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So I had a thought - rare I know

What was the first palindromic date - maybe it's controversial or simply ambiguous - Put your logic in too pls or just leave yourself open for arguments/discussion

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Maybe you want to define some restrictions on the palindrome because...

00:00:00 0 (being the "absolute 0" of time)

As in the beginning of time... :P

interesting - what year would that be?

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Why define a palindrome its self explanatory!

Maybe you want to define some restrictions on the palindrome because...

00:00:00 0 (being the "absolute 0" of time)

As in the beginning of time... :P

Just to reiterate as no reply to above - The Gregorian calendar goes fron 1 BC to 1AD but there is more to it than that as far as recorded data goes

How about

in mm/dd/yyyy System: 10/10/0101

in dd/mm/yyyy system: 10/10/0101

same: Oct 10th year 0101 :huh:

m/d/y: 10/1/101

Oct 1st, 101

d/m/y: 10/1/0101

Jan 10th, 101

or simply

d/m/t or m/d/y/; 1/1/1

Jan 1st, 1

Well you would think so but... NO! Let me know if you find a coin with that date - I'll say it's a forgery !

I think this is gonna be interesting....

there is no year 0101 or 00101 or.... etc
Leading zeros do not apply we are not in 002008 Edited by Lost in space
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Well you would think so but... NO! Let me know if you find a coin with that date - I'll say it's a forgery !

I think this is gonna be interesting....

Who said anything about coins? Do you want to re-word the OP?

"What non-forged coin currently on display in some museum displays the earliest palindromic date?"

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Who said anything about coins? Do you want to re-word the OP?

"What non-forged coin currently on display in some museum displays the earliest palindromic date?"

Can't reword, can't edit!

regarding coin I simply meant it's not possible to find a date 1/1/1 printed, stamped, etc on any material at that time - and yes I'm being cheeky!

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Really it depends on what sort of calander one is using and when one's concept of time begins. If one's concept of time is by Christian standards (which most of us use) then it starts at 1 A.D. and goes up in value. Although, to go backwards from 1 B.C. would also be going up in value. It's a very broad question and needs some guidlines to go by.

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I was originally going to give my answer based on the start of the Gregorian Calendar, until my research led me to see that the first day in the use of the Gregorian Calendar was around October 15, 1582 (or 10/15/1582). I then used the following convention to find the next palindrome:

MM/DD/YYYY, but no leading zero for Month or Day if it is a single digit

Using this convention, I believe the first palindromic date after 10/15/1582 would be 10/6/1601. I would consider this a feasible answer, although, with such an open-ended question, I would consider many answers to be feasible.

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I was originally going to give my answer based on the start of the Gregorian Calendar, until my research led me to see that the first day in the use of the Gregorian Calendar was around October 15, 1582 (or 10/15/1582). I then used the following convention to find the next palindrome:

MM/DD/YYYY, but no leading zero for Month or Day if it is a single digit

Using this convention, I believe the first palindromic date after 10/15/1582 would be 10/6/1601. I would consider this a feasible answer, although, with such an open-ended question, I would consider many answers to be feasible.

AD became acceptable from 527 when the pope John 1 had confimation of JCs birth according to Dionysius Exiguus but it was October 1582 that pope Gregory put the Gregorian Calendar into accepted usage and correction (October had the least festive dates)

how about

9/9/9999 B.C.

man would have witnessed date wise form 28000 BC according to bone carvings with lunar cycles on them - is 9999BC the farthest we go! is that the correct use of PALENDROMIC dating - it's still ambiguous
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