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Topic: 1354 BC


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In the News (Wed 23 May 12)

  
  Thebes - Crystalinks
No details of the earlier history of Thebes have been preserved, except that it was governed by a land-holding aristocracy who safeguarded their integrity by rigid statutes about the ownership of property and its transmission.
In the late 6th century BC the Thebans were brought for the first time into hostile contact with the Athenians, who helped the small village of Plataea to maintain its independence against them, and in 506 repelled an inroad into Attica.
The victorious Greeks subsequently punished Thebes by depriving it of the presidency of the Boeotian League, and an attempt by the Spartans to expel it from the Delphic amphictyony was only frustrated by the intercession of Athens.
www.crystalinks.com /thebes.html   (1129 words)

  
  14th century BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1334 BC/1333 BC - Death of Smenkhkare, Pharaoh of Egypt and co-ruler with Akhenaton.
1334 BC/1333 BC - Death of Akhenaton, Pharaoh of Egypt.
1323 BC - Death of Pharaoh Tutankhamun of Egypt.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/14th_century_BC   (646 words)

  
 Thebes, Greece - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
No details of the earlier history of Thebes have been preserved, except that it was governed by a land-holding aristocracy who safeguarded their integrity by rigid statutes about the ownership of property and its transmission.
In the late 6th century BC the Thebans were brought for the first time into hostile contact with the Athenians, who helped the small village of Plataea to maintain its independence against them, and in 506 repelled an inroad into Attica.
The victorious Greeks subsequently punished Thebes by depriving it of the presidency of the Boeotian League, and an attempt by the Spartans to expel it from the Delphic amphictyony was only frustrated by the intercession of Athens.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thebes_(Greece)   (1590 words)

  
 The Hittite empire to c. 1180 BC
It is possible that the branch of the Hittite royal family that gained control in the 15th century BC may have originated in Kizzuwadna.
While the king was at Kummanni, he was joined by his brother Piyasilis, king of Carchemish, who was taken ill and died; his death sparked off a revolt in Syria supported by Egypt and Assyria, but the appearance of the king himself at the head of his imperial army proved sufficient to suppress it.
Kurunta, another son of Muwatallis, was installed as Great King of a state centered on the city of Tarhuntassa, probably southwest of Konya, with equal status to the ruler of Carchemish; the city would have served as a base for operations farther west.
www.history-world.org /hittite_empire_to_c.htm   (2000 words)

  
 The Hittite empire to c. 1180 BC
It is possible that the branch of the Hittite royal family that gained control in the 15th century BC may have originated in Kizzuwadna.
While the king was at Kummanni, he was joined by his brother Piyasilis, king of Carchemish, who was taken ill and died; his death sparked off a revolt in Syria supported by Egypt and Assyria, but the appearance of the king himself at the head of his imperial army proved sufficient to suppress it.
Kurunta, another son of Muwatallis, was installed as Great King of a state centered on the city of Tarhuntassa, probably southwest of Konya, with equal status to the ruler of Carchemish; the city would have served as a base for operations farther west.
history-world.org /hittite_empire_to_c.htm   (1993 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Ikhnaton
c.1354 BC, king of ancient Egypt (c.1372-1354 BC), of the XVIII dynasty; son and successor of Amenhotep III (see under Amenhotep I).
c.1372-1350 BC, queen of ancient Egypt; wife of Ikhnaton (XVIII dynasty) and aunt of Tutankhamen.
Of humble origin, she was remarkable for her influence in state affairs in the reigns of her husband and of Ikhnaton, her son.
www.encyclopedia.com /SearchResults.aspx?Q=Ikhnaton&StartAt=1   (531 words)

  
 BC (Before Christ)
Queer Timeline BC Author Unknown About 2500 B.C. The Epic of Gilgamesh - a tale of love between two "friends"; the harsh king of Uruk, Gilgamesh; and a stranger, Enkidu, sent by the gods to temper the king.
600 BC After this date it becomes customary for Greek hoplites, the upper class warriors who fight in the phalanx, each to take a boy of 12 as a lover to train until he is 18 and can hunt and fight.
In 350 BC he leaves on a military expedition, taking with him 800 boys to be used for the pleasure of himself and his officers.
www.jahsonic.com /BC.html   (1174 words)

  
 Conclusions of Mr Justice Burton | Society | SocietyGuardian.co.uk
What had been put to BC in cross-examination, and Ms Monaghan on behalf of SY was putting what SY recalled his having been told by Mr White had been said by BC, was that BC would only "stop making these allegations when SY will have his crooks out of this organisation".
The finding that BC's conduct was found to be unsupportable in 1991 (Recruitment Fraud, including stooping to forgery of a document) and again in 1992 (Onuoha) made it the more inevitable that his conduct would be found similarly unsupportable in 1993 and onwards.
If there was no allegation by BC of the giving of a reward to Warnock, and if BC did not cause SY's name to be placed on the Police List after the "pooh-poohing" meeting and before the handwritten note meeting, as found by the Tribunal, then no inference can be drawn.
society.guardian.co.uk /councilsincrisis/story/0,8150,492160,00.html   (1599 words)

  
 history18aearliestcivilizations2egypt&eastmediterranean
Dynasty XXII (945—745 BC): This was the Libyan dynasty.
Dynasty XXIII (745—718 BC): This was the Nubian Dynasty that was founded after the kingdom of Kush invaded Egypt in the mid-8th century BC.
Dynasty XXV (712—663 BC): This was the Assyrian Dynasty.
home.att.net /~history240/history18aearliestcivilizations2egypt-eastmediterranean.html   (3381 words)

  
 The Hittites
One authority argues for their arrival in Anatolia from the northeast, basing his theory on the burning or desertion during the 20th century BC of a line of settlements representing the approaches to Cappadocia from that direction.
From the late 3rd millennium BC onward, the Hurrians had infiltrated northern Mesopotamia and Syria from the north and soon constituted an important element in the population of both territories.
1180 BC It is possible that the branch of the Hittite royal family that gained control in the 15th century BC may have originated in Kizzuwadna.
www.history-world.org /hittites.htm   (5137 words)

  
 Akhenaten Biography
He is thought to have been born to Amenhotep III and his Chief Queen Tiy in the year 26 of their reign (1379 BC or 1362 BC).
He reigned from 1367 BC to 1350 BC or from 1350 BC/1349 BC to 1334 BC/ 1333 BC during the Eighteenth Dynasty.
In year 7 of his reign (1361 BC or 1343 BC) the capital was moved from Thebes to Amarna, though construction of the city seems to have continued for two more years (till 1359 BC or 1341 BC).
www.biographybase.com /biography/Akhenaten.html   (886 words)

  
 Epochtimes English Edition-
CAIRO - The discovery of a stone tablet detailing diplomatic ties between the ancient Egyptians and Hittites in the 13th Century BC could be the key to the lost archives of Ramses II, according to archaeologists.
The tablet is written in cuneiform script, invented in about 3,300 BC by the Sumerians and used throughout the Middle East until the first century AD.
Tell Al-Amarna was capital during the time of Akhenaton (1372-1354 BC), remembered in history for having switched his kingdom to monotheism with the worship of the one sun god, Aton.
en.epochtimes.com /news/3-9-27/7759.html   (368 words)

  
 Epochtimes English Edition-
CAIRO - The discovery of a stone tablet detailing diplomatic ties between the ancient Egyptians and Hittites in the 13th Century BC could be the key to the lost archives of Ramses II, according to archaeologists.
The tablet is written in cuneiform script, invented in about 3,300 BC by the Sumerians and used throughout the Middle East until the first century AD.
Tell Al-Amarna was capital during the time of Akhenaton (1372-1354 BC), remembered in history for having switched his kingdom to monotheism with the worship of the one sun god, Aton.
www.theepochtimes.com /news/3-9-27/7759.html   (368 words)

  
 Egyptian Culture Photos at AllPosters.com
Stopper from One of the Canopic Urns, from the Tomb of Tutankhamun (circa 1370-52 BC) New Kingdom
Coffer from the Treasury of the Tomb of Tutankhamun (circa 1370-52 BC) New Kingdom
Pectoral with a Bird-Scarab, from the Tomb of Tutankhamun (circa 1370-52 BC) New Kingdom
www.allposters.com /-st/Egyptian-Culture-Posters_c56434_p5_.htm   (452 words)

  
 World History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
· 2234 BC, The Tower of Babel and the confusion of tongues.
· 1531 BC, Moses grows up in the house of pharaoh, but is forced to flee for his life to the back side of the desert at age 40.
· 1491 BC, After all the Children of Israel were across, God allowed the red sea to close in on the Egyptian army.
www.seekfind.net /Amazing_Facts/World_History.html   (2910 words)

  
 The Star Sothis and Egyptian Chronology
In brief, the Mesopotamian evidence indicated to Rowton that 1356 BC was the accession date of a certain Assyrian king, viz.
Though Rowton had arrived at a possible date of 1356 BC for the accession of Ashur-uballit, he regarded it as "probable" - basing himself on Weidner and Smith's view that, before Tiglath-pileser I (c.1100 BC), the Assyrians used a lunar-year of 354 days (58) - that it was even as late as 1349 BC.
Engraved as it was on a slab of stone, this decree had been promulgated by a synod of Egyptian priests representing all Egypt and meeting at the temple of the "gods Euergetai" at Canopus (on the western, or 'Canopic' mouth of the Nile Delta).
www.specialtyinterests.net /sothic_star2.html   (15677 words)

  
 TheHistoryNet | Military History | Battle of Kadesh
That era of peace and tranquility ended with what historians call the "Second Intermediate Period." By 1700 bc the Hyksos ("Rulers from Foreign Lands") had conquered Lower Egypt and extended their influence up the Nile from their capital at Avaris in the eastern delta.
Historians tout the reign of Akhenaten (1372-1354 bc) for the advances made in the concept of monotheism.
Early in the 14th century bc, Suppiluliumas I (1375-1355 bc) created a new Hittite empire by defeating Kaska and Arxawa and eventually absorbing the Mitanni, an Asiatic people of whom little is known, save that they had constituted the backbone of resistance to Egyptians during the reigns of Thutmose I and III.
www.historynet.com /magazines/military_history/3459391.html?page=1&c=y   (938 words)

  
 Telecom Orders 1997 (1251-1500)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
97-1304 - BC INTERIM APPROVAL - Revisions to its General Tariff, Item 143, proposing a short-term promotional offer, "Free for 30 days - Three-Way Calling Subscription", to be in effect from 1 October 1997 to 31 December 1997.
97-1464 - BC INTERIM APPROVAL - Revisions to apply the Local Directory Assistance charge to the provision of listings which are not listed in the current edition of the telephone directory.
Final approval of tariff revisions to BC TEL Flat-Rate Plan, adding business customers as eligible for the service and changing the name of the Plan to "Affinity North American Plan".
www.crtc.gc.ca /eng/public/1997/8045/Orders06.htm   (4968 words)

  
 Malkata, Palace of the Sun King Today
But this was a move which was first encountered in the reign of Akhenaten's father, Amenhotep III (c.1391-1354 BC), who moved his court permanently to Thebes in his regnal year 29 (c.1363 BC).
Situated on the Theban West Bank beneath the western hills into which the sun sank down each evening, and directly opposite his temple of Luxor, it was Amenhotep's Theban base throughout most of his reign.
This was in contrast to previous rulers who were based at the traditional capital Memphis in the north, and only came south to Thebes for the annual religious festivals, where they set up temporary court in palace buildings attached to Karnak temple.
www.touregypt.net /magazine/mag03012001/magf4.htm   (1620 words)

  
 Delhi,New Delhi India,Delhi Tourism,Travel to New Delhi India
The earliest reference to a settlement at Delhi is found in the epic Mahabharata, which mentions a city called Indraprastha, built about 1400 BC under the direction of 'Yudhistra', a 'Pandava' king, on a huge mound somewhere between the sites where the historic Old Fort and Humayun's Tomb were later to be located.
The first reference to the place-name Delhi, seems to have been made in the 1st century BC, when Raja Dhilu built a city near the site of the future Qutub Minar and named it after himself.
The fourth city of Delhi - JAHANPANAH was built between Lal Kot and Siri in 1327 AD.
delhi.indiantravelportal.com   (1022 words)

  
 NEMES Journal One
But this was a move which was first encountered in the reign of Akhenaten's father, Amenhotep III (c.1391-1354 BC), who moved his court permanently to Thebes in his regnal year 29 (c.1363 BC).
Situated on the Theban West Bank beneath the western hills into which the sun sank down each evening, and directly opposite his temple of Luxor, it was Amenhotep's Theban base throughout most of his reign.
This was in contrast to previous rulers who were based at the traditional capital Memphis in the north, and only came south to Thebes for the annual religious festivals, where they set up temporary court in palace buildings attached to Karnak temple.
www.nemes.co.uk /journals/journ_sunking.htm   (1405 words)

  
 IOL: Egypt gets protective of its mummy
Researchers want to settle a dispute over whether Tutankhamen was the son of Amenhotep III or the so-called heretic Akhenaten, who was known to worship one god, Mohammed al-Saghir, a specialist at the ministry of culture has said.
Tutankhamen ascended the throne as a boy in 1354 BC and ruled for around nine years until he died at around the age of 18.
His coffin, one of the few to escape graverobbers, was discovered by British archeologist Howard Carter in 1922 in the Valley of the Kings, an arid mountainous area on the west bank of the Nile near Luxor.
www.iol.co.za /index.php?click_id=31&art_id=qw983119741693B221   (446 words)

  
 [No title]
CC 830201 2146 18.49 37-32.85 118-50.75 10.89 1.59 5 221 5.2 0.05 1.6 1.4 CC 830202 1113 10.76 37-37.54 118-50.73 4.59 1.76 6 168 4.3 0.08 1.0 1.6 BC 830202 1420 17.62 37-34.60 118-47.24 0.38 1.73 4 136 3.6 0.02 0.
CC 830202 1424 44.87 37-38.49 118-53.86 7.97 1.84 7 188 8.6 0.09 1.2 1.9 CC 830203 0758 12.60 38-23.53 118-37.38 17.02 1.74 9 113 27.6 0.11 0.7 1.6 BC 830203 0904 34.48 37-37.63 118-55.41 5.85 1.16 6 206 3.5 0.07 1.2 1.5 CC 830203 1523 30.54 37-37.05 118-47.65 6.78 0.95 4 201 12.4 0.00 0.
8 120 3.1 0.04 0.4 0.8 BC 830223 2019 21.25 37-31.58 118-51.69 1.78 2.60 9 182 7.9 0.05 0.4 0.8 CC 830224 1812 30.72 38- 6.14 118-37.79 1.86 0.
www.seismo.unr.edu /ftp/pub/seisdata/1983_1984.hcat   (402 words)

  
 IndieVoice.com - Band Aid
Situated in the University of British Columbia, this soft-seat theatre has a capacity of 1200.
Hosting all types of music, this venue has a capacity of 100.
Chilliwack, BC With a capacity of 100, this venue hosts all types of music, including performance art.
www.indievoice.com /cgi-local/m2?db=htrbc   (380 words)

  
 Coleman 992874 - RG59 20BC 95%BC w/Messenger -1000FT Roll
Coleman 991055 - RG59 22 Str BC 95%BC Xtra-Flex CM
Coleman 993253 - RG59 20BC 95%BC & 18/2 STR BC Siamese CM
Coleman 992161 - RG11 14BC 95%BC AWM 1354 CL2
www.spytown.com /992874.html   (267 words)

  
 Ferries to France, Ireland, Holland, Spain and Italy from the UK
BC Ferries, British Columbia, carries travellers between Vancouver Island and the B.C. mainland.
Two of the world's largest ferry systems are located in the Strait of Georgia, in the Canadian province of British Columbia, and Puget Sound, in the U.S. state of Washington.
BC Ferries in British Columbia operates 35 vessels, visiting 47 ports of call, while Washington State Ferries owns 28 vessels, travelling to 20 ports of call around Puget Sound.
www.ferryto.co.uk   (2191 words)

  
 Page Two - (53) Chronological chart of the history of Bharatvarsh since its origination.
Sureshwaracharya 490-477 BC Brahm Swaroop 477-448 BC (Agent of Sureshwaracharya)
In his last few years Adi Shankaracharya lived in Kanchi Kamkoti.
When he left this earth planet in 477 BC, Sureshwaracharya became the first acharya of the Peeth.
encyclopediaofauthentichinduism.org /articles/53.3.htm   (118 words)

  
 [No title]
03-06-1356 BC the Lord gave to Israel the ten commandments on Mount Sinai.
05-01-1316 BC in the fortieth year, in the fifth month, in the first day of the month.
01-28-1316 BC Jericho, the priests, blow with the trumpets.
mypeoplepc.com /members/year2027/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/3rd-1000.htm   (8396 words)

  
 BBC - History - Amenhotep III (c.1391 - c.1354 BC)
The sun was also worshipped as the solar disc the Aten, with whom the king identified himself by taking the epithet 'Dazzling Aten'.
Amenhotep III died in around 1354 BC and was buried in his huge tomb in the secluded western branch of the Valley of the Kings.
He was succeeded by his son Amenhotep IV, better known as Akhenaten.
www.bbc.co.uk /history/historic_figures/amenhotep_iii.shtml   (333 words)

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