456 BC

Year 456 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Lactuca and Caeliomontanus (or, less frequently, year 298 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 456 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:
456 BC in various calendars
Gregorian calendar456 BC
CDLV BC
Ab urbe condita298
Ancient Egypt eraXXVII dynasty, 70
- PharaohArtaxerxes I of Persia, 10
Ancient Greek era81st Olympiad (victor
Assyrian calendar4295
Balinese saka calendarN/A
Bengali calendar−1048
Berber calendar495
Buddhist calendar89
Burmese calendar−1093
Byzantine calendar5053–5054
Chinese calendar甲申年 (Wood Monkey)
2241 or 2181
     to 
乙酉年 (Wood Rooster)
2242 or 2182
Coptic calendar−739 – −738
Discordian calendar711
Ethiopian calendar−463 – −462
Hebrew calendar3305–3306
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat−399 – −398
 - Shaka SamvatN/A
 - Kali Yuga2645–2646
Holocene calendar9545
Iranian calendar1077 BP – 1076 BP
Islamic calendar1110 BH – 1109 BH
Javanese calendarN/A
Julian calendarN/A
Korean calendar1878
Minguo calendar2367 before ROC
民前2367年
Nanakshahi calendar−1923
Thai solar calendar87–88
Tibetan calendar阳木猴年
(male Wood-Monkey)
−329 or −710 or −1482
     to 
阴木鸡年
(female Wood-Rooster)
−328 or −709 or −1481

Events

By place

Greece

Births

Deaths

gollark: ?
gollark: What if it makes, say, 100 transactions for 1 currency unit to get around that?
gollark: Basically payment is very hard.
gollark: You need the PIN and card, but I don't know if there's anything stopping it from displaying "please authorize a £10 transaction" then actually *making* a £100 one.
gollark: Real payment systems partly get around this by making the chip on the card itself do some cryptography, so it can't make payments without the card being physically there still, but I don't think there's actually anything other than trust, the law, and "security" through obscurity stopping a payment thing from deducting more money than it should?

References

  1. Baker, Rosalie F.; III, Charles F. Baker (1997). Ancient Greeks: Creating the Classical Tradition. Oxford University Press, US. p. 108. ISBN 9780195099409.
  2. "Ancient History in depth: Ancient Greek Olympics Gallery". BBC History. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  3. Xu, Guobin; Chen, Yanhui; Xu, Lianhua (2018). Understanding Western Culture: Philosophy, Religion, Literature and Organizational Culture. Springer. p. 150. ISBN 9789811081507.
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