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327

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
327 in variouscalendars
Gregorian calendar327
CCCXXVII
Ab urbe condita1080
Assyrian calendar5077
Balinese saka calendar248–249
Bengali calendar−266
Berber calendar1277
Buddhist calendar871
Burmese calendar−311
Byzantine calendar5835–5836
Chinese calendarBính tuấtNiên (FireDog)
3024 or 2817
— to —
Đinh hợi niên (FirePig)
3025 or 2818
Coptic calendar43–44
Discordian calendar1493
Ethiopian calendar319–320
Hebrew calendar4087–4088
Hindu calendars
-Vikram Samvat383–384
-Shaka Samvat248–249
-Kali Yuga3427–3428
Holocene calendar10327
Iranian calendar295 BP – 294 BP
Islamic calendar304 BH – 303 BH
Javanese calendar208–209
Julian calendar327
CCCXXVII
Korean calendar2660
Minguo calendar1585 beforeROC
Dân tiền 1585 niên
Nanakshahi calendar−1141
Seleucid era638/639AG
Thai solar calendar869–870
Tibetan calendarDương hỏa cẩu niên
(male Fire-Dog)
453 or 72 or −700
— to —
Âm hỏa trư niên
(female Fire-Pig)
454 or 73 or −699
Detail fromLabor,byCharles Sprague Pearce(1898)

Year327(CCCXXVII) was acommon year starting on Sunday(link will display the full calendar) of theJulian calendar.At the time, it was known in Rome as theYear of the Consulship of Constantius and Maximus(or, less frequently,year 1080Ab urbe condita). The denomination 327 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when theAnno Dominicalendar erabecame the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

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SaintAwtel

References

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  1. ^Westermann, William Linn(1955).The Slave Systems of Greek and Roman Antiquity.American Philosophical Society. p. 133.ISBN978-0-87169-040-1.
  2. ^Kayaalp, Elif Keser (2021).Church Architecture of Late Antique Northern Mesopotamia.Oxford University Press.p. 84.ISBN978-0-19-886493-6.
  3. ^Giles, H. Preston; Maiden, A. R. (1931).A Guide to the Island of Cyprus.Cyprus Publications. p. 57.