Common Era (also Current Era
or Christian Era),
abbreviated as CE, is an alternative designation for the calendar era originally introduced by 6th-century Christian monk Dionysius Exiguus, traditionally identified with ''Anno Domini'' (abbreviated AD).
Dates before the year 1 CE are indicated by the use of BCE, short for Before the Common Era (likewise with CE, also Before the Current Era or Before the Christian Era). Neither designation uses a year zero,
and the two designations are numerically equivalent; thus " CE" corresponds to "AD " and "399 BCE" corresponds to "399 BC".
The expression "Common Era" can be found as early as 1708 in English, and traced back to Latin usage among European Christians to 1615, as ''vulgaris aerae'', and to 1635 in English as ''Vulgar Era''. At those times, the expressions were all used interchangeably with "Christian Era", and "vulgar" meant "not regal" rather than "crudely indecent". Use of the CE abbreviation was introduced by Jewish academics in the mid-19th century. Since the later 20th century, use of CE and BCE has been popularized in academic and scientific publications, and more generally by publishers emphasizing secularism or sensitivity to non-Christians.
The Gregorian calendar, and the year-numbering system associated with it, is the calendar system with most widespread use in the world today. For decades, it has been the ''de facto'' global standard, recognized by international institutions such as the United Nations and the Universal Postal Union.
The CE/BCE notation has been adopted by numerous authors and publishers wishing to be
"neutral" or "sensitive to non-Christians"
because it does not explicitly make use of religious titles for Jesus, such as "Christ" and ''Domin-'' ("Lord"), which are used in the BC/AD notation, nor does it give implicit expression to the Christian creed that Jesus was the Christ.
Among the reasons given by those who oppose the use of Common Era notation is that it is selective as other aspects of the Western calendar have origins in various belief systems (e.g., Thursday is named for Thor), and claims that its propagation is the result of secularization, anti-supernaturalism, religious pluralism, and political correctness.
The year numbering system used with Common Era notation was devised by the Christian monk
Dionysius Exiguus in the year 525 to replace the
Era of Martyrs system, because he did not wish to continue the memory of a tyrant who persecuted Christians. He attempted to number years from an event he referred to as the
Incarnation of
Jesus,
although scholars today generally agree that he miscalculated by a small number of years.
Dionysius labeled the column of the Easter table in which he introduced the new era "''Anni Domini Nostri Jesu Christi.''"
Numbering years in this manner became more widespread with its usage by
Bede in England in 731. Bede also introduced the practice of dating years before the supposed year of birth
of Jesus, and the practice of not using a year
zero.
In 1422,
Portugal became the last
Western European country to
switch to the system begun by Dionysius.
The term "Common Era" is traced back in English to its appearance as "Vulgar Era"
to distinguish it from the
regnal dating systems typically used in national law.
The first use of the Latin equivalent (''vulgaris aerae'')
discovered so far was in a 1615 book by
Johannes Kepler.
Kepler uses it again in a 1616 table of
ephemerides,
and again in 1617.
A 1635 English edition of that book has the title page in English – so far, the earliest-found usage of ''Vulgar Era'' in English.
A 1701 book edited by John LeClerc includes "Before Christ according to the Vulgar Æra, 6".
A 1716 book in English by Dean
Humphrey Prideaux says, "before the beginning of the vulgar æra, by which we now compute the years from his incarnation."
A 1796 book uses the term "vulgar era of the nativity".
The first so-far-discovered usage of "Christian Era" is as the Latin phrase ''aerae christianae'' on the title page of a 1584 theology book.
In 1649, the Latin phrase ''æræ Christianæ'' appeared in the title of an English almanac.
A 1652 ephemeris is the first instance so-far-found for English usage of "Christian Era".
The English phrase "common Era" appears at least as early as 1708,
and in a 1715 book on astronomy is used interchangeably with "Christian Era" and "Vulgar Era".
A 1759 history book uses ''common æra'' in a generic sense, to refer to the common era of the Jews.
The first-so-far found usage of the phrase "before the common era" is in a 1770 work that also uses ''common era'' and ''vulgar era'' as synonyms, in a translation of a book originally written in German.
The 1797 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica uses the terms ''vulgar era'' and ''common era'' synonymously.
In 1835, in his book ''Living Oracles'', Alexander Campbell, wrote: "The vulgar Era, or Anno Domini; the fourth year of Jesus Christ, the first of which was but eight days",
and also refers to the ''common era'' as a synonym for ''vulgar era'' with "the fact that our Lord was born on the 4th year before the vulgar era, called Anno Domini, thus making (for example) the 42d year from his birth to correspond with the 38th of the common era..."
The ''Catholic Encyclopedia'' (1909) used the terms "Christian, Vulgar or Common Era" interchangeably.
The phrase "common era", in lower case, also appeared in the 19th century in a ''generic'' sense, not necessarily to refer to the Christian Era, but to any system of dates in common use throughout a civilization. Thus, "the common era of the Jews",
"the common era of the Mahometans",
"common era of the world",
"the common era of the foundation of Rome".
When it did refer to the Christian Era, it was sometimes qualified, e.g., "common era of the Incarnation",
"common era of the Nativity",
or "common era of the birth of Christ".
An adapted translation of ''Common Era'' into Latin as ''Era Vulgaris'' was adopted in the 20th century by some followers of Aleister Crowley, and thus the abbreviation "e.v." or "EV" may sometimes be seen as a replacement for AD.
Although Jews have their own
Hebrew calendar, they often find it necessary to use the Gregorian Calendar as well.
Common Era notation has also been in use for Hebrew lessons for "more than a century".
As early as 1825, the abbreviation VE (for Vulgar Era) was in use among Jews to denote years on the Western calendar.
Some Jewish academics were already using the ''CE'' and ''BCE'' abbreviations by the mid-19th century, such as in 1856, when Rabbi and historian, Morris Jacob Raphall used the abbreviation in his book, ''Post-Biblical History of The Jews''.
The ratio of usage of BCE to BC,
CE to AD,
Common Era to ''Anno Domini'',
and Before Common Era to Before Christ
in books has changed dramatically between the years 1800 and 2008, particularly since 1980, with the CE-related variants becoming used more often.
Some academics in the fields of
theology,
education and
history have adopted CE and BCE notation, although there is some disagreement.
The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, which is the leading publishing body of
Jehovah's Witnesses, has been using CE and BCE exclusively in its publications (except in quotations) since ''
The Watchtower'' of 15 April 1964.
However, in ''The Watchtower—
Simplified English Edition'', "the year ...
before Christ" is used for dates before the common era; only "the year ..." is used for other dates.
More visible uses of Common Era notation have recently surfaced at major museums in the English-speaking world: The Smithsonian Institution prefers Common Era usage, though individual museums are not required to use it.
Furthermore, several style guides now prefer or mandate its usage.
Even some style guides for Christian churches prefer its use: for example, the Episcopal Diocese ''Maryland Church News''.
In the United States, the usage of the BCE/CE notation in textbooks is growing. Some publications have moved over to using it exclusively. For example, the 2007 World Almanac was the first edition to switch over to the BCE/CE usage, ending a 138-year usage of the traditional BC/AD dating notation. It is used by the College Board in its history tests,
and by the Norton Anthology of English Literature.
Others have taken a different approach. The US-based History Channel uses BCE/CE notation in articles on non-Christian religious topics such as Jerusalem and Judaism.
In June 2006, the Kentucky State School Board reversed its decision that would have included the designations BCE and CE as part of state law, leaving education of students about these concepts a matter of discretion at the local level.
In 2002, the BCE/CE notation system was introduced into the school curriculum in the UK.
In 2011 in the UK, the BBC announced it would be using CE/BCE notation on its programmes and website, permitting usage of either notation.
Numerous British universities, museums, historians, and book retailers have either dropped BC and AD entirely or are using it alongside the BCE/CE notation.
Also in 2011, media reports suggested that the BC/AD notation in Australian school textbooks would be replaced by BCE/CE notation. The story became national news and drew opposition from some politicians and church leaders. Weeks after the story broke, the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority denied the rumour and stated that the BC/AD notation would remain, with CE and BCE as an optional suggested learning activity.
Historically, the use of CE in Jewish scholarship was motivated by the desire to avoid the implicit "Our Lord" in the abbreviation ''AD''. Although other aspects of dating systems are based in Christian origins too, AD stands out as a particularly direct reference to Jesus as Lord.
Proponents of the Common Era notation assert that the use of BCE/CE shows sensitivity to those who use the same year numbering system as the one that originated with and is currently used by Christians, but who are not themselves Christian.
Former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan argued, "[T]he Christian calendar no longer belongs exclusively to Christians. People of all faiths have taken to using it simply as a matter of convenience. There is so much interaction between people of different faiths and cultures – different civilizations, if you like – that some shared way of reckoning time is a necessity. And so the Christian Era has become the Common Era."
It has been noted that the label ''Anno Domini'' is arguably inaccurate; "scholars
generally believe that Christ was born some years before A.D. 1, the historical evidence is too sketchy to allow a definitive dating."
Some oppose the Common Era notation for explicitly religious reasons. Because the BC/AD notation is based on the traditional year of the conception or birth of
Jesus of Nazareth, removing reference to him in era notation is offensive to some Christians.
The
Southern Baptist Convention supports retaining the BC/AD abbreviations as "a reminder of the preeminence of Christ and His gospel in world history". The Southern Baptist Convention has criticized the use of BCE and CE as being the result of "secularization, anti-supernaturalism, religious pluralism, and political correctness" and encourages its members to "retain the traditional method of dating and avoid this revisionism".
There are also secular concerns. English language expert Kenneth G. Wilson speculated in his style guide that "if we do end by casting aside the A.D./B.C. convention, almost certainly some will argue that we ought to cast aside as well the conventional numbering system [that is, the method of numbering years] itself, given its Christian basis."
The short lived French Revolutionary Calendar, for example, began with the first year of the First French Republic and rejected the seven day week (with its connections to Genesis) for a ten day week.
Astrobiologist Duncan Steel argues further that if one is going to replace BC/AD with BCE/CE then one should reject all aspects of the dating system (including time of day, days of the week and months of the year), as they all have origins related to pagan, astrological, Jewish, or Christian beliefs. He rejects secular arguments against Christian-based BC/AD as selective. Steel makes note of the consistency of the Quaker system (now rarely used), which removed all such references.
Anthropologist Carol Delaney argues that the substitution of BC/AD to BCE/CE is merely a euphemism that conceals the political implications without modifying the actual source of contention.
Raimon Panikkar contends that using the designation BCE/CE is a "return... to the most bigoted Christian colonialism" towards non-Christians, who do not necessarily consider the time period following the beginning of the calendar to be a "common era".
Some critics assert that the use of identifiers which have common spellings is more ambiguous than the use of identifiers with divergent spellings. Both CE and BCE have in common the letters "CE", which is more likely to cause confusion, they claim, than identifiers with clearly different spelling.
According to a ''
Los Angeles Times'' report, it was a student's use of BCE/CE notation, inspired by its use within
Wikipedia, which prompted the history teacher
Andrew Schlafly to found
Conservapedia, a
cultural conservative wiki.
One of its "Conservapedia Commandments" is that users must always apply BC/AD notation, since its sponsors perceive BCE/CE notation to "deny the historical basis" of the dating system.
The abbreviation BCE, just as with BC, always follows the year number. Unlike AD, which traditionally precedes the year number, CE always follows the year number (if context requires that it be written at all).
Thus, the current year is written as in both notations (or, if further clarity is needed, as CE, or as AD ), and the year that
Socrates died is represented as 399 BCE (the same year that is represented by 399 BC in the BC/AD notation). The abbreviations are sometimes written with small capital letters, or with
full stops (e.g., "
BCE" or "C.E."). Style guides for academic texts on religion generally prefer BCE/CE to BC/AD.
The terms "Common Era", "''Anno Domini''", "Before the Common Era" and "Before Christ" in contemporary English can be applied to dates that rely on either the Julian calendar or the Gregorian calendar.
Modern dates are understood in the Western world to be in the Gregorian calendar, but for older dates writers should specify the calendar used. Dates in the Gregorian calendar in the Western world have always used the era designated in English as ''Anno Domini'' or ''Common Era''.
Several languages other than English also have both religious and non-religious ways of identifying the era used in dates. In some
communist states during the
Cold War period, usage of non-religious notation was mandated.
In Arabic, بعد الميلاد (After the Birth) corresponds to CE, while قبل الميلاد (Before the Birth) corresponds to BCE. The "Birth" referenced is that of Jesus. This system is in widespread use in all Arab countries, but is accompanied by the Hijri system. Dates are often given in both in that order. In Saudi Arabia, however, the Hijri System is predominant.
In the Chinese language, common era (公元, Gong yuan) has been predominantly used to refer to the western calendar without any religious connotation.
The
German Democratic Republic introduced the convention of ''v. u. Z.'' (''vor unserer Zeitrechnung'', before our chronology) and ''u. Z.'' (''unserer Zeitrechnung'', of our chronology) instead of ''v. Chr.'' (''vor Christus'', before Christ) and ''n. Chr.'' (''nach Christus/Christi Geburt'', after Christ/the Nativity of Christ); the use of this convention was already prescribed in
Nazi Germany.
:The use of these terms persists in contemporary German to some extent, differing regionally and ideologically. In Jewish contexts mostly "v. d. Z" ("vor der Zeitenwende") and "n. d. Z." ("nach der Zeitenwende") is used.
In Hungary, similarly to the Bulgarian case, ''i. e.'' (''időszámításunk előtt'', before our era) and ''i. sz.'' (''időszámításunk szerint'', according to our era) are still widely used instead of traditional ''Kr. e.'' (''Krisztus előtt'', Before Christ) and ''Kr. u.'' (''Krisztus után'', After Christ), which were unofficially reinstituted after the Communist period.
In Poland the only term generally used is ''naszej ery/przed naszą erą'' (''of our era/before our era''). The terms ''przed Chrystusem/po Chrystusie'' (''before Christ/after Christ'') are possible but nearly never used in contemporary Poland.
In Italy and other Latin countries, the use of "a.e.v." and "e.v.", meaning "Ante Era Vulgaris" and "Era Vulgaris" or "Era Volgare" (common era), is increasing.
In Angola, the abbreviations "E.C." ("Era Comum", Common Era) and "A.E.C." ("Antes da Era Comum", Before Common Era) is generally used.
In Romania, throughout most of the communist period, the preferred standard was to use the secularised ''î. e. n.'' (''înaintea erei noastre'', before our era) and ''e. n.'' (''era noastră'', our era). After the downfall of Communism and the 1989 revolution, the original convention using ''î. Hr.'' (''înainte de Hristos'', before Christ) and ''d. Hr.'' (''după Hristos'', after Christ) has become more widespread. Alternatively, ''î. Cr.'' and ''d. Cr.'' are used, mainly due to an alternative spelling of ''Hristos'' (Christ) as ''Cristos'', the latter being preferred by the Roman Catholic and Protestant Churches.
In Indonesia, the terms ''SM.'' (''Sebelum Masehi'', before Masehi, from Arabic word of Masih, referred to Jesus) and ''M.'' (''Masehi'', after Masehi) were generally used.
In Finland, the terms ''eKr.'' (''ennen Kristusta'', before Christ) and ''jKr.'' (''jälkeen Kristuksen'', after Christ) were largely used until the 1980s but have been mostly replaced during the last couple of decades with terms ''eaa.'' (''ennen ajanlaskun alkua'', before start of chronology) and ''jaa.'' (''jälkeen ajanlaskun alun'', after start of chronology).
In Swedish the terms ''f.kr.'' (''före kristus'', before Christ) and ''e.kr'' (''efter kristus'', after Christ) have traditionally been used. They have gradually been replaced by ''f.v.t'' and ''e.v.t'' (''före/efter vår tidräkning'', before/after our chronology) especially in scientific texts.
In Japan the calendar is referred to as (西暦, seireki), literally meaning as it is written, "west calendar," and sounding like, "Western calendar," which carries no religious connotation, aside from the fact that Christianity is a Western religion. "A.D.," and less commonly, "C.E.," are also occasionally seen, but the typical Japanese person would not know about the religious connotations or lack of in these terms.
In
Spanish, EC (Era Común) is used for CE, while AEC (antes de la Era Común) is equivalent to BCE.
In
Welsh, OC can be expanded to equivalents of both AD (''Oed Crist'') and CE (''Oes Cyffredin''); for dates before the Common Era, CC (traditionally, ''Cyn Crist'') is used exclusively, as ''Cyn yr Oes Cyffredin'' would abbreviate to a mild obscenity.
Ante Christum Natum
Calendar
Before present
Calendar reform
Human Era
List of calendars
Calendar era
Whatever happened to B.C. and A.D., and why? (United Church of Christ)
Category:Calendar eras
Category:Chronology
Category:Political correctness
ar:قبل الميلاد
be-x-old:Наша эра
ca:Era comuna
cs:Náš letopočet
de:V. u. Z.
el:Κοινή Χρονολογία (Χρονολόγηση)
es:Era Común
eo:Komuna Erao
fr:Ère commune
hy:Մեր թվարկություն
ia:Era commun
it:Era volgare
la:Aera Vulgaris
jbo:la cabna cedra
nl:Gangbare jaartelling
no:Common Era
pt:Era comum
ro:Era comună
ru:Наша эра
si:පොදු වර්ෂ
simple:Common Era
sl:Naše štetje let
sh:Nova era
sv:Före vår tideräkning
ta:பொது ஊழி
tr:Milat
uk:Наша ера
zh:公元