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Short Outline of World History Timeline: Modern 3.

1801 CE
Giuseppe Piazzi, an Italian Catholic priest established an observatory at Palermo and discovered the first dwarf planet, Ceres.

1801 CE
Thomas Jefferson elected President of the United States.

1801 CE
The Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland merge to form the United Kingdom.

1801 CE
The Concordat of 1801 was an agreement between Napoleon and Pope Pius VII,

1802 CE
Ludwig van Beethoven performs his Moonlight Sonata for the first time.

1803 CE
The United States more than doubles in size when it buys out France's claims in North America with the Louisiana Purchase. 

1804 CE
Napoleon crowns himself Emperor of the French.

1804 CE
World population at 1 billion.

1804 CE
In the sixteenth century, laudanum, which was opium in an alcoholic solution, was used as a painkiller. Morphine first isolated in 1804.

1807 CE
The first successful steamboat was the Clermont, built by American inventor Robert Fulton in 1807.

1807 CE
Britain declares the Slave Trade illegal.

1807 CE
Sir Humphry Davy, isolated, by using electricity, a series of elements for the first time: potassium and sodium in 1807 and calcium, strontium, barium, magnesium and boron the following year, as well as discovering the elemental nature of chlorine and iodine. Davy also studied the forces involved in these separations, inventing the new field of electrochemistry.
Sir Humphry Davy, Bt, by Thomas Phillips
18010-20s
The Latin American wars of independence.

1812-15
War of 1812 between the United States and Britain.

1813 CE
"Pride and Prejudice", by Jane Austen, published anonymously in three volumes in 1813.

1814 CE
The first successful steam engine locomotive was built by the British Engineer George Stephenson called Blücher, in 1814.

1818 CE
Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein.

1819 CE
Peterloo massacre in England. Cavalry charged into a crowd of around 60,000 people, who had gathered to demand the reform of parliamentary representation.

1820 CE
Discovery of Antarctica.

1821-30 CE
Greek War of Independence and Greece breaks away from the Ottoman Empire.

1822 CE
The first rotating device driven by electromagnetism was built by the Englishman Peter Barlow in 1822.

1825 CE
The Stockton and Darlington Railway, the world's first public railway to use steam locomotives.

1826 CE
Samuel Morey patents the internal combustion engine.

1828 CE
Black War in Tasmania leads to the near extinction of the Tasmanian Aboriginal people.
Truganini (c. 1812 – 8 May 1876) was a woman widely considered to have been the last full-blooded Aboriginal Tasmanian
1829 CE
Robert Peel founds the Metropolitan Police Service, with the Metropolitan Police Act, which set up the first disciplined police force, for the Greater London area.

1839 CE
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is established.

1836 CE
HMS Beagle entered Sydney Harbour with the 26-year old Charles Darwin on board, HMS Beagle, January 12, 1836.

1837 CE
Samuel Morse independently developed and patented a recording electric telegraph in 1837.

1837-1901 CE
Queen Victoria's reign.

1839-1860 CE
The First and Second Opium Wars.

1840 CE
The Treaty of Waitangi is signed by the Māori and British.

1844 CE
First publicly funded telegraph line in the world, between Baltimore and Washington.

1846 CE
The Lunacy Act's, of Great Britain, most important provision was a change in the status of mentally ill people to patients.

1845-49
The Irish Potato Famine leads to the Irish diaspora.

1846 CE
Successful anaesthesia for surgery was first demonstrated in 1846.

1846-1847 CE
Mormon migration to Utah.

1846 CE
The Communist Manifesto published.

1848 CE
The California Gold Rush (1848–1855).

1850 CE
By 1850 a transatlantic cable had been laid between England and France, for telegraph communications.

1850 CE
The Taiping Rebellion, caused massive political and religious upheaval, lasting from 1850 to 1864, between the established Manchu-led Qing dynasty and the Hakka-led Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. At least 20 million people died.

1851 CE
The Great Exhibition in London was the world's first international World Fair.
The Crystal Palace in Hyde Park, London, in 1851
1851 CE
Gold rush begins in Australia.

1853 CE
On July 8, 1853, commodore Matthew Perry, commander of the United, used “gunboat diplomacy” to force the Japanese to agree to open trade.

1853-56 CE
Crimean War between France, the United Kingdom, the Ottoman Empire and Russia.

1855 BC
Bessemer process enables steel to be mass-produced.

1857 CE
Indian Rebellion of 1857.

1858 CE
Invention of the phonautograph is the earliest known device for recording sound.

1859 CE
Charles Darwin publishes "On the Origin of Species".

1861 CE
The American Civil War, fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865, between the northern United States (loyal to the Union) and the southern United States (that had seceded from the Union and formed the Confederacy).
Union soldiers entrenched along the west bank of the Rappahannock River at Fredericksburg, Virginia,
Created: 1 May 1863
1861 CE
Emperor Alexander II finally abolished Russian serfdom (serfs were unfree peasants ) in the emancipation reform of 1861.

1861 CE
James Clerk Maxwell publishes "On Physical Lines of Force". Maxwell's equations, describe how electric charges and electric currents create electric and magnetic fields.

1863 CE 
The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution and the Emancipation Proclamation issued by United States President, Abraham Lincoln.

1863 CE
Formation of the International Red Cross is followed by the adoption of the First Geneva Convention in 1864.

1863 CE
On January 10, 1863, the London Underground, or the "Tube", opened to passengers.

1863 CE
The French scientist Paul-Jean Coulier developed a method to transfer latent fingerprints on surfaces to paper using iodine fuming in 1863. It allowed the London Scotland Yard to start fingerprinting individuals and identify criminals using fingerprints in 1901.

1865 CE
Gregor Mendel, by experimenting with pea plant breeding, developed three principles of inheritance that described the transmission of genetic traits.

1866 CE
Japan embarks on a program of rapid modernisation.

1869 CE
First Transcontinental Railroad completed in United States.

1871 CE
The feudal system is dismantled in Japan.

1874 CE
The Home Rule Movement is established in Ireland.
Irish political leader Charles Stewart Parnell (1846-1891) addressing a meeting. Library of Congress
1875-1900
26 million Indians die in India due to famine.

1876-1879 CE
13 million Chinese die of famine in northern China.

1870s CE
The Gilded Age was an era from the 1870s to about 1900 in the USA, when the country became more prosperous, with unprecedented growth in industry and technology.

1877 CE
Thomas Edison invents the phonograph, 1877. In 1879, Edison tests his first light bulb.

1880
The First Boer War (December 1880 to March 1881). The Second Boer War (11 October 1899 – 31 May 1902).

1881 Ce
Tsar Alexander II is assassinated.

1881 CE
Pogroms (anti-Semitic violence) begin in the Russian Empire.

1881 CE
Godalming, Surrey, England, became the first place in the world to have public electricity supply and electric street lighting.

1881 CE
Laws are passed in France establishing free, secular education.

1885 CE
First car with internal combustion engine is created by Karl Benz. Benz sells the first car in the following year.
The Benz Patent-Motorwagen, 1885
1886 CE
Burma is presented to Queen Victoria as a birthday present.

1890 CE
The last battle in the American Indian Wars, the Battle of Wounded Knee.

1893 CE
New Zealand became the first country in the world to grant all women the right to vote.

1894 CE
First gramophone record.

1895 CE
First commercial film is screened, on December 28, 1895, at the Grand Cafe in Paris.

1895 CE
Wilhelm Röntgen identifies x-rays.

1896 CE
Philippines free from Spanish rule.

1896 CE
Klondike Gold Rush in Canada.

1897 CE
The Greco-Turkish War of 1897, fought between the Kingdom of Greece and the Ottoman Empire, over Crete.

1898-1900 CE
The Boxer Rebellion, was an anti-imperialist, anti-foreign, and anti-Christian uprising in China. "Boxers” was the name that foreigners gave to a Chinese secret society known as the Yihequan (“Righteous and Harmonious Fists”).

1901 CE
On 1 January 1901, the six existing self-governing British colonies of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia agreed to unite and form the Commonwealth of Australia, establishing a system of federalism in Australia.

Short Outline of World History Timeline: Modern 2.

1701-2 CE
The Daily Courant and The Norwich Post become the first daily newspapers in England.

1703 CE
Saint Petersburg is founded by Peter the Great; it is the Russian capital until 1918.

1705 CE
George Frideric Handel composed his first opera, Almira, when he was 19 years old.

1706 CE
The first English-language edition of the Arabian Nights is published.

1707 CE
The Acts of Union, passed by the English and Scottish Parliaments in 1707, led to the creation of the United Kingdom of Great Britain.

1707 CE
Mount Fuji erupts in Japan for the first time in 10000 years.
Mt.fuji from R469 in Yuno, Japan
1707 CE
The Mughal–Maratha Wars were fought between the Maratha Empire and the Mughal Empire from 1680 to 1707 (India).

1708-9
Famine kills one-third of East Prussia's population.

1710 CE
The Statute of Anne, also known as the Copyright Act 1710, is regulated by the government and courts, rather than by private parties.

1710-11
Ottoman Empire fights Russia. 

1714 CE
George I, Elector of Hanover becomes King of Great Britain and Ireland. Early in his reign, he appeared to be unable to speak English. 

The Jacobite risings, or the War of the British Succession, were a series of uprisings, rebellions, and wars in Great Britain and Ireland occurring between 1688 and 1746.

1716 CE
The Sikh Confederacy (from 1716-1799) was a collection of small to medium sized political Sikh states, governed by barons, along the present-day India-Pakistan border.

1720 CE
The economic bubble, a British stock market mania, which ruined thousands of investors, became known as the South Sea Bubble.

1722 CE
The Afghan conquest of Iran. Afghans ousted from Iran 1729.

1729
The Methodist revival began in England with a group of men, including John Wesley and his younger brother Charles, as a movement within the Church of England. 

1733 CE
Letters on the English, written by Voltaire, based on his experiences living in England between 1726 and 1729, was published first in English in 1733.

1740-1
Famine in Ireland kills ten percent of the population.

1741 CE
Pope Benedict XIV issues Immensa Pastorum principis against slavery.

1742 CE
The first water-powered cotton mill, Marvel's Mill, begins operation in England.
"The Cotton Mill on the River Nen", from Noble and Butlin's 1746 map of Northampton - the earliest known pictorial representation of a cotton mill.
1744 CE
The First Saudi State is founded by Mohammed Ibn Saud.

1750
The Little Ice Age was a period of cooling that occurred after the Medieval Warm Period.

1754-1763 CE
The French and Indian War, is fought in colonial North America, mostly by the French and their allies against the English and their allies. 

1755 CE
Richard Cantillon, an Irish-French economist is credited with the discovery of economic theory and the first to consider the critical role of entrepreneurship in the economy. 

1756 CE
The Seven Years' War was a global war fought between 1756 and 1763. It involved all five European great powers of the time plus many of the middle powers and spanned five continents. 

1757 CE
The Battle of Plassey signals the beginning of formal British rule in India.  

1762-1796 CE
Reign of Catherine the Great of Russia.

1770 CE
In 1770, James Cook sailed along and mapped the east coast of Australia, which he named New South Wales and claimed for Great Britain.

1770 CE
The Bengal famine of 1770 kills one-third of the Bengal population.

1769 CE
Mayer Rothschild and his five sons established an international banking dynasty from humble beginnings in Frankfurt, Germany and invented modern banking.

1771 CE
Richard Arkwright, the pioneer of the factory system, combined power, machinery, semi-skilled labour and the new raw material of cotton to create mass-produced yarn.

1776 CE
The United States Declaration of Independence is adopted by the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.

1776 CE
Scottish moral philosopher, Adam Smith, publishes The Wealth of Nations, which described the industrialised capitalist system that was replacing the mercantilist system.

1778 CE
James Cook becomes the first European to land on the Hawaiian Islands. Cook is killed by Hawaiian natives at Kealakekua Bay in the following year.
Replica of the sailing ship Endeavor by James Cook, Dennis4trigger
7791879
Xhosa Wars between British and Boer settlers.

1783 CE
The French Montgolfier Brothers were the inventors of the first practical hot air balloon.

1783 CE
The Treaty of Paris, signed by representatives of King George III of Great Britain and representatives of the United States of America on September 3, 1783, ended the American Revolutionary War.

1776 CE
 English Bill of Rights, 1776

1787 CE
The United States Constitution is written.

1788 CE
The first settlement at Sydney, Australia, in 1788, consisted of about 850 convicts and their naval guards and officers, led by Governor Arthur Phillip.

1789 CE
George Washington is elected the first President of the United States.

1789 CE
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen is set by France's National Constituent Assembly in 1789. This human rights document emerged largely from the ideals of the Enlightenment.

1789 CE
The French Revolution was a period of far-reaching social and political upheaval in France and its colonies beginning in 1789 and ending in 1799.

1792 CE
 The New York Stock & Exchange Board is founded.

1803 CE
The French Revolutionary Wars lead into the Napoleonic Wars, which last from 1803–1815.

1793 CE
The last king of France, Louis XVI, before the French Revolution of 1789, was married to Marie Antoinette and both were executed for treason by guillotine in 1793.
Portrait of Marie-Antoinette of Austria, 1775
1794 CE
Darug people of the Hawkesbury and Penrith, NSW, raid farms and murder settlers until Governor Macquarie dispatchs troops from the British Army 46th Regiment in 1816. The Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars.
Aboriginal method of attack with boomerang under cover of shield, National Museum of Australia
1796 CE
English country doctor, Edward Jenner, introduced the vaccine for smallpox. Jenner called his new method "vaccination" after the Latin word for cow.

1799 CE
Napoleon stages a coup d'état and becomes First Consul of France.

1799 CE
In 1799, the 14th Tuʻi Kanokupolu, Tukuʻaho was murdered, which sent Tonga into a civil war for fifty years.

Short Outline of World History Timeline: Modern 1.

1501 CE
The Renaissance sculpture, the statue of David, was created between 1501 and 1504, by Michelangelo.

1503
Leonardo da Vinci begins painting the Mona Lisa and three years later, completes it.

1505 CE
The Ming dynasty was the ruling dynasty of China, from 1368 to 1644, following the collapse of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty. Zhengde Emperor ascended the throne of Ming Dynasty.

1506 CE
The first Muslim kingdom in Java, called Demak, in Indonesia, built by Sultan Trenggono.

1506 CE
The Catholic Church arrived in the Kingdom of Congo shortly after the first Portuguese explorers reached its shores in 1483. Catholicism becomes state religion in 1506.

1508-12
Michelangelo paints the Sistine Chapel ceiling.
The Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Alex Proimos
1509 CE
The Battle of Diu in 1509, was the culmination of global trade and the beginning of Portuguese dominance of the Spice trade and the Indian Ocean.

1509 CE
The “great plague" afflicted various parts of England in 1509.

511 CE
The Portuguese annexed Malacca in August 1511.

1512 CE
Copernicus proclaims the sun the center of the solar system.

1513 CE
Niccolò Machiavell writes, "The Prince", a treatise on political power.

1513 CE
Jorge Álvares is the first European to reach China by sea during the Age of Discovery.

1516-17 CE
The Ottomans gain control of Egypt, Arabia, and the Levant.

1517 CE
Martin Luther nailed a list of grievances against the Catholic Church to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany, 31 October 1517. The catalyst for the Protestant Reformation.

1518 CE
The documented outbreak of smallpox in 1518, in Hispaniola, was “the first epidemic of record”.

The sweating sickness was a mysterious and contagious disease that struck England and later, continental Europe in a series of epidemics beginning in 1485. Death often occurred within hours.

1518 CE
The dancing plague, possibly a psychogenic illness, caused people to dance in the streets in Strasbourg, Alsace (now modern-day France). Between 50 and 400 people danced for days.

1519-22 CE
An expedition led by explorer Ferdinand Magellan and Juan Elcano is the first to Circumnavigate the Earth.

1519 CE
The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire begins.

1521 CE
The fall of Belgrade to the Ottoman Empire.

1521 CE
The Portuguese attempt to invade Ming Dynasty China.

1524 CE
Great Peasants' Revolt in some German-speaking areas in Central Europe from 1524 to 1525.

1526 CE
The Ottomans defeat the Kingdom of Hungary. 

1527 CE
The sack of the city of Rome and the end of the Italian Renaissance.

1529 CE
The Austrians defeat the Ottoman Empire. 

1534 CE
The Ottomans capture Baghdad.

1536 CE
Between 1536 and 1541, Henry VIII disbanded monasteries, priories, convents and friaries, in England, Wales and Ireland; appropriated their income and disposed of their assets. The Church of England breaks away from the Roman Catholic Church.

1536 CE
The Inquisition was formally established in Portugal in 1536, after beginning in Spain some years earlier.

1536 CE
William Tyndale is burned at the stake for translating the Bible into English.

1562 CE
The French Wars of Religion between Catholics and Huguenots (Reformed/Calvinist Protestants) rage in the Kingdom of France between 1562 and 1598.

1563 CE
Between 1563 and 1665, London experienced four plagues that each killed one fifth of the city's inhabitants. Bubonic plague epidemics originated in China in 1331.

1565 CE
Colonisation of the Phillipines began when Spanish explorer Miguel López de Legazpi arrived from Mexico in 1565.

1566-1648
Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Netherlands.

1579 
Sir Francis Drake was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world.

1583 CE
Located in Klampenborg, North of Copenhagen (Denmark), Bakken opened in 1583 and is the oldest operating amusement park in the world.

1585 CE
Colony at Roanoke founded in North America.

1586 CE
The Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604) was an intermittent conflict between the kingdoms of Spain and England.

1588 CE
The English defeated the Spanish Armada's fleet of 130 ships sent by Spain in 1588 to invade England. 
Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 8 August 1588, c 1796
1590 CE
Shakespeare is believed to have written his very first play, Henry VI, Part One, 1590-91.

1592-1598 CE
Korea, with the help of the Chinese Ming Dynasty, repels two Japanese invasions.

1600 CE
The East India Company received a Royal Charter from Queen Elizabeth I on 31 December 1600.

1601 CE
The Russian famine of 1601–1603 kills about one-third of Russias.

1603
First permanent Dutch trading post is established in Banten, West Java.

1606 CE
Captain Willem Janszoon and his crew aboard the ship Duyfken becomes the first recorded Europeans to sight and make landfall in Australia.
The 1999 replica of Duyfken under sail in c. 2006, Rupert Gerritsen
1607 CE
The first permanent English colony in North America is settled, at Jamestown, Virginia.

1609 CE
The Dutch East India Company establish a factory in Hirado, Japan.

1611
The first publication of the King James Bible.

1616 CE
In 1616, Dirk Hartog, sailing off course, en route from the Cape of Good Hope to Batavia, landed on an island off Shark Bay, West Australia.

1619 CE
In 1619, the first 19 or so Africans to reach the English colonies arrived in Point Comfort, Virginia, near Jamestown, brought by English privateers, who seized them from a captured Portuguese slave ship.

1620
The first English Puritans, known today as the Pilgrims from Plymouth, arrive on the Mayflower, to the New World in 1620.

1622 CE
Algonquian natives kill 347 English settlers outside Jamestown, Virginia (one-third of the colony's population).

1625 CE
New Amsterdam, a 17th-century Dutch settlement established at the southern tip of Manhattan. In 1664, the English took over New Amsterdam and renamed it New York City.

1625 CE
Charles I, was the king of England, Scotland and Ireland from 1625, until his execution in 1649.

1626 CE
St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican completed.

1627 CE
In 1627 the south coast of Australia was accidentally discovered by François Thijssen, a Dutch explorer.

1632 CE
The Taj Mahal was built around 1632.
Taj Mahal, Agra © Yann Forget / Wikimedia Commons
1640 CE
Torture is outlawed in England.

1641 CE
The Irish Rebellion of 1641 led to sectarian killing, which still shapes Anglo-Irish politics today.

1641 CE
The first major philosopher of the early modern era, René Descartes, publishes Meditations on First Philosophy.

1642 CE
Abel Tasman, during his voyage in 1642, was the first known European expedition to reach Van Diemen's Land (later Tasmania) and New Zealand and to sight Fiji.

The Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam took place from the 16th through 18th centuries and turned Iran, which previously had a Sunni majority, into a Shia Islam majority.

1642 CE
The Roman Inquisition tried Galileo in 1633 and found him "vehemently suspect of heresy", sentencing him to indefinite imprisonment. Galileo was kept under house arrest until his death in 1642.

1642 CE
Beginning of English Civil War, conflict that will end in 1649 with the execution of King Charles I.

1643 CE
Louis XIV crowned King of France. His reign of 72 years and 110 days is the longest recorded of any monarch of a sovereign country in European history.

1644 CE
The Manchu conquer China ending the Ming dynasty. The subsequent Qing dynasty rules until 1912.

1645-1669 CE
Ottoman war with Venice. The Ottomans invade Crete and capture Canea.

1647 CE
Seven-year-old Mehmed IV becomes sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

1647 CE
The Great Plague of Seville (1647–1652) was a massive outbreak of disease in Spain that killed up to a quarter of Seville's population.

1648 CE
The Peace of Westphalia ends the Thirty Years' War and the Eighty Years' War and marks the ends of Spain and the Holy Roman Empire as major European powers.

1649-1653 CE
 The conquest of Ireland by the forces of the English Parliament, led by Oliver Cromwell.

1652 CE
Cape Town founded by the Dutch East India Company in South Africa.

1660 CE
The Royal Society of London, for Improving Natural Knowledge, was founded on 28 November 1660.

1660 CE
The Restoration of the Stuart monarchy in the kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland took place in 1660, when King Charles II returned from exile in Europe.

1662 CE
Blaise Pascal invented the first public transit system in Paris in 1662, using horse drawn buses.

1662 CE
Sylva, by the English writer John Evelyn, was first presented in 1662, as a paper to the Royal Society. It was published as a book two years later in 1664, and it is recognised as one of the most influential texts on forestry ever published.

1665 CE
In 1665, Robert Hooke used a microscope about six inches long with two convex lenses and discovered cells.

1665 CE
The Great Plague, lasting from 1665 to 1666, was the last major epidemic of the bubonic plague to occur in England. Originated in China in 1331.

1666 CE
The Great Fire of London swept through the central parts of the English city from Sunday, 2 September to Thursday, 6 September 1666.

1667-1699 CE
The Great Turkish War stops the Ottoman Empire's expansion into Europe.

1670 CE
The Hudson's Bay Company, a fur-trading enterprise headquartered in London, began operations on the shores of Hudson Bay in 1670. Founded in New France (Modern-day Canada).

1673 CE
Antonie Philips van Leeuwenhoek, using a single-lensed microscopes of his own design, was the first to experiment with microbes.

1675 CE
The Royal Observatory, Greenwich, UK, was commissioned in 1675 by King Charles II.

1682 CE
La Salle, a 17th-century French explorer and fur trader in North America, claims Louisiana for France.

1683 CE
China conquers the Kingdom of Tungning and annexes Taiwan.

1687 CE
Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, a work in three books by Isaac Newton, in Latin, first published 5 July 1687, states Newton's laws of motion, forming the foundation of classical mechanics; Newton's law of universal gravitation; and a derivation of Kepler's laws of planetary motion. 
Title page of "Principia", first edition (1687). Zhaladshar
1688 CE
The Revolution of 1688, was the deposition and subsequent replacement of James II and VII as ruler of England, Scotland and Ireland by his daughter Mary II and his Dutch nephew and Mary's husband, William III of Orange.

1689 CE,
A Letter Concerning Toleration, by John Locke, argues that having more religious groups actually prevent civil unrest. Locke also publishes Two Treatises of Government, which outlines Locke's ideas for a more civilized society based on natural rights and contract theory.

1689 CE
A border established between Russia and China.

1690 CE
The Battle of the Boyne, was a battle in 1690, between the Catholic James II and the Protestant William III, who had overthrown James as king of England.

1692 CE
Salem witch trials in Colonial Massachusetts.

1692-94 CE
Famine in France kills 2 million people.

1694 CE
The Bank of England was established in 1694.

1696-7 CE
Famine in Finland wipes out almost one-third of the population.

1698 CE
Thomas Savery invented the first commercially used steam powered device.
Fire pump, Savery system, 1698.PHGCOM



 

Short Outline of World History Timeline: 5th to 15th centuries/ Middle Ages


481 CE
Clovis who becomes King of the Franks 481 rules until 511. Converts to Christianity (AD. 496).

490 CE
Battle of Mount Badon and according to legend, British forces led by Arthur defeat the invading Saxons.

Buddhism reaches Burma and Indonesia.

527 CE
In 527, Justinian I becomes emperor of the Byzantine Empire, until 565. His legacy was the uniform rewriting of Roman law, the Corpus Juris Civilis, which is still the basis of civil law in many modern states. Under the Justinian Dynasty, particularly the reign of Justinian I, the Empire reached its largest territorial point, reincorporating North Africa, southern Illyria, southern Spain, and Italy into the Empire.

538 CE
Buddhism was introduced to Japan from Korea, either in 538 or 552 CE.

541 CE
The Plague of Justinian afflicted the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire and was one of the deadliest pandemics in history, with deaths of an estimated 25–100 million people during two centuries of recurrence (541–542 AD, with recurrences until 750).

570 CE
Muhammad, the founder of Islam, was born in Mecca in Saudi Arabia in 570 CE.

597 AD
The first organised attempt to convert the British people to Christianity by Augustine in 597 AD.

622 CE
In 622, Muhammad flees to the town of Medina, known as the Hegira, Arabic for "flight." And so, the first year of the Islamic calendar began in 622 CE.

626 CE
The Siege of Constantinople in 626 by the Sassanid Persians and Avars.

658 CE
Cædmon, the earliest English poet whose name is known, who cared for the animals at the monastery Streonæshalch (now known as Whitby Abbey). Composed "Cædmon's Hymn" between 658 and 680 CE.
Whitby Abbey, North Yorkshire, was founded in 657, Wilson44691
532 CE
Death of Muhammad.

638 CE
Jerusalem captured by the Arab army, mostly Muslims, but with contingents of Syrian Christians.

645 CE
The Soga clan falls in Japan.

674–678 CE
Islamic armies defeated at Constantinople, forestalling Islamic conquest of Europe.

698 CE
Byzantine rule in North Africa ends when Arabs destroy Carthage.

711 CE
Muslim army defeated the Visigoth army in Spain and by 720, Spain was largely under Muslim (Moorish) control.

712 CE
Buddhism in Pakistan took root some 2,300 years ago under the Mauryan king Ashoka. However, in 712 CE, Muslims established a state in Sind (modern day Pakistan).

732 CE
Battle of Tours halted the advancement of the Muslims (Moors) in southwestern Europe.

735 CE
The Venerable Bede, one of the greatest Anglo-Saxon scholars dies. He wrote many scientific, historical and theological works.

746 CE
Greeks take back Cyprus from the Arabs.
The Sanctuary and Temple of Apollo Hylates at Kourion, Cyprus
751 CE
The Battle of Talas, a military engagement between the Abbasid Caliphate, along with their ally, the Tibetan Empire, against the Chinese Tang dynasty. In July 751 AD. The Chinese were defeated and China's westward expansion came to an end.

757 CE
Offa was King of Mercia, a kingdom of Anglo-Saxon England, from 757, until his death in July 796.

768 CE
Beginning of Charlemagne's reign. He was King of the Franks and later became the Holy Roman Emperor.

772 CE
From 772, Charlemagne conquers Saxony and forcibly converts Germanic pagans to Catholicism.

787 CE
The Second Council of Nicaea met in 787 in Nicaea, to restore the use and veneration of icons.

793 CE
Sack of Lindisfarne. Viking attacks on Britain begin. The first English monastery raided by Vikings was in 793 at Lindisfarne. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle described the Vikings as "heathen men".

794 CE
The Heian period, the last division of classical Japanese history begins, running from 794 to 1185.


Beowulf, an Old English epic poem, was produced between 975 and 1025.

795 CE
The first recorded Viking raid in Ireland occurred in 795 AD when the Vikings plundered and burned the church on Lambeg Island, Dublin.

796 CE
The death of Offa marks the end of Mercian supremacy in England.

By the late 8th century, the Muslim Empire had conquered all of Persia and parts of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) territory including Egypt, Palestine, and Syria.

814 CE
After Charlemagne died in 814. Europe was in chaos, as there was no central government. Around 900 CE, some nobles began building castles to protect their lands from Viking raids and also collecting taxes, enforcing laws and raising armies. This was the era of Feudalism. 

826 CE
Arabs conquer Crete, Sicily, and Sardinia, 826–827.

865 CE
Danish raiders first begin to settle in England.

868 CE
In the words of the British Library, "the earliest complete survival of a dated printed book, is the Diamond Sūtra, a Tang-dynasty Chinese version dated back to 11 May 868.

870 CE
Iceland was first settled around 870.

871 CE
King Alfred the Great ruled Wessex from 871 to 899 and successfully defendied his kingdom against Viking invaders.

882 CE
In 882 CE, Kievan Rus', a loose federation of East Slavic and Finnic peoples in Europe forms under the reign of the Varangian Rurik dynasty. The modern nations of Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine all claim Kievan Rus' as their cultural ancestors.

893 CE
One of the earliest surviving biographies was written by Asser, a Welsh monk, called the "Life of King Alfred", in 893 CE.

900 CE
End of the Classic Period of Maya history.

907 CE
Tang Dynasty ends and Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms begins in China.

911 CE
The Viking Rollo and his tribe settle in what is now Normandy.

914 CE
Sri Kesari Warmadewa was the first king of Bali to leave a written inscription. He authored the inscription on the 914 CE Belanjong pillar. 

927 CE
King Aethelstan the Glorious unites the heptarchy of the Anglo-Saxon nations of Wessex, Sussex, Essex, Kent, East Anglia, Mercia and Northumbria founding the Kingdom of England.

960 CE
Song Dynasty begins, China.

960 CE
Westminster Abbey was founded in London, England, in 960 CE. However, today's building dates from the reign of Henry III in the 13th century.
  
988 CE
Volodymyr I of Kiev makes Christianity the national religion (Ukraine, Russia).

1000 AD
The Japanese epic "The Tale of Genji" is often called the world’s first novel. Following the life and romances of Hikaru Genji. It was written by a woman, Murasaki Shikibu, just after 1000 AD.

1001 CE
Leif Erikson, the Norse explorer from Iceland, was the first known European to set foot on continental North America (excluding Greenland).

1025 CE
An encyclopedia of medicine in five books is compiled by Persian Muslim physician-philosopher Avicenna (Ibn Sina) and completed in 1025.

1054 CE
The East-West Schism of 1054, was the break between what are now the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches. One major factor being the use of religious images, by the Western Church.

Construction on the Great Zimbabwe city in the south-eastern hills of Zimbabwe began in the 11th century and continued until it was abandoned in the 15th century.
A closeup of Great Zimbabwe ruins, Macvivo
1066 CE
William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, invades England and becomes king after the Battle of Hastings in 1066 CE.

1077 CE
In 1077, construction begins on the Tower of London, on the north bank of the River Thames in central London.

1086 CE
Domesday Book, the "Great Survey" of much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086 by order of King William the Conqueror.

1088 CE
The University of Bologna is founded in 1088 by an organised guild of students (hence studiorum), it is the oldest university in the world.

1095 CE
The first of 9 major crusades, which would continue into late 13th century. to capture the Holy Land, and to repel the Seljuk Turks from the Byzantine Empire occurred in 1095 CE.

1096 CE
The University of Oxford began teaching as early as 1096 CE.

1119 CE
The Knights Templar were a Catholic military order founded in 1119, headquartered on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. 

1135 CE
The Anarchy was a civil war in England and Normandy between 1135 and 1153, which resulted in a widespread breakdown in law and order. 

1150 CE
The University of Paris, known as the Sorbonne, emerged around 1150.

1154 CE
In 1154, Henry II institutionalised common law in England, by creating a unified court system "common" to the country.

1158 CE
The Hanseatic League, a commercial and defensive confederation of merchant guilds, for northern and central Europe, was founded 1158.

1160 CE
Construction of Notre-Dame de Paris began in 1160.

1171 CE
King Henry II of England commenced the Norman invasion of Ireland, marking the beginning of more than 800 years of direct English and, later, British involvement in Ireland.

1192 CE
Minamoto no Yoritomo was the founder and the first shōgun of the Kamakura shogunate of Japan. He ruled from 1192 until 1199.

1215 CE
The Magna Carta, a charter of rights is agreed to by King John of England at Runnymede, on 15 June 1215.

1237–1240 CE
The split of Kievan Rus' into three components (present day Russia, Ukraine, Belarus) followed from the Mongol invasion of Europe.

1258 CE
The Siege of Baghdad by the Mongols, which lasted from January 29 until February 10, 1258, is considered to mark the end of the Islamic Golden Age.

1274 CE
The Summa Theologiae, the best-known work of Thomas Aquinas, one of the most influential works of Western literature, published 1274.

1279 CE
All of China is under the rule of Kublai Khan as the emperor.

1296 CE
The English invasion of Scotland in 1296.

1299 CE
The Ottoman Empire is founded by Osman I and would last over 600 years.

1305 CE
Sir William Wallace, who became one of the main leaders during the First War of Scottish Independence was executed for treason.

1337 CE
The Hundred Years' War from 1337 to 1453, between the House of Plantagenet, rulers of England and the French House of Valois, over the right to rule the Kingdom of France.

1346
The Black Death swept through the Middle East and Europe in the years 1346-1353. Believed to have wiped out as many as 50% of Europe's population by its end.

1364 CE
The first modern documented astrarium clock was completed in 1364 by Giovanni de' Dondi.
The astrarium made by Giovanni Dondi dell'Orologio showed hour, year calendar, movement of the planets, Sun and Moon. Reconstruction, Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci, Milan.
1378 CE
The Western Schism, was a split within the Catholic Church lasting from 1378 to 1417, in which two men (by 1410 three) simultaneously claimed to be the true pope, and each excommunicated one another.

1380 CE
Chaucer begins to write The Canterbury Tales.

1381 CE
The Peasants' Revolt, a major uprising across large parts of England in 1381.

1389 CE
After the Battle of Kosovo in Serbia in 1389, the Turkish empire continued to spread over the Balkans, to finally reach Vienna.

1399 CE
End of Plantagenet Dynasty, beginning of the Lancaster lineage in England.

1405 CE
Zheng He, born Ma He, to a Muslim family in China, travels to Southeast Asia, South Asia, Western Asia, and East Africa from 1405 to 1433.

1417 CE
In 1417, Pope Martin V becomes the pope and the Western Schism is resolved.

1429 CE
The battle at Orléans and Joan of Arc's role finally drive the English from continental Europe.

1434 CE
The rise of the Medici family in Florence.

The illusionism of The Arnolfini Portrait painted in 1434 was remarkable for its time.
Van Eyck - Arnolfini Portrait, 1434 oil painting
1438 CE
The Inca civilisation begins expanding and the Inca Empire is born.

1439 CE
Invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg.
Picture of a copy of the Gutenberg Bible owned by the US Library of Congress, taken by Mark Pellegrini
1443 CE
King Sejong of Korea, created hangul, the native phonetic writing system for the Korean language.

1453
The Fall of Constantinople was the capture of the Byzantine Empire's capital by the Ottoman Empire on 29 May 1453.

1464 CE
The Dardanelles Gun, was cast in bronze in 1464, by Munir Ali, Turkish military engineer.

1485 CE
"Le Morte d'Arthur" was first published in 1485 by William Caxton and is today one of the best-known works of Arthurian literature in English. 

1485 CE
The Battle of Bosworth Field, was the last significant battle of the Wars of the Roses, the civil war between the Houses of Lancaster and York.

1492 CE
Age of discovery begins when Christopher Columbus reaches the New World.

1494 CE
The Treaty of Tordesillas was an agreement between Portugal and Spain to divide ownership rights of land found outside of Europe between them.

1499 CE
The naval Battle of Zonchio, part of the Ottoman–Venetian War of 1499–1503, is the first naval battle that used cannons in ships. Ottoman fleet defeats Venetians.

Short Outline of World History Timeline: ANCIENT 2

6 BCE 
The date of birth of Jesus is not stated in the gospels or in any historical reference. Theologians assume a year of birth between 6 BC and 4 BC.

27 BCE
Augustus Caesar was the first emperor of the Roman Empire reigning from 27 BCE, until his death in CE 14.

14 CE 
Tiberius was the second Roman emperor reigning from CE 14 to CE 37.

30 CE
The crucifixion of Jesus occurred in 1st-century Judea, most likely between CE 30 and 33.

37 CE 
Caligula was the third Roman emperor ruling from CE 37 to CE 41. 
Caligula, Roman emperor 37-41, Richard Mortel
41 CE 
Claudius was Roman emperor from CE 41 to CE 54.

43 CE 
The Roman conquest of Britain was a gradual process beginning in CE 43 under Emperor Claudius and being largely completed by CE 87.

46 CE
Paul the Apostle (Hebrew name Saul of Tarsus) sets out on his first missionary journey 46 to 48 CE. First stop was Cyprus. Paul's last journey began in 63 CE.

54 CE
Nero was the last Roman emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Ruled Rome from 54 CE. until his death by suicide, June 9 in 68 CE

70 CE 
The Siege of Jerusalem in the year 70 CE was the decisive event of the First Jewish–Roman War, in which the Roman army captured the city of Jerusalem and destroyed both the city and its "second temple".

72 CE
The Colosseum was built in Rome under the emperor Vespasian in AD 72 and was completed in AD 80 under his successor and heir, Titus.

79 CE
Destruction of Pompeii by the volcano Vesuvius.
Pompeii, with Vesuvius towering above, Italy, Qfl247
The Kingdom of Aksum in what is now Eritrea existed from approximately 80 BCE to AD 825.

98 CE
Roman Empire at largest extent under Emperor Trajan who presided over biggest military expansion in history, after having conquered modern-day Romania, Iraq and Armenia.

161 CE
One of the greatest Roman Emperors, Marcus Aurelius, becomes emperor of the Roman Empire.

206 CE
The Han dynasty was the second imperial dynasty of China from 206 BCE–220 CE.

220 CE
The Three Kingdoms from 220–280 CE was the tripartite division of China among the states of Wei, Shu, and Wu, 220-280 CE.

240 CE
The Gupta empire has been described as the Golden Age of Indian history, was founded by Sri Gupta sometime between 240 and 280 CE. 

313 CE
During the reign of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great in 313 CE, the Edict of Milan decreed religious toleration in the Roman empire.

325 CE
Constantine I summoned church officials to the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, to resolve the problem of Arianism, a doctrine that held that Christ was not divine but was a created being. It also resulted in the first uniform Christian doctrine, called the Nicene Creed.

330 CE
The ancient city of Byzantium became the new capital of the Roman Empire by Emperor Constantine the Great, after whom it was renamed, and dedicated on 11 May 330 CE.

378 CE
At the Battle of Adrianople, 9 August 378, the Roman army is defeated by the Germanic tribes. This was the start of the process which led to the fall of the Western Roman Empire.

380 CE
Roman Emperor Theodosius I declares the Arian faith of Christianity heretical. The priest, Alexandrian Arius, based on a study of the Bible stated the belief that Jesus was more than man, but less than God.

396CE
Theodosius I, Roman Emperor from 379 to 395, the last emperor to rule over both the Eastern and the Western halves of the Roman Empire outlaws all religions other than Catholicism.

409 CE
Rome sends orders for the Roman legion in Britain to withdraw and protect Rome against the Visigoths.
Roman public baths (thermae) in Bath (Aquae Sulis), UK. Steve Cadman
410 CE
Rome is ransacked by the Visigoths led by King Alaric in 410 CE.

431 CE
The Vandals cross the Strait of Gibraltar into Africa and capture Hippo Regius in August 431, which they make the capital of their kingdom.

440 CE
Some time after 440 CE, the Anglo-Saxons settle in Britain and mix with the native Celtic Britions.

450CE
The Tugu inscription was written in Pallava script, in West Java, with information about irrigation and water drainage.
Tugu inscription in National Museum of Indonesia, Bkusmono
428 CE
The Neo-Persian Empire, the last kingdom of the Persian Empire before the spread of Islam declared war on Armenia and Armenia lost its sovereignty in 428 CE.

451 CE
In 451, while under Persian control, the Armenians fought against the Persians in the battle of Vartanantz resisting the forced conversion to Zoroastrianism. Although defeated, the Persians afterwards allowed the Armenians to practice Christianity.

453 AD
The leader of the Hunnic Empire from 434 to 453 AD, Attila the Hun, dies, it is believed of a nosebleed on his wedding night.

455 CE
Chichen Itza the large pre-Columbian city built by the Maya people was founded 455 CE.

478 CE
Romulus Augustulus, the last of the Roman emperors in the west was overthrown by the Germanic leader Odoacer, bringing about the fall of the Roman Empire in the West.


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Short Outline of World History Timeline: ANCIENT 1

13.7 billion  
Big Bang occured approximately 13.7 billion years ago.

4..54 billion
Earth formed around 4.54 billion years ago.

3.77 billion
The earliest time that life first appeared on Earth is at least 3.77 billion years ago.

3.5 billion
Fossilised rock formations called stromatolites, found in the Pilbara region of western Australia, are the oldest fossils ever found at 3.5 billion-year-old.

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230 million BCE
Dinosaurs evolved from other reptiles (socket-toothed archosaurs) during the Triassic period, over 230 million years ago.

210 million 
The earliest known mammals were the morganucodontids, tiny shrew-size animals that lived 210 million years ago.

65 million BCE
Dinosaurs went extinct about 65 million years ago (at the end of the Cretaceous Period).

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4.2 to 1.9 million BCE
Australopithecus, a genus of hominins, from which modern humans are considered to be descended,  existed in Africa from around 4.2 to 1.9 million years ago.

2.12 million BCE
Stone tools discovered at the Shangchen site in China are dated to 2.12 million years ago, are claimed to be the earliest known evidence of hominins outside Africa.

3.3 million BCE
Stone tools found at Lake Turkana in Kenya are dated to be 3.3 million years old.

2.1 and 1.5 million BCE
Homo habilis is an archaic species of human which lived about 2.1 and 1.5 million years ago.

2 million BCE
Homo erectus was the first human ancestor to spread throughout the Old World, lived from about 2 million years ago, until at least 250,000 years ago. Homo erectus populations lived in southeastern Europe by 1.8 million years ago.

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700,000 BCE
Homo heidelbergensis lived from about 700,000 to 300,000 years ago.

300,000 BCE
All people living today belong to the species Homo sapiens, who arose about 300,000 years ago.

300,000 BCE
Neanderthals and Denisovans, our hominid cousins (we all descended from Homo heidelbergensis), left Africa about 300,000 years ago and settled in Europe and parts of western Asia. Many of us today have fragments of Neanderthals and Denisovans within our DNA, due to interbreeding.
Neanderthals are hominids in the genus Homo, humans, and generally classified as a distinct species (extinct)

300,000 BCE
The oldest known evidence for anatomically modern humans (as of 2017) are fossils found at Jebel Irhoud, Morocco, dated about 300,000 years old.

300,000 BCE
The best evidence of human's habitual use of fire comes from caves in Israel dating back between 400,000 and 300,000 years ago. Qesem Cave, reveals a hearth and evidence of the roasting of meat.

210,000 BCE
Early Eurasian Homo sapiens fossils have been found in Israel and Greece, dated to 194,000–177,000 and 210,000 years old respectively.

100,000 BCE
Earliest known human burial in the Middle East.

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70,000 BCE
Modern humans reached Asia by 70,000 years ago, moving down through South-east Asia and into Australia. Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, and Melanesian peoples came to Australia through the islands to the northwest, perhaps, about 65 thousand years ago.

70,000 BCE
A genetic bottleneck in human evolution occurred about 70,000 years ago, when human populations sharply decreased to 3,000–10,000 surviving individuals.

60,000 BCE
60, 000 year old needlepoint (missing stem and eye) has been found in Sibudu Cave, South Africa. 50,000 years ago sewing needles found in (Denisova Cave, Siberia).

45,000 BCE
About 45,000 years ago, modern humans ventured into Europe, by way of the Middle East. Modern human remains dating to 43–45,000 years ago have been discovered in Italy and Britain.

44,000 BCE
The oldest known cave paintings are more than 44,000 years old, found in both the Franco-Cantabrian region in western Europe, and in the caves in the district of Maros (Sulawesi, Indonesia). 32 shapes and lines, on the caves at Marsoulas in France, are repeated often and could be the world’s oldest code.

40,000 BCE
Extinction of Neanderthals about 40,000 years ago.

40,000 BCE 
The remains of one of the earliest known anatomically modern humans to be discovered cremated, was buried near Lake Mungo, Australia, 40,000 BCE.

36,000 BCE
The earliest dyed flax fibres have been found in a prehistoric cave in Georgia and date back to 36,000 BCE.

35,000 and 40,000 BCE
The lion-headed figurine is the oldest-known zoomorphic (animal-shaped) sculpture in the world, found to be between 35,000 and 40,000 years old, from Hohlenstein-Stadel cave, Germany.
The Löwenmensch figurine, between 35,000 and 40,000 years old, from Hohlenstein-Stadel cave, Germany.
28,000 BCE
The rock art at Narwala Gabarnmang rock shelter in south-western Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, Australia, is dated at 28,000 years BCE.

25,000–21,000 BCE
Burials in Iberia, Wales and eastern Europe, using red ochre and grave goods, such as ivory beads and flint blades.

23,000 BCE
The first evidence of agriculture was 23,000 years ago, at a human camp on the shore of the Sea of Galilee.

20,000 BCE
Pottery may well have been discovered independently in various places. However, pottery made for storing, cooking and carrying water was first manufactured in China about 20,000 years ago, found at Neolithic cave site of Xianrendong.

20,000 BCE
The settlement of the Americas began, via the Beringia land bridge, which had formed between northeastern Siberia and western Alaska, about 20,000 years ago.

12,600 to 9,600 BCE
Charred crumbs of a flatbread made by Natufian hunter-gatherers from wild wheat, wild barley and plant roots between 14,600 and 11,600 years ago ,have been found at the archaeological site of Shubayqa 1, in the Black Desert in Jordan.

12,000 BCE
Farming and agriculture began in Iraq, the Levant, parts of Turkey and Iran, 12,000 years ago. Agriculture is believed to be a pre-requisite for the development of cities.

10,000 BCE
A mesolithic arrangement of twelve pits and an arc found in Warren Field, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, which dates to about 10,000 years ago, has been described as a lunar calendar and the "world's oldest known calendar".

10,000 BCE
Göbekli Tepe in Turkey, dating back to the 10th–8th millennium BCE, is perhaps the world's oldest religious site. It is also notable for the complexity of its design.
Göbekli Tepe, an archaeological site in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey, Teomancimit

8040 BCE
The Pesse canoe is the world's oldest known ship dating between 8040 and 7510 BC. It was discovered during the construction of the Dutch A28 motorway.

7500 BCE
The first cities were founded in Mesopotamia, after the Neolithic Revolution, around 7500 BCE. However, The first cities to house several tens of thousands of people were Memphis, Egypt and Uruk, by 3100 BCE.

4500 BC - 3500 BC
Farming of plants and animals begins in Britain.

4,000 BCE
King Sargon of Akkad established the world's first empire more than 4,000 years ago in Mesopotamia.

3500 BCE
The first true city-states arose in Sumer about 3500 BCE, almost contemporaneously with similar entities in what are now Syria and Lebanon.

3500 BCE
The first city of the Norte Chico civilization is generally dated to around 3500 BCE.

3300 BCE
The Ancient Sumerians in the Middle East were most probably the first people to enter the Bronze Age, about 3300 to 1200 B.C. This is when people started to work with metal and make bronze tools and weapons.

3200 BCE
The cuneiform script created in Mesopotamia, present-day Iraq, was the first true writing system, dating to 3200 BCE.

3200–3100 BCE
Newgrange, the 250,000 ton (226,796.2 tonne) passage tomb aligned to the winter solstice in Ireland, was built.

3100 BCE
Babylonian mathematics, which used a sexagesimal (base 60) system and which is the source of the 60-minute hour, the 24-hour day and the 360-degree circle, originated about 3100 BCE.

3100 BCE
Egypt was largely unified under a single ruler around 3100 BCE.

3100 BCE
Stongehenge was built in six stages between 3000 and 1520 BCE during the transition from the Neolithic Period to the Bronze Age.

3000 BCE
The ancient Sumerians, who built the earliest civilization in Mesopotamia, developed a complex system of metrology from 3000 BCE.

3000 BCE
Minoan civilization, a Bronze Age civilization of Crete flourished from about 3000 BCE to about 1100 BCE.

2750 BCE
Hannu was an ancient Egyptian explorer (around 2750 BCE) and the first explorer of whom there is any knowledge. He travelled along the Red Sea to Punt and sailed to what is now part of eastern Ethiopia and Somalia.

2635–2610 BCE
The oldest surviving Egyptian Pyramid was commissioned by Pharaoh Djoser.

2613 BCE
The oldest religious writings in the world, The Pyramid Texts, which make up the principal funerary literature of ancient Egypt, were inscribed on the sarcophogi and walls of the pyramids at Saqqara in the 5th and 6th Dynasties of the Old Kingdom (2613-2181 BCE).

2600-1900 BCE
One of the largest ancient cities was Mohenjo-daro located in the Indus Valley (present-day Pakistan); it existed from about 2600 BCE and had a population of about 50,000. The rulers of the town of Lothal lived in the acropolis, which featured paved baths, underground and surface drains (built of kiln-fired bricks) and potable water well.

2560 BCE
The Great Pyramid of Giza completed.

2,500 BCE
2,500 BCE, in ancient Greece, mathematics first became an organised science.

2150 BCE
The earliest surviving great work of literature and the second oldest religious text, after the Pyramid Texts, is the Epic of Gilgamesh, an epic poem from ancient Mesopotamia. Written 2150 -1400 BCE.

2100–2050 BCE
The Code of Ur-Nammu is the oldest known law code surviving today. It is from Mesopotamia and is written on tablets, in the Sumerian language 2100–2050 BCE.
Ur Nammu code, Istanbul, Istanbul Archaeology Museums
2000 BCE
The oldest Egyptian medical text is the Kahun Gynaecological Papyrus from around 2000 BCE.

2000 BCE
The earliest fully developed spoke-wheeled horse chariots are from the chariot burials of the Andronovo (Timber-Grave) sites of the Sintashta-Petrovka Proto-Indo-Iranian culture in modern Russia and Kazakhstan, from around 2000 BCE.

2000 BCE
The Babylonians were the first to recognize that astronomical phenomena are periodic and apply mathematics to their predictions, in conjunction with their mythology, dating back 1894 BCE – 1595 BCE.

1900 BCE
The Erlitou culture was an early Bronze Age urban society and archaeological culture that existed in the Yellow River valley, China, from approximately 1900 to 1500 BCE.

1700–1100 BCE
The oldest of the Hindu Vedas (scriptures), the Rig Veda was composed 1700–1100 BCE and it contains the first mention of Rudra, a form of Shiva, as the supreme god.

1600-1046 BCE
The Oracle bones, part of the shoulder blade of an ox or other animals, were carved by priests or diviners, in the Shang Dynasty script. This is the oldest known form of Chinese writing and the ancestor of the Chinese characters still used today.

1600 BCE
The Edwin Smith Papyrus, is an ancient Egyptian medical text from 1600 BCE, named after the dealer who bought it in 1862. It presents a rational and scientific approach to medicine in ancient Egypt.

1450 BCE
The earliest written evidence of Linear B, a syllabic script that was used for writing Mycenaean Greek, can be found on a clay tablet found in Messenia that dates to between 1450 and 1350 BCE, making Greek the world's oldest recorded living language.

1400 BCE
The earliest form of musical notation can be found in a cuneiform tablet that was created at Nippur, in Babylonia (today's Iraq), in about 1400 BCE.

1360 BCE
From 1360 BC to 1074 BC, the Assyrian Empire conquered all of Mesopotamia and also much of the Middle East, Egypt, Babylon, Israel, and Cyprus.

1351 or 1353 BCEThe earliest known recorded monotheistic religion (one god), was created during the reign of Akhenaten, in Ancient Egypt.

1250–600 BCE
The Upanishads, part of the oldest scriptures of Hinduism, the Vedas, that deal with meditation, philosophy and spiritual knowledge and which are central toHinduism, Buddhism and Jainism are created.

1200 BCE
A widespread collapse of Bronze Age civilization in the Eastern Mediterranean, often called the Greek Dark Ages, begins from 1200 BC, with the loss of the Linear B writing of the Greek language. great palaces and cities of the Mycenaeans were destroyed or abandoned.

1200 and 600 BCE
The Iron Age, was characterised by the prevalent smelting of iron with Ferrous metallurgy and the use of Carbon steel. Pirak is an early iron-age site in Balochistan, Pakistan, going back to about 1200 BCE.

1200 BCE
The earliest known major Mesoamerican civilization, the Olmecs, built step pyramids, made and traded rubber and carved 20 ton stone heads, to commemorate their rulers.

1200-1500 BCE?
Zoroastrianism is an ancient pre-Islamic religion of Iran dated to the 6th century BCE. Zoroastrians believe that there is one universal, transcendent, all-good, and uncreated supreme creator deity, Ahura Mazda.

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900 to 600 BCE
The Chandogya Upanishad is written with Verse 3.17.6 mentioning Krishna Devakiputra, as a student of the sage Ghora Angirasa.

900 to 600 BCE
The Torah, the five books of Moses, or the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible, is compiled.

800 BCE
Phoenicians settled in southern Spain after 800 BCE, shortly after the traditional founding of the greatest Phoenician colony, Carthage, in 814 BCE.

800 BCE
The oldest surviving works of Greek literature were composed 800 BCE. The Iliad, 750BCE and the Odyssey 720BCE.

776 BCE
The ancient Games were first staged in Olympia, Greece, from 776 BCE, until 393 AD. But it took 1503 years for the Olympics to return.

753 BCE
Legend has it that Ancient Rome was founded by the two brothers and demigods, Romulus and Remus, on 21 April 753 BCE.

624 BCE –546 BCE
Thales of Miletus, a Greek mathematician, astronomer and pre-Socratic philosopher from Miletus in Ionia, Asia Minor, was regarded by Aristotle as the first philosopher in the Greek tradition. He broke away from the use of mythology to explain the world and the universe.

610BCE
According to the geographer Eratosthenes, Anaximander was the first person to publish a map of the world, 610 – 546 BCE.

600 BCE
Britain becomes separated from the European mainland.

551 BCE
The teachings of the Chinese philosopher Confucius (551–479 BCE).

525BCE
The Acropolis was built around 525 BCE.

507 BCE
Athenian democracy developed around the sixth century BCE in the Greek city-state (known as a polis) of Athens, introduced by the Athenian leader Cleisthenes in 507 BCE.

490 BCE
Greeks defeat Persians at battles of Marathon, 490 BCE.

485BCE
Xerxes I, ruled Persia from 485–465 BCE.

484 BCE
The earliest known systematic historical thought emerged in Ancient Greece, beginning with Herodotus of Halicarnassus (484–425 BCE).

472 BCE
"The Persians” is a tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus. first performed in 472 BCE. It is considered the oldest surviving play in the history of theatre.

 460 –400 BCE
Thucydides has been dubbed the father of "scientific history" due to his evidence-gathering and analysis of cause and effect, without reference to intervention by the deities.

460 BCE
Hippocrates was a Greek physician who lived from about 460 BCE to 375 BCE, who taught that all forms of illness had a natural cause, rather than superstition or the anger of the gods.

451 BCE
The Twelve Tables was a set of laws inscribed on 12 bronze tablets created in ancient Rome in 451 and 450 BCE, which was binding on both patrician and plebeian. This is the earliest attempt by the Romans to create a CODE OF LAW.

449 BCE
The golden age of Athenian culture is usually dated from 449 to 431 B.C, when Athens became the artistic, cultural and intellectual as well as commercial center of the Hellenic world.

447 BCE
Parthenon is built in Athens as a temple of the goddess Athena 447–432 BCE

400 BCE
The Ancient Greeks were the first to develop astronomy, which they treated as a branch of mathematics, rather than relate celestial objects to gods and spirits, 400 BCE.

400 BCE
The earliest water-powered machines, the water wheel and watermill, first appeared in the Persian Empire, in what are now Iraq and Iran, by the early 4th century BCE.

300 BCE
The oldest known version of the Tao Te Ching was written on bamboo tablets.

300 BCE
Greek mathematician, Euclid, in about 300 BCE, wrote a complete, coherent review of all geometrical theory, which existed at the time.

264 BCE
The First Punic War (264 to 241 BC) was the first of three wars fought between Carthage and Rome, the two main powers of the western Mediterranean, in the early 3rd century BCE. After huge human losses on both sides, the Carthaginians were defeated and Rome rises as the dominant power.

250–900 BCE
Classic Mayan step pyramids were constructed.

221 BCE
Emperor Qin Shi Huang ordered the construction of the Great Wall of China around 221 BCE. Qin dynasty (221–206 BC).

218 BCE
In 218 BCE, Hannibal led an army, including a few dozen elephants, over the Alps from Spain, to northern Italy, starting the second war between Rome and Carthage.

150 BCE
The Antikythera Mechanism was an analog computer made from 150–100 BCE designed to calculate the positions of astronomical objects.
The Antikythera mechanism (Fragment A – front); visible is the largest gear in the mechanism, approximately 14 centimetres (5.5 in) in diameter Marsyas
146 BCE
The Greeks were finally defeated by Rome, at the Battle of Corinth in 146 BCE.

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63 BCE
The Roman general Pompey conquered Jerusalem in 63 BCE.

49 BCE,
Julius Caesar's crossed the Rubicon river in January 49 BCE, which precipitated the Roman Civil War, which ultimately led to Caesar becoming a dictator.
                                                    
4 BCE–30/33 CE
Jesus of Nazareth, the central figure of Christianity is believed to have lived, 4 BCE–30/33 CE and Jesus' preaching began around AD 27–29 and lasted one to three years.




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Short Outline of World History Timeline: MODERN