49 BC

Year 49 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Lentulus and Marcellus (or, less frequently, year 705 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 49 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:
49 BC in various calendars
Gregorian calendar49 BC
XLVIII BC
Ab urbe condita705
Ancient Egypt eraXXXIII dynasty, 275
- PharaohCleopatra VII, 3
Ancient Greek era182nd Olympiad, year 4
Assyrian calendar4702
Balinese saka calendarN/A
Bengali calendar−641
Berber calendar902
Buddhist calendar496
Burmese calendar−686
Byzantine calendar5460–5461
Chinese calendar辛未年 (Metal Goat)
2648 or 2588
     to 
壬申年 (Water Monkey)
2649 or 2589
Coptic calendar−332 – −331
Discordian calendar1118
Ethiopian calendar−56 – −55
Hebrew calendar3712–3713
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat8–9
 - Shaka SamvatN/A
 - Kali Yuga3052–3053
Holocene calendar9952
Iranian calendar670 BP – 669 BP
Islamic calendar691 BH – 690 BH
Javanese calendarN/A
Julian calendarN/A
Korean calendar2285
Minguo calendar1960 before ROC
民前1960年
Nanakshahi calendar−1516
Seleucid era263/264 AG
Thai solar calendar494–495
Tibetan calendar阴金羊年
(female Iron-Goat)
78 or −303 or −1075
     to 
阳水猴年
(male Water-Monkey)
79 or −302 or −1074

Events

By place and Date

Roman Republic

Births

Deaths

gollark: Much more readily available, very multipurpose, still pretty fast.
gollark: Arguably you would be better off with random microcontroller hardware.
gollark: If you're emulating a CPU on your FPGA, then an actual hardware CPU is going to easily beat it.
gollark: I think a more sensible model is multicore CPUs for general tasks and FPGAs doing dedicated acceleration things which they're actually good at.
gollark: I guess you could have one FPGA per running task or something but… why?

References

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