencing similar markings/milestones for almost everything else; so when a certain piece of literature or some other scientific/artistic work had been completed some years before that Year Zero point, it's again a simple calculation.There are no dates in terms of a month and a year since the calendar standards have varied widely across countries/cultures/geographies, so it's just a year (365 day) approximation.If, by some chance, the battle happened a year later or a year earlier, I don't think we should go about discrediting the historian(s) who had put so much effort in their research.It's been over 2000 years since that Year Zero, and the most important thing is to learn from those battles (aka mistakes) so not to let the history repeat itself.

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