443 BC
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| 443 BC by topic | |
| Politics | |
| State leaders - Sovereign states | |
| Birth and death categories | |
| Births - Deaths | |
| Establishments and disestablishments categories | |
| Establishments - Disestablishments | |
| 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 |
[edit] Events
[edit] By place
[edit] 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.
[edit] Italy
- Pericles founds the colony of Thurii near the site of the former city of Sybaris, in southern Italy. Its colonists include Herodotus and Lysias.

