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.
27 bc- ad 476/1453
It is in the first century BC.
199 to 100bc The first year of the 2nd century BC was 200 BC, and the last year was 101 BC.
The century for 561 bc, or more correctly 561 BC (also, BC is sometimes termed BCE) is: The 6th century BC
No one sacked Rome in 476 BC. Rome was sacked by the Senone Gauls in 390 BC
476 BC
27 bc- ad 476/1453
The year 340 BC is classified as the 4th century BC.
The western half of Rome falls
500 bc to 476 ad
It's in the ninth century BC.
The 10th century BC is older than the 3rd century BC. The 10th century BC spans the years 1000 to 901 BC, while the 3rd century BC covers the years 300 to 201 BC. Therefore, the 10th century BC predates the 3rd century BC by several centuries.
It is in the middle of the 8th century BC. The years 1 to 100 BC (inclusive) are the 1st century BC. 101 to 200 are the 2nd century BC 201 to 300 are the 3rd century BC 301 to 400 are the 4th century BC 401 to 500 are the 5th century BC 501 to 600 are the 6th century BC 601 to 700 are the 7th century BC 701 to 800 are the 8th century BC . . . and so on.
The 10th century BC.
Rome was was said to have been founded in 753 BC. Her imperial expansion started in the late 4th century BC and early 3rd century BC. Historian use 476 BC as the conventional date for the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire. In this year the last emperor of this part of this empire, Romulus Augustus, was deposed.
3 BC falls in the 1st century BC. The 1st century BC spans from 100 BC to 1 BC, with the year 1 BC being the last year of that century. Thus, 3 BC is the third year of the 1st century BC.
86 BC is the first century BC (Before Christ). BC is a designation used to label or number years in the Julian and Gregorian calendars that precede the year 1 AD (Anno Domini which is Latin for "in the year of the Lord").The centuries in relation to 86 BC are as follows: 7th century BC 6th century BC 5th century BC 4th century BC 3rd century BC 2nd century BC 1st century BC (86 BC)