771 BC

Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
771 BC in various calendars
Gregorian calendar771 BC
DCCLXX BC
Ancient Egypt eraXXIII dynasty, 110
Ancient Greek era2nd Olympiad, year 2
Assyrian calendar3980
Balinese saka calendarN/A
Bengali calendar−1363
Berber calendar180
Buddhist calendar−226
Burmese calendar−1408
Byzantine calendar4738–4739
Chinese calendar己巳年 (Earth Snake)
1926 or 1866
     to 
庚午年 (Metal Horse)
1927 or 1867
Coptic calendar−1054 – −1053
Discordian calendar396
Ethiopian calendar−778 – −777
Hebrew calendar2990–2991
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat−714 – −713
 - Shaka SamvatN/A
 - Kali Yuga2330–2331
Holocene calendar9230
Iranian calendar1392 BP – 1391 BP
Islamic calendar1435 BH – 1434 BH
Javanese calendarN/A
Julian calendarN/A
Korean calendar1563
Minguo calendar2682 before ROC
民前2682年
Nanakshahi calendar−2238
Thai solar calendar−228 – −227
Tibetan calendar阴土蛇年
(female Earth-Snake)
−644 or −1025 or −1797
     to 
阳金马年
(male Iron-Horse)
−643 or −1024 or −1796


Events

  • End of the Western Zhou Dynasty in China as Western barbarian tribes sack the capital Hao. The King Zhou you wang is killed. Crown Prince Ji Yi Jiu escapes to the East where he will reign as Zhou ping wang.

Births

Romulus and Remus


Deaths

  • Zhou you wang, King of the Zhou Dynasty of China.
gollark: Anyway, the generality of this solution and the fact that they'll probably keep the exact details private for "security"-through-obscurity reasons also means that, as I have written here (https://osmarks.net/osbill/) in a blog post tangentially mentioning it, someone could just feed it hashes for, say, anti-government memes and find out who is saving those.
gollark: Although I suppose that *someone* probably keeps the originals around in case they have to change the hashing algorithm.
gollark: It's trickier on images (see how PyroBot does it...) but not impossible. (since you want moderately fuzzy matching, unlike SHA256 and such, which will produce an entirely different hash if a single bit is flipped)
gollark: Through the magic of cryptography, you can condense arbitrarily big files down to a fixed-length fingerprint and check if that matches, with basically-zero false positive risk.
gollark: Hashes of it.

References

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