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Year 384 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Tribunate of Cornelius, Poplicola, Camillus, Rufus, Crassus and Capitolinus [ 1 ] (or, less frequently, year 370 Ab urbe condita ).
Aristotle [A] (Attic Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης, romanized: Aristotélēs; [B] 384–322 BC) was an Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath.His writings cover a broad range of subjects spanning the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, and the arts.
The Tollund Man (died 405–384 BCE) is a naturally mummified corpse of a man who lived during the 5th century BC, during the period characterised in Scandinavia as the Pre-Roman Iron Age. [1] He was found in 1950, preserved as a bog body near Silkeborg on the Jutland peninsula in Denmark. [2]
Aristotle, (384 BC-322 BC) Aristoxenus, (4th century BC) Asclepiades of ... Dirghatamas (14th century BCE) Deng Xi (501 BC) Diagoras, (5th century BC)
Demosthenes was born in 384 BC, during the last year of the 98th Olympiad or the first year of the 99th Olympiad. [4] His father—also named Demosthenes—who belonged to the local tribe, Pandionis, and lived in the deme of Paeania [5] in the Athenian countryside, was a wealthy sword-maker. [6]
The date used as the end of the ancient era is arbitrary. The transition period from Classical Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages is known as Late Antiquity.Late Antiquity is a periodization used by historians to describe the transitional centuries from Classical Antiquity to the Middle Ages, in both mainland Europe and the Mediterranean world: generally from the end of the Roman Empire's ...
Aristotle (384–322 BCE), ancient Greek philosopher; Aristotelianism, a philosophical tradition inspired by the work of Aristotle; Aristotelian ethics; Aristotelian logic, an approach to formal logic that began with Aristotle; Aristotelian physics, the form of natural philosophy described in the works of Aristotle
384–322 BCE – Aristotle: Aristotelian physics, earliest effective theory of physics [2] c. 300 BCE – Euclid: Euclidean geometry; c. 250 BCE – Archimedes: Archimedes' principle; 310–230 BCE – Aristarchos: Proposed heliocentricism [3] 276–194 BCE – Eratosthenes: Circumference of the Earth measured