443 BC


Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries: 6th century BC - 5th century BC - 4th century BC
Decades: 470s BC  460s BC  450s BC  - 440s BC -  430s BC  420s BC  410s BC
Years: 446 BC 445 BC 444 BC - 443 BC - 442 BC 441 BC 440 BC
443 BC by topic
Politics
State leaders - Sovereign states
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
443 BC in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 443 BC
Ab urbe condita 311
Armenian calendar N/A
Bahá'í calendar -2286 – -2285
Berber calendar 508
Buddhist calendar 102
Burmese calendar -1080
Byzantine calendar 5066 – 5067
Chinese calendar [[Sexagenary cycle|]]年
(2194/2254)
— to —
[[Sexagenary cycle|]]年
(2195/2255)
Coptic calendar -726 – -725
Ethiopian calendar -450 – -449
Hebrew calendar 3318 – 3319
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat -387 – -386
 - Shaka Samvat N/A
 - Kali Yuga 2659 – 2660
Holocene calendar 9558
Iranian calendar 1064 BP – 1063 BP
Islamic calendar 1097 BH – 1096 BH
Japanese calendar
Korean calendar 1891
Thai solar calendar 101

Events

By place

Roman Republic

  • No consuls are elected in Rome, but rather military tribunes with consular power are appointed in their stead. While only patricians could be consuls, some military tribunes were plebeians. These positions had responsibility for the census, a vital function in the financial administration of Rome. So to stop the plebeians from possibly gaining control of the census, the patricians remove from the consuls and tribunes the right to take the census, and rather entrust it to two magistrates, called censores who were to be chosen exclusively from the patricians in Rome.

Italy

Births

Deaths

sex





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