No. The modern calender we use now was set several hundred years after Jesus died. They calculated back to the year Jesus was born to set the beginning of the years. Jesus died in the year 33 according to the calender that we use.
The 100th calendar year to start on January 1 is the year 100. Calendar years are counted from year 1 AD onward, so the first calendar year is 1 AD, the second is 2 AD, and this continues sequentially. Therefore, the 100th year in this sequence is 100 AD.
1. The year Christ was crucified then ressurected.
The year was AD 1.
Quite simply, due to the importance of Jesus Christ for Christians, it has been decided to start counting years from the (estimated) year of His birth.By the way, the way years are counted traditionally, there is no such year as "0 AD". The year before 1 AD (1 after Christ) is the year 1 BC (1 before Christ).
1 AD came after 1 BC.
It did not start at 0 AD. There was no year zero. Zero is nothing, whereas a year is something, so you cannot have something that is numbered zero. So you have 1 BC followed directly by 1 AD. It is just like at the end of the month there is no day zero between the last day of the month and the first day of the next month.
Year 1
There are no years in "0 BC" or "0 AD" in the traditional Gregorian calendar; the calendar transitions directly from 1 BC to 1 AD. Therefore, 2 BC is simply one year before 1 BC, making it a single year in the timeline. Thus, 2 BC represents one year, and it is the second year before the start of the AD era.
It did not start at year zero. There was no year zero. Zero is nothing, so you cannot give it as a value to anything. A year is something, so it cannot be numbered zero. After 1 BC came 1 AD not Zero. It is just like the last day of one month is immediately followed by the first day of the next month. There is no day zero in between. There was no year zero between 1 BC and 1 AD.
yes. in AD 1 and 1 BC
Add the two year values together and subtract 1, to allow for the fact that there was no year zero. So from 1 BC to 1 AD is 1 year. 1 + 1 - 1 = 1. From 10 BC to 40 AD is 49. 10 + 40 - 1 = 49.
No "year 0" exists. The calendar goes from the year 1 BC to the year 1 AD. Like so:December 30, 1 BCDecember 31, 1 BCJanuary 1, 1 ADJanuary 2, 1 AD