Century Century Comment Category="Ancient military unit types"Category="Units of time"This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality

A century is one hundred of something, usually one hundred consecutive years.

This page is about centuries as units of time. For other meanings of the term, please see Century (disambiguation).

The oldest dating systems were regnal, and considered the date as an ordinal, not a cardinal number. Thus, one speaks of the first year of the reign of King so-and-so. Obviously, the century problem does not arise in such systems. Somewhat later, systems arose dating from the founding of a dynasty, city or religion, and these continued ordinal, rather than cardinal, counting. Thus Ab urbe condita counts the Year 1 as the founding of Rome; Anno Domini as the first full year of Jesus Christ's life; the Islamic calendar as the year of the Hejira, so it is also latinized as Anno Hejira.

More modern systems of dating, (such as the astronomical calendar, see Proleptic Gregorian calendar) begin with a year zero. In these cardinal dating systems, it is perfectly logical to use 0 to 99 as the first century, and to regard 2000 as the first year of the twenty-first century.

This encyclopedia has a page for each century; see Centuries.

See also

Useful Source

"The Battle of the Centuries", Ruth Freitag, U.S. Government Printing Office. Available from the Superintendent of Documents, PO Box 371954, Pittsburgh, PA 15250- 7954. Cite stock no. 030-001-00153-9.