| 10,000 - 8000 | The Natufian culture appeared in modern-day Israel - some of the first known human settlements in the world. |
| 8000 | Agriculture began in Near East as people started using "digging sticks" to plant the seeds of wild grasses which would eventually become the domesticated wheat we know today. |
| c. 6750 | Pigs are domesticated in modern Iraq. |
| 6500 - 6300 | Wheel was invented by Sumerians who lived in the Tigris-Euphrates river basin. |
| c. 6000 | Chickens were domesticated in southern Asia. |
| 5508 | Year of Creation, as calculated in seventh-century CE Constantinople and used by Eastern Orthodox Church until 18th century CE. |
| 5490 | Year of Creation, as calculated by Syrian Christians. |
| c. 5000 | The earliest known cities were founded as increasing numbers of people began to gather in villages scattered around the Fertile Crescent. |
| 4004 (October 23) | Date of Creation, as calculated by Irish theologian James Ussher in 1650 CE. |
| c. 4000 | Horses were domesticated. |
| c. 4000 | Sumerians in southern Mesopotamia developed the boat for water transportation. |
| 3760 | Year of Creation, as calculated by the Hebrews and used since the 15th century CE. |
| 3641 (February 10) | Date of Creation, as calculated by the Mayans. |
| 3500 | Sumerian society developed in the Tigris-Euphrates river basin. The Sumerians made use of many agricultural advances, such as domestic animals to pull plows, irrigated desert, drained marshlands and more in order to create a large, cosmopolitan civilization. The increased output of food allowed for the further development of a "leisure class" that did not have to work for food, allowing them to become priests, artists, merchants, scholars, etc. The Sumerians also developed oar-powered ships, animal-drawn wheeled chariots and other, similar vehicles, bronze objects, and the written cuneiform alphabet. |
| c. 3400 | Early form of hieroglyphic writing started being used in Egypt. |
| 3100 | The first Egyptian Dynasty united the southern and northern kingdoms under the rule of Menes, founder of the city of Memphis which would become the center of his authority. |
| c. 3000 | First human settlements were established on the site of modern-day Athens. |
| c. 3000 | Stonehenge was built in England. |
| c. 2980- 2950 | Life of Imhotep, famed Egyptian physician. He was worshiped as a medical demigod in ancient Egypt because of his work on medical methods for treating diseases rather than simply religious methods. Imhotep was also responsible for the construction of the pyramid of Zoser (the Step Pyramid at Sakkara), the first large stone structure in the entire world. |
| c. 2800 | Egyptians began wearing wedding rings, believing that the circular bands symbolized eternity. |
| 2613 | The Great Pyramid of Cheops at Giza was constructed by Cheops, son of the founder of Egypt's 4th Dynasty, Snefru. |
| c. 2600 | The first recorded seagoing voyage carried Egyptian sailors to Phoenicia in search of cedarwood. |
| c. 2600 | Chinese began cultivation of silkworms. |
| 2560 | Great Sphinx at Giza, a 189-foot long monument to King Khafra (Khafre), the third king of the 4th Dynasty, was carved. |
| 2500 | Sumerian cuneiform script was simplified from an earlier version consisting of thousands of ideograms. |
| 2350 | Sargon I founded the Akkadian empire, which ruled Mesopotamia for the next couple of centuries. |
| 2349 | The Great Flood occurred (according to fundamentalist sources). |
| 2247 | The Tower of Babel was constructed (according to fundamentalist sources). |
| 2200 | Indo-European invaders, speaking the earliest forms of Greek, entered the mainland of Greece, and the Mycenaean Civilization (named after the leading Greek city on the peninsula from 1600-1200 BCE) emerged. |
| 2100 | Ziggurat of Ur was built by Sumerian king Ur-Nammu. Sumerians called it temen, from which the later word temple was derived. |
| 2000 - 1500 | Minoan Civilization (named after the Cretan ruler Minos) reached its height with its central power in Knossos on the island of Crete. This culture may have been more female-oriented and peaceful than others at the time. |
| c. 2000-1700 | Abraham left Ur in Chaldea (according to traditional sources). This is often called the age of the "patriarchs" (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob). |
| c. 2000 | Domestic bathroom plumbing appeared in Crete. |
| c. 2000 | Babylonians replaced Sumerians as the dominant power in the Middle East, creating a decimal system notation. |
| c. 1800 | Babylonians are believed to have initiated the custom of the handshake. It began with grasping the hand of a statue of the god Marduk in order to receive his power symbolically and it later came to symbolize good will. |
| c. 1792-1750 | Hammurabi ruled Babylon and created his famous legal code. |
| 1750 | The Babylonians began using windmills to pump water for irrigation. |
| 1700 - 1500 | Possible dates for when Joseph could have been in Egypt. |
| 1660 - 1550 | The Hyksos, a Semitic tribe, invaded Egypt and dominated the Nile Delta for about a century. The Hyksos were successful because they were superior archers and rode horses and chariots at the same time. |
| c. 1650 | Cult of Yahweh, earliest form of Judaism, may have been created by Abraham and carried on by his sons. |
| 1568 | The Hyksos, a semitic tribe which had dominated the Nile Delta, was finally driven out by Egyptian leader Ahmose I, who then founded the 16th Dynasty. |
| 1523 - 1027 | Shang Dynasty in China. |
| 1491 | Date of the Exodus of the Hebrews out of Egypt. (according to fundamentalist sources) |
| 1491 | Ten Commandments were received. (according to fundamentalist sources) |
| c. 1479 | Egyptian armies under Pharaoh Tuthmosis III defeated a confederation of Palestinian states and captured a fortress on the hill of Meggido. Christian theology predicts a final battle between good and evil on this spot (Armageddon = Hill of Megiddo). The first use of the title "Pharaoh," which means "Great House," is found here applied to Tuthmosis. |
| 1470 | A massive volcanic eruption at Thera destroyed the Minoan civilization on Crete. Because of huge waves rising up to 160 feet, the water levels along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean at first dropped, but then the Egyptian cost was flooded by large amounts of seawater, resulting in famine due to the loss of arable farmland. |
| 1451 | Hebrews arrive in Canaan (according to traditional sources) |
| 1400 | Iron Age began in Asia Minor when methods for smelting iron ore were developed |
| 1400 | Mycenaean Civilization replaced Minoan Civilization after the destruction of Knossos. Bronze weapons, war-scenes on art, Cyclopean defense walls, and the fact that male warriors were buried with their weapons provide evidence for the claim that the Mycenaeans were militaristic. The horse-drawn chariot emerged around this time and the Mycenaeans would dominate the Aegean world for about 200 years. |
| 1349-1334 | Amenhotep IV, aka Akhenaten, ruled Egypt and developed the first recorded strict monotheism. He was succeeded by his nine-year-old son Tutankhamen, who eliminated his religious reforms |
| 1300 | In Babylon they developed a new alphabetic script which was a further simplification of the cuneiform writing. |
| 1305 | Accession of Ramses II, the Great, of Egypt to pharaoh. |
| c. 1250 | Possible date of the Exodus of the Hebrews out of Egypt. (according to modern scholars) |
| 1232 | Israelites of some sort were definitely in Canaan - Ramses II's son Merneptah defeated them in battle. They were not necessarily the same Israelites as those who left in the Exodus - they might have been from earlier emigrations. |
| 1200-1020 | Period of the Judges in Israel. |
| 1200 | Gilgamesh epic, recorded in cuneiform script, is the first known such written legend. |
| 1193 | Traditional date set for the city of Troy being destroyed by besieging Greek armies. |
| 1146 | Nebuchadrezzar I reigned as King of Babylon for 23 years. |
| 1141 | According to biblical accounts in Samuel, Israelite armies suffered massive losses to the Philistines. |
| 1050 | Philistines conquered Israel. |
| 1027 - 771 | Zhou Dynasty in China. |
| 1020 - 922 | Period of the United Kingdom of Jews. |
| 1020 | Samuel, last of the Israelite Judges, anointed Saul as the first King of Israel. Saul led a successful rebellion against Philistines. |
| c. 1000 | Earliest Old Testament documents were created from older and highly developed oral tradition. |
| 1000 | Saul was killed at the Battle of Gilboa and was succeeded by David, first as King of Judah and then later as King of Israel. David later captured Jerusalem and made it his capital. |
| c. 1000-950 | Biography of David may have been composed, eventually becoming a written narrative of David's life later included in I and II Samuel and IKings. |
| c. 1000 | Iberians invaded the region of modern Spain, giving the Iberian Peninsula its name. |
| 961 | David died and was succeeded by his son, Solomon. |
| 953 | Dedication of the Temple of Jerusalem, built by Solomon. |
| c. 950 - 900 | Composition of the "Yahwistic" (J) document, one of the four major sources believed to have been the basis of the Pentateuch (Books of Moses): Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. |
| 922 | Death of Solomon, who was succeeded by his son, Rehoboam. Rebellion against Rehoboam was led by Jeroboam, leading to a split of the kingdom into two halves: Judah in the south under Rehoboam and Israel in the north under Jeroboam. |
| c. 900 | Assyrian war chariots were equipped with metal tires (copper or bronze) for greater durability. |
| 884 | Ashurnasirpal II, Assyrian king, began a 24-year reign during which he defeated Babylon and ensured Assyrian dominance throughout the Near East. |
| 854 | Ahab of Israel joined with Ben Hadad of Damascus and Irkhuleni of Hamath in an allied army to halt Shalmaneser III. Egypt and Jehoshaphat of Judah lent support, but the alliance failed to stop the onslaught. |
| c. 850 | Traditional date for the probable composition of Homer's epic poems The Illiad and The Odyssey. |
| c. 850 | Traditional date for when Elijah lived and prophecized. |
| c. 850 - 800 | Composition of the "Elohistic" (E) document, another major source of the Pentateuch. |
| 842 | Jehu, an Israelite soldier, led a rebellion against Jehoram, Ahab's son, and founded a new dynasty in Israel. By the next year, however, he was paying tribute to the Assyrian leaders. |
| 814 | Phoenicians founded Carthage (literally: "New Town") near their North African colony of Utica. |
| 801 | Indians began to venerate cows and dairy products. |
| 800 | Increase in trade and the establishment of governmental defense fortifications allowed for the emergence of Greek city-states from tribal communities. These grew up around marketplaces and included Athens, Thebes and Megara on the Greek mainland. The Greek city-states were considered the most famous units of Greek political life to develop in this society. |
| 800 - 500 | This period, often referred to as the Archaic period, marked the developments of literature and the arts, politics, philosophy and science. The Peloponnesian city of Corinth, Sparta and cities along the coast of the Aegean Sea flourished. For the most part, the Greek city-states were similar in their political evolution, with the exception of Sparta's elite dictatorship. Most began their political histories as monarchies, evolved to oligarchies, were overthrown during the age of the tyrants (650-500 BCE) and eventually established democracies in the sixth and fifth centuries. Of the Greek city-states, Athens and Sparta were the two most important. |
Saturday, January 13, 2007
Old Testament Chronology
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