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BC stands for Before the Common Era- Common era starts . You would count 15 years to 1 AD. If your question is how many years from 15BC and the first day of the year 1AD your answer would be 15 years.
When trying to calculate ages remember that there is no year 0 AD/BC- it goes straight from 1BC to 1AD, so he lived for 5 years before the change and 33 years after so he would be 38 years old total.
The sixth century BC:1BC - 100BC = 1st century BC;101BC - 200BC = 2nd century BC;201BC - 300BC = 3rd century BC...and so on:501BC - 600BC = 6th century BC.Remember that there was no 0 A.D., so the first century BC ended with 1BC, swiftly followed by the first century AD that started with 1AD.
AD stands for "anno Domini" BC stands for "before Christ"
33 years i believe ============ No. There is no interval at all from B.C. to A.D., not even a year zero. The concept of a mathematical zero had not been developed.
The year that comes before 1AD is 1BC. there's no 0 (Zero) AD.
1ad
1ad
1AD
1AD.
1AD to 100AD.
Yes, the first year of our current systems was 1AD. There was no year zero. Zero is nothing, so it cannot have something attached to it. 1BC preceded 1AD. There was no year in between these two. It is just like there is no day between the last day of one month and the first day of the next month. Right from the 1st of January 1AD we were in the year 1AD though the year was not complete until it ended. Your starting point of zero was at the very beginning of the year. The year prior to that zero point was the year immediately before it, so there is no intervening year. We went from 1BC to 1AD, not from 1BC to year 0 to 1AD.
2009.
It is: 99 BC
The first century AD consists of the years 1AD to 100AD.
The 1st of January 1AD.
1AD is first.