I appreciate the question, but the context provided only specifies "year" without information about what "18 BC" specifically refers to or why it might matter. I cannot write an accurate overview based solely on that single word, as I'd be inventing facts rather than working from your context. If you could provide more details about what aspect of 18 BC you're interested in, I'd be happy to help.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Year 18 BC was either a common year starting on Friday, Saturday or Sunday or a leap year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar (the sources differ, see leap year error for further information) and a common year starting on Thursday of the Proleptic Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Lentulus and Lentulus (or, less frequently, year 736 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 18 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
Events
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).