january1st 1 A.D now this is the correct answer=D
January 1, 0AD
The day that comes after December 31 1BCE is December 30th, because the years went down not up and that includes months. The start of AD would be, January 1 AD1. Hope this sums it up!
the day that came after December 31, 1 BC was a new millenium and not zero because there was no zero in milleniums, centuries, decades, or years
1bc
1 AD came after 1 BC.
Neither, because there is no year zero in the BC/AD calendar. After the year 1BC, the year AD1 starts. There is a zero point, at midnight on 31 December, 1BC, but that point has no duration, any more than midnight tonight will have any duration. As the clock ticks past midnight, the next day begins immediately. Same applies to years, and same applies to BC and AD.
No. AD started immediately after BC. There was no year zero. So after 1BC came 1AD.
Yes - there was NO 'year zero' - we went from 1BC to 1AD. In the western calendar, the years are calculated from a year called "1", although in that year it wasn't known as that. It was calculated many years later by trying to work out when Jesus Christ was born, but errors were made in the calculation, so it is probable He was born about 4BC. Around that time years were named according to a Roman system. The Muslim calendar, and the Chinese Calendar and many others adopt different baselines for naming years.
1bc
year 1bc
1bc
That could be the year 1BC.
1552BC, of courseTime scale:2000BC ... 1000BC ...500BC ... 1BC (Christ is born here ;)) 1 .. 500 ... 1990 2000... 2010
In the year 1bc in the land of penis by barney the purple dinosaur