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Hum110: Spring Semester
Nigel Nicholson

A Selective Timeline for the Mediterranean World 1600 BCE to 410 CE
(adapted from Oxford History of the Classical World, ed. J. Boardman, J. Griffin, O. Murray; P. Brown, The World of Late Antiquity; and with help from Michael Foat)


 PALESTINE, SYRIA, EGYPT, PERSIA                         GREECE, ASIA MINOR                                       ITALY, NORTH AFRICA                                 


EARLY HISTORY
Rome remains a separate sphere of operations; contact between Greece and Persia increases from colonies, traders and travellers (like Herodotus), to sustained military engagements between Greeks and western parts of Persian empire throughout fifth and fourth centuries

                                                        c.1500                                                                                                            
c.1280       Exodus of Jews from Egypt                    -1120     Mycenaean civilization                                                                                
                                                        c.1200      Sack of Troy                                                                                          
1200-1000    Jewish conquest of Palestine                                                                                                                                 
c. 970       Construction of first Jewish temple        c.1050                                                                                                            
             in Jerusalem; First Temple Period            -950      Greek colonization of Asia Minor                                                                      
950-800      First strand of Genesis and Exodus ('JE')  c.900       Rise of the polis                                                                                     
             written down                                                                                                                                                 
722          Assyrians destroy Ten Tribes of Israel;    750-700     Iliad written down                           753         Rome founded (according to tradition)        
             parts of Psalms, Isaiah, Amos composed                                                              750-700     Greek colonization of Southern Italy         
586          Babylonians (Assyrians) destroy first                                                                            and Sicily                                   
             temple; Jewish exile in Babylon begins;                                                                                                                      
             second strand of Genesis and Exodus                                                                                                                          
             ('P') written down; parts of Psalms,                                                                                                                         
             Isaiah, Amos composed                                                                                                                                        
538          Cyrus, king of Persians (Medes) 559                                                                                                                          
             -530, conquers Babylon (Hdt I.178-200),                                                                                                                      
             restores Jews to Jerusalem                                                                                                                                   
537          Building of second temple begins;                                                                                                                            
             beginning of Second Temple Period;                                                                                                                           
             parts of Psalms, Isaiah, Amos composed                                                                                                                       
521-486      Darius king of Persians; dramatic date                                                              510         Tarquin the Proud expelled; end of           
             of Daniel anachronistic mix of reigns of                                                                        monarchy; Republic founded                   
             Darius, Cyrus, and Babylonian kings                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                 496-338     Romans extend control into central Italy     
490-479      Persian Wars: Greek alliance defeats armies of Darius and Xerxes (Hdt VI-IX)                       494-440     Struggle of Orders: Patricians vs Plebeians  
479-404      Period of aggressive Athenian expansion; initially directed against Persia, gradually focuses on    415-413     Athenian expedition against Sicily           
             other Greek states; culminates in Peloponnesian War (431-04), won by Sparta with Persian aid                                                                       
                                                        399         Death of Socrates                            390         Gauls sack Rome (temporary setback)          
                                                        335         Aristotle teaching in Athens                                                                          


PALESTINE, SYRIA, EGYPT, PERSIA                         GREECE, ASIA MINOR                                       ITALY, NORTH AFRICA                                 

FROM ALEXANDER TO AUGUSTUS
period of intense struggle for power between a variety of power centres; Rome gradually absorbs most of these and asserts itself as dominant power in Mediterranean world

336-323      Macedonian (Northern Greek) king Alexander conquers Persian Empire as far as Egypt and                                                                        
             Afghanistan; after his death empire splinters into "successor" Greek kingdoms of Antigonids          334-264     Romans extend control into the rest of       
             in Macedon, Attalids in western Asia Minor, Seleucids in Syria, Palestine and Iran, Ptolemies                    Italy south of Po Valley                     
             in Egypt, (and Bactrian kings in Afghanistan)                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                  264-201     1st & 2nd Punic Wars: Rome flexes            
                                                                                                                              muscles in Mediterranean, esp. Sicily, and   
                                                                                                                              comes into conflict with Carthaginians       
                                                                                                                  240-207     Livius Andronicus (first Roman poet)         
                                                                                                                  200         Greek art reaches Rome                       
164-141      Revolt of the Jews in Jeruslaem under the Maccabees against the rule of Seleucids; Jews, supported by Romans, given considerable autonomy in                       
             Jerusalem; Roman power in easterm Mediterranean now undisputed; Daniel composed 164 in context of Maccabean revolt                                                 
133          Rome now in control of Greece, Spain, western Asia Minor, northern Africa                                                                                     
                                                                                                                  149         Cato's Origines: first history in Latin      
                                                                                                                  133-121     Tribunician struggles over land reform       
                                                                                                                              (Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus)                
                                                                                                                  91-82       Sustained war in Italy: first, Social War    
                                                                                                                              against the Allies, over Allied rights; then      
                                                                                                                              Civil War, won by conservative Sulla         
86-53        Roman campaigns against eastern empires: conquest of new Mithridatic kingdom of Pontus, south of Black Sea, and of old Seleucid empire; Judaea                     
             conquered by Pompey in 63 and made a client kingdom; but Parthian empire of Iran/Iraq proves more difficult, inflicting massive defeat on Roman                    
             armies at Carrhae in 53                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                  81-43       Cicero active                                
                                                                                                                  60          1st triumvirate: Caesar, Pompey, Crassus;    
                                                                                                                              senate increasingly marginalized             
                                                                                                                  55          Death of Lucretius; poem published           
                                                                                                                  49-47       Civil War of Caesar vs Pompey                
                                                                                                                  43          2nd triumvirate: Octavian, Anthony,          
                                                                                                                              (Lepidus); rise of Octavian                  
                                                                                                                  31          Battle of Actium: Octavian crushes           
                                                                                                                              Anthony (& Cleopatra); gains full control    


PALESTINE, SYRIA, EGYPT, PERSIA                         GREECE, ASIA MINOR                              ITALY, NORTH AFRICA                                 

ROMAN EMPIRE
Rome, for the most part stable and at peace, dominates Mediterranean world

                                                                                                         30-19       Virgil works on Aeneid                       
                                                                                                         29          Livy begins work on his "history"            
                                                                                                         27          Octavian named Augustus (not Romulus!)       
20           Settlement with Parthia; return of                                                                                                                   
             Roman standards lost at Carrhae                                                             18          Augustan legal reforms encourage children    
20/19        Second Temple rebuilt                                                                       9           Dedication of Altar of Peace (Ara Pacis)     
                                                                                                         2           Forum of Augustus dedicated (temple of       
                                                                                                                     Mars)                                        
CE                                                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                         1-8         Ovid works on Metamorphoses; Ovid            
                                                                                                                     banished to Black Sea in 8; Silver Age of    
                                                                                                                     Latin literature firmly underway             
                                                                                                         14          Death of Augustus; publication of            
                                                                                                                     Augustus' "Achievements" Julio-Claudian      
                                                                                                                     Dynasty (14-68), begins with Tiberius        
                                                                                                         10-100      (approx) Carmina Priapea                     
30           (29? 33?) Martyrdom of Jesus Christ;                                                                                                                 
             beginning of three-way struggle between                                                                                                              
             Roman governors, Jewish temple officials                                                                                                             
             and Messianic Jewish followers of Christ                                                    37          Gaius ('Caligula') succeeds Tiberius         
40           James leads Messianic sect; Peter                                                                                                                    
             missions to Jews, Paul to gentiles                                                                                                                   
41           Gaius' death prevents revolt in Judaea;                                                     41          Claudius succeeds Gaius                      
             Gaius had ordered that statue of himself                                                                                                             
             be erected in the temple                                                                    49          Claudius expels Jews (Christians?) from      
                                                                                                                     Rome (ineffectual?); Seneca tutor to Nero    
50           'Q' (Gospel source) circulating in Galilee                                                  54          Nero succeeds Claudius                       
                                                                                                         59-62       Paul (Apostle) in Rome; Romans               
                                                                                                         64          Nero persecutes Christians, blaming them     
                                                                                                                     for a great fire                             
66-70        Jewish revolt; culminates in destruction                                                    65          Suicide of Seneca                            
             of temple in 70 by Titus, son of emperor;                                                   68          Nero dies; end of Julio-Claudian dynasty     
             Rabbis, less attached to temple come to                                                     69          Flavian dynasty begins with Vespasian        
             dominate Judaism, set up academy;                                                                                                                    
             context for Tractate Avot                                                                                                                            
90           Matthew (Palestine)                                                                        90-120      Suetonius active; works on imperial staff    
95           John (Northern Syria)                                                                      96-192      Antonine dynasty                             
                                                        100         Revelations                         98-117      Trajan emperor                               
115-17       Jewish revolt                              115         Acts                                100-111     Tacitus writes Annals                        
132-5        Jewish revolt of Bar Kochba                                                                 117-38      Hadrian emperor                              
                                                                                                         138-61      Antoninus Pius emperor                       
                                                                                                         140-60      Apuleius active in Africa and Rome           
                                                                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                         203         Matyrdom of Perpetua in Carthage             


PALESTINE, SYRIA, EGYPT, PERSIA                         GREECE, ASIA MINOR                              ITALY, NORTH AFRICA                                 

LATE ANTIQUITY
Marked by acceptance of Christianity as state religion, increasing border troubles in west and east, and the grand solution of dividing the empire into two halves.

226          Ardashir the Sassanian crowned in Iran; inaugurates 400 years of war with Roman empire in Persia; Roman empire threatened with disintegration on               
             many sides during third century; but military control gradually reasserted                                                                                     
240-276      Mani active in Persia                                                                       249-51      Massive persecution of Christians by         
                                                                                                                     emperor Decius                               
269          St Anthony becomes a hermit                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                                                  
293          Diocletian establishes tetrachy, effectively dividing empire into two units, east and west; shift of focus to military struggles in east and on Danubian                     
             frontier                                                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                         312         Battle of Milvian Bridge: Constantine,       
                                                                                                                     converted to Christianity, wins control      
                                                                                                                     of western unit                              
325          Nicaean council                            324         Constantine unites eastern and western                                                                
                                                                    empires; Constantinople founded, thus                                                              
337/8?       Anthony joins Athanasius in Arian                      in effect canonizing the split                                                                
             controversy in Alexandria                                                                   337         Constantine II succeeds his father           
                                                                                                         361-3       Julian the Apostate emperor (pagan)          
                                                                                                                                                                  
395          Roman empire is divided between the two sons of emperor Theodosius the Great: Honorius ('one of the feeblest of all the Roman emperors') takes the                           
             east, Arcadius the west; empire is now permanently split                                                                                                       
                                                                                                         397         Augustine's Confessions                       
                                                                                                         410         Sack of Rome by Visigoths; Rome              
                                                                                                                     renounces Britain                            


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