Ted here is a site that has a brief mention of the two calendars. http://www.kencollins.com/calendar.htm
As you may/may not know the system was changes somewhere in the ?1600's? or so. One October lost several days when the change over occured from Julian to Georgian so you need to take that into condideration so research well! Jessica Kelly >>> tedd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 12/07/06 11:45 AM >>> On Mon, Dec 04, 2006 at 11:06:27AM -0500, Phil Duffy wrote: > I understand that MySQL does not have the ability to store B.C. dates, but > that PostgreSQL does. Considering the history of calendars, I wonder how they did that? It's one thing to estimate that 2000 years ago was 0006 -- but, it's a completely different thing to claim that 2000 years ago today was December 7, 0006. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com http://ancientstones.com http://earthstones.com _______________________________________________ New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online http://www.nyphpcon.com Show Your Participation in New York PHP http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php _______________________________________________ New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online http://www.nyphpcon.com Show Your Participation in New York PHP http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php
