No, 356 BCE is earlier.
200 years.
BC is the same as BCE. From 200 BCE to 50BC is 150 years.
no it was notAnswer:The earliest record of gold was in Egyptian hieroglyphs from as early as 2600 BCE. We do not know how much earlier in prehistoric times it was discovered.
As cursive writing was only invented in the 9 th Century BCE, our records are limited for earlier on. We have brief inscriptions in Egypt and Mesopotamia from the second and third millennia BCE, but nothing earlier, though the archaeological evidence and our knowledge of the way human beings act tell us that there were endless battles in the previous millennia. So the answer to the question has to be 'We don't know'.Asking questions about first, last, biggest, smallest etc is rather unproductive as someone can usually think of something earlier, later etc etc. It is better to concentrate on what happened and why.
The Persian Empire lasted from approximately 550 BCE to 330 BCE, which totals around 220 years. In contrast, Egypt's Middle Kingdom is typically dated from about 2055 BCE to 1650 BCE, lasting around 405 years. Therefore, the Persian Empire existed for about 185 years less than Egypt's Middle Kingdom.
born in circa 350 BCE said to be 356 BCE
200 years.
The term has been in use at least since 1600 BCE, perhaps earlier than that.
Remembering that there was no year zero, there were 399 years between 200 BCE and 200 CE.
Third century BCE
200 years.
6300
The roman numeral of Alexander the Great is Alexander III [356-323 BCE]
301
BC is the same as BCE. From 200 BCE to 50BC is 150 years.
2000 BCE is before 200 BCE is the correct answer. A timeline works like so: the "I" represents the birth of Christ, which is the event which separates BCE and CE. From the "I" forward is where we are now. The numbers increase 0 to 2011. From the "I" backwards the number decreases 0 to (whenever the world began). Therefore 2000 BC come before 200BC. BCE_____________________________I___________________________________CE
540 BCE. In years BCE (BC), the years count backward until the year 1 BCE is reached. The year 1 CE (AD) immediately follows 1 BCE, and begins counting upward; there is no year 0.