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  2. Kyrene School District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyrene_School_District

    Kyrene School District is a K-8 school district that serves parts of Tempe, Chandler, Guadalupe, and Phoenix, Arizona, as well as portions of the Gila River Indian Community within Maricopa County. Kyrene School District operates a total of 26 schools, consisting of nineteen elementary schools, six middle schools and one online school.

  3. Cyrene, Libya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrene,_Libya

    Cyrene, also sometimes anglicized as Kyrene, was an ancient Greek colony and Roman city near present-day Shahhat in northeastern Libya in North Africa. It was part of the Pentapolis, an important group of five cities in the region, and gave the area its classical and early modern name Cyrenaica. Cyrene lies on a ridge of the Jebel Akhdar uplands.

  4. Coligny calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coligny_calendar

    The Coligny calendar is a bronze plaque with an inscribed calendar, made in Roman Gaul in the 2nd century CE. It lays out a five-year cycle of a lunisolar calendar, each year with twelve lunar months. An intercalary month is inserted before each 2.5 years. The lunar phase is tracked with exceptional precision, adjusted when necessary by a ...

  5. Mesoamerican Long Count calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesoamerican_Long_Count...

    The combination of a Haabʼ and a Tzolkʼin date identifies a day in a combination which does not occur again for 18,980 days (52 Haabʼ cycles of 365 days equals 73 Tzolkʼin cycles of 260 days, approximately 52 years), a period known as the Calendar Round. To identify days over periods longer than this, Mesoamericans used the Long Count calendar.

  6. Cyrene (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrene_(mythology)

    Cyrene. Cyrene (/ saɪˈriːni /, sy-REE-nee), also spelled Kyrene (/ kaɪˈriːni /, ky-REE-nee; Ancient Greek: Κυρήνη, romanized: Kurḗnē) is a figure in Greek mythology considered the etymon of the Greek colony of Cyrene in eastern Libya in North Africa. She was said to have been a Thessalian princess who became the queen of Cyrene ...

  7. Byzantine calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantine_calendar

    [2] [note 2] It was also the official calendar of the Byzantine Empire from 988 to 1453 and it was used in Russia until 1700. [note 3] This calendar was used also in other areas of the Byzantine commonwealth such as in Serbia, where it is found in old Serbian legal documents such as Dušan's Code, thus being referred to as the Serbian Calendar ...

  8. Gezer calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gezer_calendar

    The Gezer calendar is a small limestone tablet with an early Canaanite inscription discovered in 1908 by Irish archaeologist R. A. Stewart Macalister in the ancient city of Gezer, 20 miles west of Jerusalem. It is commonly dated to the 10th century BCE, although the excavation was not stratified. [1][2]

  9. Priene calendar inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priene_calendar_inscription

    The Priene calendar inscription (IK Priene 14) is an inscription in stone recovered at Priene (an ancient Greek city, in Western Turkey) that records an edict by Paullus Fabius Maximus, proconsul of the Roman province of Asia and a decree of the conventus of the province accepting the edict from 9 BC. The documents align the provincial calendar ...