The truth is that the Roman Republic named its years by the names of the two consuls who were ruling that year. The two consuls were kind of like co-presidents. So 50 BC was actually “the year of Paullus and Marcellus”. In theory always equal, though they would tend to share power by swapping out one month each.
I explain this because of another fun fact. In 59 BC Julius Caesar and Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus were elected consul, “the year of Caesar and Bibulus”. But in March that year, Caesar’s supporters assaulted Bibulus and forced him to back down from a significant policy. After that he retreated from public and was barely seen all year. It became known as “the year of Julius and Caesar”.
toynbee@lemmy.world 22 hours ago
When I was a kid I read a story - possibly Encyclopedia Brown? - wherein a counterfeiter got caught trying to sell a counterfeit coin labeled “50 B.C.” or similar. They got caught because the coin manufacturer wouldn’t have known it was B.C.
Lemmy has unlocked a lot of childhood memories I didn’t know I had and this is one of them.
Mickey7@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
that’s a good story and a testament to how dumb some people can be
FryHyde@lemmy.zip 15 hours ago
I mean… it’s not really a testament to anything. Encyclopedia Brown is a fictional children’s detective series