[f. Gr. σύγχρονος SYNCHRONOUS: see -Y.] = SYNCHRONISM 1, 2, 2 b.

1

1848.  W. W. Lloyd, in Numism. Chron., XI. 105. Very precise arrangement in sequence and synchrony.

2

1853.  Merivale, Rom. Emp., xxx. (1865), III. 417. Orosius,… anxious … to find or make a synchrony between an epoch so important in the world’s history and one of the most signal events recorded in his own creed.

3

1880.  Athenæum, 18 Dec., 821/1. The relics of the ‘Burnt City’ of the Troad favour in the most significant manner a synchrony with the graves in the acropolis of Mycenæ.

4