Difference between revisions of "A.D. System"

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Officially A.D stands for Age of Dawn, but After Dragon is a much more popular definition. Though in year 3105 of the Age of Dawn, the calender shifted once again. For a while, the new age would be called the Dawn of the Dragon, but eventually settled on The Age of the [[New Day]] and [[N.D. System]].
 
Officially A.D stands for Age of Dawn, but After Dragon is a much more popular definition. Though in year 3105 of the Age of Dawn, the calender shifted once again. For a while, the new age would be called the Dawn of the Dragon, but eventually settled on The Age of the [[New Day]] and [[N.D. System]].
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[[Category:Course Books]]

Latest revision as of 22:44, 26 December 2018

Not to be confused with the A.D. system of the real world, this one uses the end of the Age of the Dragon as Year 0 and counts forward.

A.D. was used during the Long Night and is considered a single age lasting around 3105 years. It is not broken down into sub-groups like the A.Y. System, so A.D. 2569 is actually the two thousnd, five hundred and sixty-ninth year After Dragon and not Year 569 of the Second Age.

Officially A.D stands for Age of Dawn, but After Dragon is a much more popular definition. Though in year 3105 of the Age of Dawn, the calender shifted once again. For a while, the new age would be called the Dawn of the Dragon, but eventually settled on The Age of the New Day and N.D. System.