as
Anno
Domini Nostri
Iesu
(Jesu)
Christi ("In the Year of Our Lord Jesus Christ"). Anno
Domini (AD or A.D.)
and Before Christ (BC or B.C.)
are designations used to label or number the years used with the Julian/Gregorian Calendars. The term Anno
Domini is Latin but when translated it is In the year of the Lord/As in the year of the year of the Lord. It's sometimes Specified more clearly as Anno
Domini Nostri
(Christi) Iesu
(Jesu)
translated from latin
this means (In the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ..... Hope that this helped
no it was not called year 0 it was called AD 1
The year 1013 AD.
In the year AD 813 (also called the year 813 CE).
Nero Ceasar is the leader.
The year was AD 1.
It's called CHUGJUG by FAMILY OF THE YEAR :)
any year after AD 800 and before AD 901
any year after AD 800 and before AD 901
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AD is after and BC before
The year before the year One AD is called the year One BC. (There was no year zero.) We call it that now, according to the Gregorian Calendar. At the time it was called different names in different places where other calendars were used. This means that from the year 5 BC to the year 5 AD, for example, was 9 years, not 10 as you might expect if there had been a year zero. And today, there are people who use CE (Common Era) for the AD years and BCE (Before the Common Era) for the BC years.
There is no designated last year for the AD calendar. AD takes it year by year and keeps going that way. It is not like the Mayan Calendar. So there is no designated last year in the AD calendar. Nobody knows. It could be this year. AD will just keep on going until the end.