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Topic: 1274 BC


  
  Assyria - Search View - MSN Encarta
Later, probably in the 3rd millennium bc, Semitic nomads conquered the region and made their inflected tongue, which was closely related to Babylonian, the prevailing language of the land.
bc), succeeded in extending the territory of Assyria from the Zagros Mountains to the Mediterranean Sea.
He relieved Assyria from the pressure of the Aramaean tribes that were menacing the valley of the central Tigris, expelled the Urartians from Syria, annexed the Aramaean states of Arpad and Damascus, subjugated the cities of Palestine, and made himself the ruler of Babylonia.
encarta.msn.com /text_761564347__1/Assyria.html   (2592 words)

  
 Britain.tv Wikipedia - Arameans
As early as the 8th century BC, Aramaic language and writing competed with the Akkadian language and script (cuneiform) in Assyria, and thereafter it spread throughout the Orient.
Around 500 BC, when the Achaemenid monarchs looked for a tongue that could be understood by all their subjects, they chose Aramaic, which became the lingua franca of their vast empire.
In the early 14th century BC, much of Israel was under Aramaean rule for eight years according to the Biblical Book of Judges until Othniel defeated the forces led by Chushan-Rishathaim, the King of Aram-Naharaim.
www.britain.tv /wikipedia.php?title=Arameans   (1325 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - 13th century BC - Calendar Encyclopedia
1250 BC - Wu Ding emperor of Shang Dynasty to 1192 BC.
Merneptah, Pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt (1212 BC - 1202 BC).
Amenemses, Pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt (1202 BC - 1199 BC).
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /13th_century_BC.htm   (781 words)

  
 1270s BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1279 BC - 1212 BC - Temple of Ramesses II in Abu Simbel, Nubia (19th dynasty) was built.
1274 BC, July - The Battle of Kadesh in Syria.
1274 BC - sign the earliest known peace treaty at the end of the Battle of Kadesh.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1274_BC   (172 words)

  
 Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Later, probably in the 3d millennium bc, Semitic nomads conquered the region and made their inflected tongue, which was closely related to Babylonian, the prevailing language of the land.
Beginning about 2300 bc, Assyria formed part of the empire of Sumer and Akkad founded by the kings of the Akkadian dynasty, which was established by Sargon I, called the Great (r.
Toward the end of the 10th century bc, for example, Adad-nirari II (912–891 bc) annexed the Aramaean state centering on Nisibis, east of the Habur River.
historychannel.com /encyclopedia/article.jsp?link=FWNE.fw..as161600.a   (2525 words)

  
 All Empires - Assyria
Adad-Nirari III was succeeded by Shalmaneser IV (782-772 B.C.), and the latter by Asshur-Dan III (773-754 B.C.).
In 729 BC the summit of his ambition was attained, and he was invested With the sovereignty of Asia in the holy city of Babylon.
Shalmaneser died suddenly in Tebet 722 B.C., while pressing the siege of Samaria, and the seizure of the throne by another general, Sargon, on the 12th of the month, gave the Babylonians an opportunity to revolt.
www.allempires.com /empires/assyria/assyria1.htm   (3118 words)

  
 Britain.tv Wikipedia - Trojan War
They believed that this war took place in the 13th or 12th century BC, and that Troy was located in the vicinity of the Dardanelles in what is now north-western Turkey.
Many scholars would agree that there is a historical core to the tale, though this may simply mean that the Homeric stories are a fusion of various stories of sieges and expeditions by the Greeks of the Bronze Age or Mycenean period.
It is generally thought that the poems were written down in the seventh and sixth century BC, after the composition of the Homeric poems, though it is widely believed that they were based on earlier traditions.
www.britain.tv /wikipedia.php?title=Trojan_War   (7580 words)

  
 AskWhy! Assyria - Jewish Mythology   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Assur-nadin-ahhe (1400-1391 BC) is mentioned by Assur-uballit(1363-1328 BC), in one of his letters to Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten, 1350-1334 BC), king of Egypt, as his father and predecessor, but he was actually the son of Eriba-adad (1390-1364 BC) who was the son of Assur-bel-nisheshu, not Assur-nadin-ahhe.
Adad-nirari III was succeeded by Shalmaneser III (783-773 BC), and the latter by Assur-dan III (773-755 BC).
Tiglath-pileser III (744-727 BC), the biblical Pul, seized the throne of Assyria, at Nineveh.
www.askwhy.co.uk /judaism/0356Assyria.html   (8510 words)

  
 TEMPLE OF RAMSES II   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Ramses II was an ancient Egyptian king, third ruler of the 19th Dynasty, the son of Seti I. During the early part of his reign Ramses fought to regain the territory in Africa and western Asia that Egypt had held during the 16th and 15th centuries BC.
The major battle of this war was fought in 1274 at Kadesh, in northern Syria, and in 1258 BC a treaty was signed whereby the contested lands were divided and Ramses agreed to marry the daughter of the Hittite king.
The remaining years of his rule were distinguished by construction of such monuments as the rock-hewn temple of Abu Simbel, the great hypostyle hall in the Temple of Amon at Karnak, and the mortuary temple at Thebes, known as the Ramesseum.
sangha.net /messengers/Ramses-II.htm   (210 words)

  
 Ramses II
Ramses II (1279-1212 BC) was an ancient Egyptian King, third ruler of the 19th Dynasty, and the son of Seti I. According to tradition, he was the Pharaoh of Egypt in the biblical Exodus story.
When Seti I died in 1290 B.C., Ramses assumed the throne and began a series of wars against the Syrians, he fought to regain the territory in Africa and western Asia that Egypt had held during the 16th and 15th centuries BC.
The major battle of this war was fought in 1274 BC at Kadesh, in northern Syria, and showed Ramses as the winner Neither power achieved a conclusive victory, however, in 1258 BC a treaty was signed whereby the contested lands were divided and Ramses agreed to marry the daughter of the Hittite king.
www.aldokkan.com /egypt/ramses.htm   (341 words)

  
 A timeline of the Ancient Middle-East
1787 BC : Hammurabi conquers the city-states of Uruk and Isin
1274 BC : the Egyptian king Rameses II is defeated by the Hittite king Muwatallis II at the city of Kadesh
1200 BC : the Arameans migrate from Arabia to Syria (Harrans)
www.scaruffi.com /politics/neareast.html   (4175 words)

  
 American Oriental Society: Abstracts of Communications presented at the 207th Meeting 4
Evidence of a gap in occupation in the early Middle Bronze period, at least on the site acropolis, is succeeded by later Middle Bronze remains indicating the importance of the town in the period of the Yamhad state.
This occupation is followed by an extensive mid-second millennium B.C. settlement with evidence of a site-wide conflagration in the early Late Bronze Age.
BC) and that of Semito-Hamitic by Militarev (Near East, before VIII mill.
www.umich.edu /~aos/abs974.htm   (6901 words)

  
 New Kingdom Egyptian (1550-1070 BC) - DBA #11
Amenhotep II, who reigned 1453-1419 BC, and Thutmose IV tried to maintain the Asian conquests in the face of growing threats from the Mitanni and Hittites, but they found it necessary to use negotiations as well as force to penetration further into Mesopotamia.
He was succeeded by his son, Seti I, who reigned 1291-1279 BC and is considered to be one of the most active and successful military leaders of the period.
It covers the time period 1340 - 1100 BC and I would presume that the rulers of those states within Egypt's sphere of influence would continue to require reminders of where their loyalty lay or that they would request aid from their overlord in times of internecine wars.
www.fanaticus.org /DBA/armies/dba11tr.html   (1494 words)

  
 untitled
1274 BC, Hittites (Hattusilis) and new Kingdom Egypt (Ramses II) fought a fierce battle at Kadesh, to a standstill.
Its assemblages appear associated with a late Bronze Age settlement, actually, a meager garrison town, with barracks and soup kitchens by the walls, and bodies of warriors found lying in streets.
By 1100 BC, there was a complete collapse of urban civilizations in the Mycenaean and Hittite areas.
web.ics.purdue.edu /~rauhn/FallofBA.htm   (1425 words)

  
 Conflict - Timeline Index
The writings of Herodotus, who was born c.484 B.C., are the great source of knowledge of the histo...
In the 3d century B.C. Rome challenged Carthage’s control of the W Mediterranean in the Punic Wars (so called after the Roman name for the Carthaginians, Poeni, i.e...
The Mongol invasions of Japan of 1274 and 1281 were major events of macrohistorical importance, despite their ultimate failures.
www.timelineindex.com /content/select/397   (471 words)

  
 Oded Lipschits on Jehoiakim's death and burial. New a
Near the ziggurat of Assur, a large stone tablet of Shalmaneser I (1274-1245 BC) was discovered, mentioning the renewing of the Temple of Assur and the building of the two towers by the Kal-kal gate.
One stamped brick of Adad Nirari I (1307-1275 BC), and numerous economic tablets, some belonging to the end of the Assyrian empire were also recovered.
It rose to prominence during the reign of the Assyrian king Ashur-nasirpal II (883-859 B.C.), who elevated it to the position of his new capital and commissioned the building and / or refurbishment of many of its major buildings, temples and palaces.
oi.uchicago.edu /OI/ANE/ANENEWS-DIGEST/2001/v2001.n208   (6556 words)

  
 Legion XXIV - Time Line of Etruscan Rome
c.3000 BC Ur and Uruk, the first recognized city-states on Earth, are established in the Sumer region of Southern Mesopotamia (Iraq) in the south end of the Fertile Crescent, where records for the first Kings, the wheel and the plow are found.
c.1900 BC Postulated time for the biblical destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the wicked "cities of the plain" in the Dead Sea region, also of Admah, Zeboiim and Zoar, of which Zoar was spared.
718 BC The Eternal Flame of Rome is ignited, tended by the Vestal Virgins.
www.legionxxiv.org /etruscantimeline   (2476 words)

  
 #1CHART
It was probably at this period, 250-100 BC, that the Mithraic system of ritual and doctrine took the form which it afterward retained.
"as early as 70 BC Mithraism was known to the Roman world....That the doctrine always remained pure is of course unlikely.
1274 The Council of Trent approves the Hellfire doctrine.
www.fenskeart.com /JW/timeline.htm   (15883 words)

  
 Adar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Therefore January 20 - February 19 marked Adar 1 and February 19 - March 21 Adar 1238 BC, probably the year of Joshua's long day.
Then Joshua's long day on the sixth day of the month of the Chinese spring may mean January 26/27 or February 25/26 1238 BC.
If the sun moved back five years later to the day, February 25, it would mark the end of the month Adar.
sunnyokanagan.com /joshua/Adar.html   (97 words)

  
 BC Auto Design - NASIOC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
About dealing with them, personally I think they are a bunch of horses **ses, but they sure have everything you want and stuff that is very difficult to find.
The Impreza that Richard has (he also owns the supercharged NSX) was done by BC auto.
SFR did get some of their product from there as well..but since SFR is out of business....
forums.nasioc.com /forums/showthread.php?t=89533   (496 words)

  
 Quantitative Trait Loci for Sexual Isolation Between Drosophila simulans and D. mauritiana -- Moehring et al. 167 (3): ...
In all three crosses, BC flies were collected as virgins and
BC and pure-species flies were transferred by aspiration to
All BC flies from the mating behavior assays were stored at
www.genetics.org /cgi/content/full/167/3/1265   (3741 words)

  
 The life of Ramesses the Great - the battle of Kadesh
In the spring of 1274 BC, recorded as regnal year 5, day 9, 2nd month of summer of his reign, Ramesses marched eastwards with a force of 20,000 troops and charioteers through Gaza, Canaan and Syria to confront the coalition at Kadesh.
1246-1245 BC) and was accepted into Ramesses's harem as Mahor-Neferure, "she is one who sees Horus, the beauty of Re".
A few years later, year 44, another one of Hattusilis daughters was sent for Ramesses to marry, an action that can only be described as a bribe, as a means of securing the continued allegiance between the two countries.
www.egyptologyonline.com /battle_of_kadesh.htm   (1886 words)

  
 Medicine in Ancient Egypt 3
The most reputable ones where that of Imhotep at Memphis which has gained an international reputation particularly for its library till AD, the one at Sais where midwives were trained and afterwards themselves instructing physicians in the art of obstetrics, and the peri-ankh of Abydos which Ramses IV visited frequently its library.
He thought the Egyptian people were rejoicing his defeat, and in his rage, ordered the schools and temples to be destroyed.
An inscript illustrates a man caring for the leg of his fellow in the rear of the battle of Kadesh (1274 BC).
www.arabworldbooks.com /articles8c.htm   (1649 words)

  
 Egyptian Herbs
The earliest written records of its practices are to be found in the Ebers Papyrus, dating from the sixteenth century BC.
This is historically of value since in itself, it represents a compilation of earlier works that contain a large number (877) of prescriptions and recipes.
The most famous and elaborate papyri are the “Edwin Smith Papyrus” (1600 BC) and the “Ebers papyrus”, which refers to King Den (1st dynasty, 3000 BC), suggesting a much earlier origin.
www.angelfire.com /realm2/amethystbt/Egyptianherbs.html   (4565 words)

  
 Masonically Inspired Essays: January 2006
This Gregorian calendar was based on the actual revolution of the earth around the sun consisting of 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds, which is 11 minutes and 14 seconds less than the Julian calendar of 365 days every three years and 366 days on the fourth or leap year.
Julius Ceasar reformed the Egyptian calendar in 63 BC using the traditional 365 days normal year and the 366 days leap year, that in turn, was amended by the Georgian calendar in 1582.
King Solomon built his magnificent temple sometime 950 BC where the chapiters and pommels (or bowls, or nodes depending on the translation used) are mentioned in the Holy Bible.
lionrroar.blogspot.com /2006_01_01_lionrroar_archive.html   (6139 words)

  
 Western Speculative Thought
3000 BC: Pharaoh is worshiped by the Egyptians
2500 BC: The beginnings of the Isis and Osiris cult in Egypt
585 BC: Thales of Miletus begins the development of philosophy by speculating about the nature of the "cosmos."
www.thenagain.info /WebChron/WestCiv/WestPhil.html   (82 words)

  
 Parthia in the News - 2002 and Prior
The Unknown Paradise: Archaeological Treasures from Bahrain presents nearly 600 objects outlining 4500 years of the history of this past and present center of international trade in the Arabian Gulf.
As the bronze-age commercial link among the civilizations of the Indus, Oman and Mesopotamia, Bahrain was the home of the rich and sophisticated Dilmun civilization (2100-1700 BC), whose most important trading commodity was copper.
Bahrain enjoyed another, less well-known florescence at the intersection of Hellenic and Parthian culture (300 BC-AD 600), when it was known as Tylos.
www.parthia.com /parthia_news_2002-prior.htm   (4971 words)

  
 [No title]
CHRONOLOGICAL SEQUENCE: 1274 BC, Hittites (Hattusilis) and new Kingdom Egypty (Ramses II) fought fierce battle at Kadesh, to a standstill.
According to OT Exodus, they migrated for 40 years before invading the "promised land" of Canaan.
By 1100 BC, complete collapse of urban civilizations of Mycenae and Hittites.
web.ics.purdue.edu /~rauhn/H102_8.doc   (1181 words)

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