455 BC

Year 455 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Vaticanus and Cicurinus (or, less frequently, year 299 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 455 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
455 BC in various calendars
Gregorian calendar455 BC
CDLIV BC
Ab urbe condita299
Ancient Egypt eraXXVII dynasty, 71
- PharaohArtaxerxes I of Persia, 11
Ancient Greek era81st Olympiad, year 2
Assyrian calendar4296
Balinese saka calendarN/A
Bengali calendar−1047
Berber calendar496
Buddhist calendar90
Burmese calendar−1092
Byzantine calendar5054–5055
Chinese calendar乙酉年 (Wood Rooster)
2242 or 2182
     to 
丙戌年 (Fire Dog)
2243 or 2183
Coptic calendar−738 – −737
Discordian calendar712
Ethiopian calendar−462 – −461
Hebrew calendar3306–3307
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat−398 – −397
 - Shaka SamvatN/A
 - Kali Yuga2646–2647
Holocene calendar9546
Iranian calendar1076 BP – 1075 BP
Islamic calendar1109 BH – 1108 BH
Javanese calendarN/A
Julian calendarN/A
Korean calendar1879
Minguo calendar2366 before ROC
民前2366年
Nanakshahi calendar−1922
Thai solar calendar88–89
Tibetan calendar阴木鸡年
(female Wood-Rooster)
−328 or −709 or −1481
     to 
阳火狗年
(male Fire-Dog)
−327 or −708 or −1480

Events

By place

Greece

  • Athens, under Athenian general Tolmides, sends 100 ships around the Peloponnesus and they set fire to the Spartan naval base at Gythion. As a result, Athens gains the agreement of the Achaean cities to join the Delian League. Athenian forces then go on to attack the Spartan allies on the Corinthian Gulf. Athens is now able to confine Sparta to the southern Peloponnesus.
  • The Athenians suffer a severe defeat in Egypt at the hands of the Persians. After being cut off in the Nile Delta, the Athenian fleet is defeated, and the Athenian army retreats across the Sinai Desert to Byblos before its remnants are rescued. The Egyptian rebel Inaros is crucified by the Persians. The Athenians decide against any further military activity in Egypt.

China

By topic

Literature

Births

Deaths

gollark: This isn't a paradox. It can't simulate arbitrarily large CGoL grids.
gollark: Nope! Many languages, abstractly speaking, *don't* have limited memory. Their implementations might, though.
gollark: No, Turing completeness means it can simulate any Turing machine. It *can't* do that if it has limited memory.
gollark: I don't know exactly what its instruction set is like. But if it has finite-sized addresses, it can probably access finite amounts of memory, and thus is not Turing-complete.
gollark: *Languages* can be, since they often don't actually specify memory limits, implementations do.

References

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