
The 1st millennium BC, also known as the last millennium BC, was the period of time lasting from the years 1000 BC to 1 BC (10th to 1st centuries BC; in astronomy: JD 1356182.5 – 1721425.5). It encompasses the Iron Age in the Old World and sees the transition from the Ancient Near East to classical antiquity.
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World population roughly doubled over the course of the millennium, from about 100 million to about 200–250 million after the birth of Jesus Christ and the establishment of the Julio-Claudian dynasty led by its founder Octavian.
Overview
The Neo-Assyrian Empire dominates the Near East in the early centuries of the millennium, supplanted by the Achaemenid Empire in the 6th century. Ancient Egypt is in decline, and falls to the Achaemenids in 525 BC.
In Greece, Classical Antiquity begins with the colonization of Magna Graecia and peaks with the conquest of the Achaemenids and the subsequent flourishing of Hellenistic civilization (4th to 2nd centuries).
The Roman Republic supplants the Etruscans and then the Carthaginians (5th to 3rd centuries). The close of the millennium sees the rise of the Roman Empire. The early Celtic culture dominate Central Europe while Northern Europe is in the Pre-Roman Iron Age. In East Africa, the Nubian Empire and Aksum arise.
In South Asia, the Vedic civilization gives rise to the Maurya Empire. The Scythians dominate Central Asia. In China, the Zhou dynasty rules the Chinese heartland at the beginning of the millennium. The decline of the Zhou dynasty during Spring and Autumn period and the Warring States period sees the rise of such philosophical and spiritual traditions as Confucianism and Taoism. Towards the close of the millennium, the Han dynasty extends Chinese power towards Central Asia, where it borders on Indo-Greek and Iranian states. Japan is in the Yayoi period.
The Olmec civilization declines, and the Maya and Zapotec civilizations emerge in Mesoamerica. The Chavín culture flourishes in Peru.
The first millennium BC is the formative period of the classical world religions, with the development of early Judaism and Zoroastrianism in the Near East, and Vedic religion and Vedanta, Jainism and Buddhism in India. Early literature develops in Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Sanskrit, Tamil and Chinese. The term Axial Age, coined by Karl Jaspers, is intended to express the crucial importance of the period of c. the 8th to 2nd centuries BC in world history.
World population more than doubled over the course of the millennium, from about an estimated 50–100 million to an estimated 170–300 million. Close to 90% of world population at the end of the first millennium BC lived in the Iron Age civilizations of the Old World (Roman Empire, Parthian Empire, Graeco-Indo-Scythian and Hindu kingdoms, Han China). The population of the Americas was below 20 million, concentrated in Mesoamerica (Epi-Olmec culture); that of Sub-Saharan Africa was likely below 10 million. The population of Oceania was likely less than one million people.
Ancient history

Timeline

- 10th century BC
- Near East: Neo-Assyrian Empire
- Near East: Shoshenq I invades Canaan
- Aegean: Helladic period ends
- Sub-Saharan Africa West: Nok Culture slowly diffuse discernible ceramic sculpting, iron metallurgy and cereal farming cultures through the Niger Delta region, though debatable possible settling period and or foundation of proto Ile-Ife
- 9th century BC
- 8th century BC
- 727 BC: Egypt: Kushite invasion (25th Dynasty)
- 771 BC: China: Spring and Autumn period
- Near East: 727 BC: Death of Tiglath-Pileser III, Babylonia secedes from Assyria
- Near East: 722 BC: Sargon II takes Samaria; Assyrian captivity of the Israelites.
- Greece: Archaic Greece, Greek alphabet
- Greece: Homer
- 776 BC: Greece: First Olympiad
- 753 BC: Europe: foundation of Rome
- 7th century BC
Relief of King Ashurbanipal of Assyria hunting a Mesopotamian lion, from the Northern Palace in Nineveh, c. 645-635 BC - 671 BC: Assyrian conquest of Egypt
- Near East: 631 BC: Death of Ashurbanipal, decline of the Assyrian Empire
- 6th century BC
- Egypt: 592 BC: Psamtik II sacks Napata
- Sudan: Aspelta moves the Kushite capital to Meroe
- Near East: 539 BC: Achaemenid conquest of Babylon under Cyrus the Great
- South Asia: Śramaṇa movement and "second urbanisation"
- South Asia: Early Buddhism
- Europe: 509 BC: Roman Republic
- 5th century BC
- China: 479 BC: death of Confucius
- China: 476 BC: Warring States period
- China: 486 BC: Grand Canal construction begins
- Near East: Second Temple Judaism, redaction of the Hebrew Bible
- Greece: beginning of the classical period (Greece in the 5th century BC).
- Greece: Greco-Persian Wars (Battle of Marathon, Battle of Thermopylae)
- Greece: 440 BC: Herodotus' Histories
- Greece: 431 BC: Peloponnesian War
- Oceania: Austronesian expansion reaches Western Polynesia
- 4th century BC
- Greece: 395 BC: Corinthian War
- Egypt: 343 BC: Achaemenid conquest
Map of the world in 323 BC - Greece/Asia/Egypt: 330s BC: conquests of Alexander the Great, end of the Achaemenid Empire, Macedonian Empire, beginning of the Hellenistic period
- South Asia: Mauryan Empire
- 3rd century BC
- China: Qin Unified China
- China: 206 BC: Han dynasty
- South Asia: 261 BC: Kalinga war
- Rome: Roman expansion in Italy
- Rome/Carthage: Punic Wars
- 264 BC: First Punic War
- 218 BC Second Punic War
- 2nd century BC
- Rome/Carthage: 149 BC Third Punic War, Roman province of Africa
Augustus Caesar, the first emperor of the Roman Empire - Rome/Greece: 146 BC Battle of Corinth, beginning of the Roman era
- South Asia: 185 BC: Fall of the Maurya Empire
- China: Confucianism became the state ideology of China
- Rome/Carthage: 149 BC Third Punic War, Roman province of Africa
- 1st century BC
- China: 91 BC: Records of the Grand Historian finished
- Rome/Europe: 58–50 BC Gallic Wars
- Rome: 32/30 BC: Final War of the Roman Republic (Battle of Actium)
- Rome/Egypt: 31 BC: Roman conquest of Egypt
- Rome/Europe/West Asia/Africa: 27 BC: Roman Empire
Inventions, discoveries, introductions




- 8th century BC
- Greek alphabet, the first alphabet with vowels.
- 7th century BC
- Trireme
- 6th century BC
- Paved trackway
- Pythagorean theorem
- Monotheism
- 5th century BC
- Blast furnace China
- Atomism
- Crossbow
- Siege engine
- 4th century BC
- formal grammar
- Kyrenia ship
- 3rd century BC
- Lighthouse of Alexandria
- Malleable Cast iron China
- Archimedes' principle
- Spherical Earth
- Water clock
- Qin built and unified various sections of the Great Wall of China.
- Qin built Qin Shi Huang's Mausoleum guarded by the life-sized Terracotta Army.
- 2nd century BC
- Antikythera mechanism
Literature
- Greco-Roman literature
Archaic period
- Homer (late 8th or early 7th c.), Iliad, Odyssey
- Hesiod (8th to 7th c.), Theogony and Works and Days
- Archilochus (7th century), Greek poet
- Sappho, (late 7th to early 6th c.), Greek poet
- Ibycus
- Alcaeus of Mytilene
- Aesop's Fables
Classical period
- Aeschylus (c. 525–455 BC), Greek playwright
- Herodotus (484–425 BC), Histories
- Euripides (c. 480–406 BC), Greek playwright
- Xenophon: Anabasis, Cyropaedia
- Aristotle (384–322 BC), corpus Aristotelicum
Hellenistic to Roman period
- Septuagint
- Apollonius of Rhodes: Argonautica
- Callimachus (310/305-240 B.C.), lyric poet
- Manetho: Aegyptiaca
- Theocritus, lyric poet
- Euclid: Elements
- Menander: Dyskolos
- Theophrastus: Enquiry into Plants
- Old Latin Livius Andronicus, Gnaeus Naevius, Plautus, Quintus Fabius Pictor, Lucius Cincius Alimentus
- Classical Latin: Cicero, Julius Caesar, Virgil, Lucretius, Livy, Catullus
- Chinese literature
- I Ching (date unknown, between the 10th and 4th centuries BC)
- Classic of Poetry (Shījīng), Classic of Documents (Shūjīng) (authentic portions), Classic of Changes (I Ching)
- Spring and Autumn Annals (Chūnqiū) (722–481 BC, chronicles of the state of Lu)
- Confucius: Analects (Lúnyǔ)
- Classic of Rites (Lǐjì)
- Commentaries of Zuo (Zuǒzhuàn)
- Laozi (or Lao Tzu): Tao Te Ching
- Zhuangzi: Zhuangzi (book)
- Mencius: Mencius
- Sanskrit literature
- Vedic Sanskrit: Vedas, Brahmanas
- Vedanga
- Mukhya Upanishads
- Early layers of the Sanskrit epics (c. 3rd century BC to 4th century AD)
- Hebrew
- c. 8th to 7th c.: the Book of Nahum, Book of Hosea, Book of Amos, Book of Isaiah
- c. 6th c.: Psalms
- c. 5th century: redaction of the Torah
- 3rd century: Ecclesiastes
- 2nd century: Book of Wisdom
- Avestan
- Yasht, Avesta, Vendidad
- Other (2nd to 1st century BC)
- Pali literature: Tipitaka
- Tamil:Sangam literature
- Aramaic: Book of Daniel
Archaeology
Culture | Region | Period | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Urnfield culture | Europe, Central | 1300–750 BC | Bronze Age Europe |
Atlantic Bronze Age | Europe, Western | 1300–700 BC | Bronze Age Europe |
Painted Grey Ware culture | South Asia | 1200–600 BC | Bronze Age India, Indo-Aryan migration |
Late Nordic Bronze Age | Europe, North | 1100–550 BC | Bronze Age Europe |
Villanovan culture | Europe, Italy | 1100–700 BC | Iron Age Europe |
Greek Dark Ages | Greece | 1100–800 BC | Dorian invasion |
Iron Age II | Near East | 1000–586 BC | Ancient Near East, List of archaeological periods (Levant) |
Sa Huỳnh culture | Southeast Asia, Vietnam | 1000 BC–AD 200 | |
Woodland period | North America | 1000 BC – AD 1000 | List of archaeological periods (North America) |
Bantu expansion | Sub-Saharan Africa | 1000 BC–AD 500 | |
Middle Nok Period | Sub-Saharan Africa, West | 900–300 BC | Iron metallurgy in Africa |
Novocherkassk culture | Europe, Eastern | 900–650 BC | |
Chavín de Huántar | South America, Peru | 1200–500 BC | |
Poverty Point earthworks | North America, Louisiana | 1650–700 BC | |
Olmecs | Mesoamerica | 1500–400 BC | |
Adena culture | North America, Ohio | 1000–200 BC | |
Liaoning bronze dagger culture | East Asia | 800–600 BC | |
Middle Mumun | East Asia, Korea | 800–300 BC | |
Etruscan civilization | Europe, Italy | 800–264 BC | |
Paracas culture | South America, Peru | 800–100 BC | |
Hallstatt culture | Europe, Central | 800 BC–500 BC | Iron Age Europe, Thraco-Cimmerian, Celts |
British Iron Age | Europe, Britain | 700–50 BC | Insular Celts |
Zapotec civilization | Mesoamerica | 700 BC – AD 700 | |
Pazyryk culture | Central Asia | 600–300 BC | Scythians, Saka, Pazyryk burials |
Aldy-Bel culture | Central Asia | 600–300 BC | Scythians, Saka |
La Tène culture | Europe, Central/Western | 500–50 BC | Gauls |
Pre-Roman Iron Age | Europe, North | 500–50 BC | Proto-Germanic |
Northern Black Polished Ware | South Asia | 500–300 BC | Vedic period |
Late Mumun | East Asia, Korea | 550–300 BC | |
Urewe | Sub-Saharan Africa | 400 BC–AD 500 | Iron metallurgy in Africa |
Late Nok Period | Sub-Saharan Africa, West | 300–1 BC | Iron metallurgy in Africa |
Nasca culture | South America, Peru | 100 BC–800 AD | |
Calima culture | South America, Colombia | 200 BC–400 AD | |
Hopewell tradition | North America | 100 BC–AD 400 | |
Teotihuacan | Mesoamerica | 100 BC –AD 550 | |
Ipiutak site | North America, Alaska | 100 BC –AD 800 |
Astronomy
- Historical solar eclipses
Year (BC) | Date | Eclipse Type | Saros Series | Eclipse Magnitude | Gamma | Ecliptic Conjunction (UT) | Greatest Eclipse (UT) | Duration (Min & Sec) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
899 | 21 Apr | Annular | 53 | 0.9591 | 0.8964 | 22:32:15 | 22:21:56 | 00:03:04 | China's 'Double-Dawn' Eclipse [2] [3] |
763 | 15 Jun | Total | 44 | 1.0596 | 0.2715 | 08:11:13 | 08:14:01 | 00:05:00 | Assyrian Eclipse [4] [5] |
648 | 6 Apr | Total | 38 | 1.0689 | 0.6898 | 08:24:05 | 08:31:03 | 00:05:02 | Archilochus' Eclipse [6] [7] |
585 | 28 May | Total | 57 | 1.0798 | 0.3201 | 14:25:41 | 14:22:26 | 00:06:04 | Thales Eclipse (Medes vs. Lydians), firstly recorded in Herodotus History. [8] [9] [10] |
557 | 19 May | Total | 48 | 1.0258 | 0.3145 | 12:49:02 | 12:52:26 | 00:02:22 | The Siege of Larisa, firstly recorded by Xenophon. [11] |
480 | 2 Oct | Annular | 65 | 0.9324 | 0.4951 | 11:56:54 | 11:51:01 | 00:07:57 | Xerxes' Eclipse. recorded by Herodotus History. [12] |
431 | 3 Aug | Annular | 48 | 0.9843 | 0.8388 | 14:45:34 | 14:54:52 | 00:01:05 | Peloponnesian War. [13] [14] |
424 | 21 Mar | Annular | 42 | 0.9430 | 0.9433 | 07:43:30 | 07:54:29 | 00:04:39 | 8th Year of Peloponnesian War. [15] |
Centuries and decades
10th century BC | 990s BC | 980s BC | 970s BC | 960s BC | 950s BC | 940s BC | 930s BC | 920s BC | 910s BC | 900s BC |
9th century BC | 890s BC | 880s BC | 870s BC | 860s BC | 850s BC | 840s BC | 830s BC | 820s BC | 810s BC | 800s BC |
8th century BC | 790s BC | 780s BC | 770s BC | 760s BC | 750s BC | 740s BC | 730s BC | 720s BC | 710s BC | 700s BC |
7th century BC | 690s BC | 680s BC | 670s BC | 660s BC | 650s BC | 640s BC | 630s BC | 620s BC | 610s BC | 600s BC |
6th century BC | 590s BC | 580s BC | 570s BC | 560s BC | 550s BC | 540s BC | 530s BC | 520s BC | 510s BC | 500s BC |
5th century BC | 490s BC | 480s BC | 470s BC | 460s BC | 450s BC | 440s BC | 430s BC | 420s BC | 410s BC | 400s BC |
4th century BC | 390s BC | 380s BC | 370s BC | 360s BC | 350s BC | 340s BC | 330s BC | 320s BC | 310s BC | 300s BC |
3rd century BC | 290s BC | 280s BC | 270s BC | 260s BC | 250s BC | 240s BC | 230s BC | 220s BC | 210s BC | 200s BC |
2nd century BC | 190s BC | 180s BC | 170s BC | 160s BC | 150s BC | 140s BC | 130s BC | 120s BC | 110s BC | 100s BC |
1st century BC | 90s BC | 80s BC | 70s BC | 60s BC | 50s BC | 40s BC | 30s BC | 20s BC | 10s BC | 0s BC |
References

- "Julian Day Number from Date Calculator". keisan.casio.com.
- Klein Goldewijk, K., A. Beusen, M. de Vos and G. van Drecht (2011). The HYDE 3.1 spatially explicit database of human induced land use change over the past 12,000 years, Global Ecology and Biogeography20(1): 73–86. doi:10.1111/j.1466-8238.2010.00587.x (pbl.nl). Goldewijk et al. (2011) estimate 188 million as of AD 1, citing a literature range of 170 million (low) to 300 million (high). Out of the estimated 188M, 116M are estimated for Asia (East, South/Southeast and Central Asia, excluding Western Asia), 44M for Europe and the Near East, 15M for Africa (including Egypt and Roman North Africa), 12M for Mesoamerica and South America. North America and Oceania were at or below one million. Jean-Noël Biraben, "Essai sur l'évolution du nombre des hommes", Population 34-1 (1979), 13–25 (p. 22) estimates c. 100 million at 1200 BC and c. 250 million at AD 1.[1]
- "Who Built it First". Ancient Discoveries. A&E Television Networks. 2008. Archived from the original on 2009-04-29. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
- Although disputed, some scholars see the emergence of monotheism proper in the context of the Babylonian exile, during which the Israelites adopted aspects of Babylonian religion, resulting in Second Temple Judaism by 515 BC. No Other Gods: Emergent Monotheism in Israel Also credited with early monotheism is Zoroastrianism, founded at roughly the same time. Zoroastrianism
- Temple 1986
- Temple 1986, pp. 15
- "World Timeline of the Americas 1000 BC – AD 200". The British Museum. 2005. Archived from the original on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-07-25.
- "World Timeline of the Americas 200 BC – AD 600". The British Museum. 2005. Archived from the original on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-07-25.
- Temple, Robert (1986). The Genius of China: 3000 years of science, discovery and invention. New York: Simon and Schuster. Based on the works of Joseph Needham
- Zimmer, Heinrich (1952), Joseph Campbell (ed.), Philosophy of India, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd,
Not in copyright
The 1st millennium BC also known as the last millennium BC was the period of time lasting from the years 1000 BC to 1 BC 10th to 1st centuries BC in astronomy JD 1356 182 5 1721 425 5 It encompasses the Iron Age in the Old World and sees the transition from the Ancient Near East to classical antiquity Millennia 2nd millennium BC 1st millennium BC 1st millennium ADCenturies 10th century BC 9th century BC 8th century BC 7th century BC 6th century BC 5th century BC 4th century BC 3rd century BC 2nd century BC 1st century BCFrom top left clockwise The Parthenon a former temple in Athens Greece Aristotle Greek philosopher Gautama Buddha a spiritual teacher and the founder of Buddhism Wars of Alexander the Great last from 336 BC to 323 BC Letters of the Greek alphabet People working during the Iron Age Roman dictator Julius Caesar is assassinated by the Roman Senate in 44 BC Background A mural from the Assyrian Empire which dissolved in the 7th century BC World population roughly doubled over the course of the millennium from about 100 million to about 200 250 million after the birth of Jesus Christ and the establishment of the Julio Claudian dynasty led by its founder Octavian OverviewThe Neo Assyrian Empire dominates the Near East in the early centuries of the millennium supplanted by the Achaemenid Empire in the 6th century Ancient Egypt is in decline and falls to the Achaemenids in 525 BC In Greece Classical Antiquity begins with the colonization of Magna Graecia and peaks with the conquest of the Achaemenids and the subsequent flourishing of Hellenistic civilization 4th to 2nd centuries The Roman Republic supplants the Etruscans and then the Carthaginians 5th to 3rd centuries The close of the millennium sees the rise of the Roman Empire The early Celtic culture dominate Central Europe while Northern Europe is in the Pre Roman Iron Age In East Africa the Nubian Empire and Aksum arise In South Asia the Vedic civilization gives rise to the Maurya Empire The Scythians dominate Central Asia In China the Zhou dynasty rules the Chinese heartland at the beginning of the millennium The decline of the Zhou dynasty during Spring and Autumn period and the Warring States period sees the rise of such philosophical and spiritual traditions as Confucianism and Taoism Towards the close of the millennium the Han dynasty extends Chinese power towards Central Asia where it borders on Indo Greek and Iranian states Japan is in the Yayoi period The Olmec civilization declines and the Maya and Zapotec civilizations emerge in Mesoamerica The Chavin culture flourishes in Peru The first millennium BC is the formative period of the classical world religions with the development of early Judaism and Zoroastrianism in the Near East and Vedic religion and Vedanta Jainism and Buddhism in India Early literature develops in Greek Latin Hebrew Sanskrit Tamil and Chinese The term Axial Age coined by Karl Jaspers is intended to express the crucial importance of the period of c the 8th to 2nd centuries BC in world history World population more than doubled over the course of the millennium from about an estimated 50 100 million to an estimated 170 300 million Close to 90 of world population at the end of the first millennium BC lived in the Iron Age civilizations of the Old World Roman Empire Parthian Empire Graeco Indo Scythian and Hindu kingdoms Han China The population of the Americas was below 20 million concentrated in Mesoamerica Epi Olmec culture that of Sub Saharan Africa was likely below 10 million The population of Oceania was likely less than one million people Ancient historyMap of the Eastern Hemisphere in 1000 BC Timeline Map of the world in 1 AD just after the end of the 1st millennium BC 10th century BC Near East Neo Assyrian Empire Near East Shoshenq I invades Canaan Aegean Helladic period ends Sub Saharan Africa West Nok Culture slowly diffuse discernible ceramic sculpting iron metallurgy and cereal farming cultures through the Niger Delta region though debatable possible settling period and or foundation of proto Ile Ife 9th century BC Chavin culture in Peru Egypt 872 BC Nile floods the Temple of Luxor Egypt 836 BC Civil war in Egypt South Asia 872 BC Jainism re organized by Parshvanatha North Africa 814 BC Carthage founded China 841 BC 828 BC Gonghe Regency 8th century BC 727 BC Egypt Kushite invasion 25th Dynasty 771 BC China Spring and Autumn period Near East 727 BC Death of Tiglath Pileser III Babylonia secedes from Assyria Near East 722 BC Sargon II takes Samaria Assyrian captivity of the Israelites Greece Archaic Greece Greek alphabet Greece Homer 776 BC Greece First Olympiad 753 BC Europe foundation of Rome 7th century BCRelief of King Ashurbanipal of Assyria hunting a Mesopotamian lion from the Northern Palace in Nineveh c 645 635 BC671 BC Assyrian conquest of Egypt Near East 631 BC Death of Ashurbanipal decline of the Assyrian Empire 6th century BC Egypt 592 BC Psamtik II sacks Napata Sudan Aspelta moves the Kushite capital to Meroe Near East 539 BC Achaemenid conquest of Babylon under Cyrus the Great South Asia Sramaṇa movement and second urbanisation South Asia Early Buddhism Europe 509 BC Roman Republic 5th century BC China 479 BC death of Confucius China 476 BC Warring States period China 486 BC Grand Canal construction begins Near East Second Temple Judaism redaction of the Hebrew Bible Greece beginning of the classical period Greece in the 5th century BC Greece Greco Persian Wars Battle of Marathon Battle of Thermopylae Greece 440 BC Herodotus Histories Greece 431 BC Peloponnesian War Oceania Austronesian expansion reaches Western Polynesia 4th century BC Greece 395 BC Corinthian War Egypt 343 BC Achaemenid conquestMap of the world in 323 BC Greece Asia Egypt 330s BC conquests of Alexander the Great end of the Achaemenid Empire Macedonian Empire beginning of the Hellenistic period South Asia Mauryan Empire 3rd century BC China Qin Unified China China 206 BC Han dynasty South Asia 261 BC Kalinga war Rome Roman expansion in Italy Rome Carthage Punic Wars 264 BC First Punic War 218 BC Second Punic War 2nd century BC Rome Carthage 149 BC Third Punic War Roman province of AfricaAugustus Caesar the first emperor of the Roman Empire Rome Greece 146 BC Battle of Corinth beginning of the Roman era South Asia 185 BC Fall of the Maurya Empire China Confucianism became the state ideology of China 1st century BC China 91 BC Records of the Grand Historian finished Rome Europe 58 50 BC Gallic Wars Rome 32 30 BC Final War of the Roman Republic Battle of Actium Rome Egypt 31 BC Roman conquest of Egypt Rome Europe West Asia Africa 27 BC Roman EmpireInventions discoveries introductions Scythian gold plaque with panther late 7th century BC The Parthenon Athens 5th century BC The Victorious Youth c 310 BC a preserved bronze statue of a Greek athlete in Contrapposto pose The Wrestler an Olmec era statuette dated roughly 1400 400 BCLamassu facing forward Bas relief from the king Sargon II s palace at Dur Sharrukin in Assyria now Khorsabad in Iraq c 713 716 BC From Paul Emile Botta s excavations in 1843 1844 8th century BC Greek alphabet the first alphabet with vowels 7th century BC Trireme 6th century BC Paved trackway Pythagorean theorem Monotheism 5th century BC Blast furnace China Atomism Crossbow Siege engine 4th century BC formal grammar Kyrenia ship 3rd century BC Lighthouse of Alexandria Malleable Cast iron China Archimedes principle Spherical Earth Water clock Qin built and unified various sections of the Great Wall of China Qin built Qin Shi Huang s Mausoleum guarded by the life sized Terracotta Army 2nd century BC Antikythera mechanism Literature Greco Roman literature Archaic period Homer late 8th or early 7th c Iliad Odyssey Hesiod 8th to 7th c Theogony and Works and Days Archilochus 7th century Greek poet Sappho late 7th to early 6th c Greek poet Ibycus Alcaeus of Mytilene Aesop s Fables Classical period Aeschylus c 525 455 BC Greek playwright Herodotus 484 425 BC Histories Euripides c 480 406 BC Greek playwright Xenophon Anabasis Cyropaedia Aristotle 384 322 BC corpus Aristotelicum Hellenistic to Roman period Septuagint Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica Callimachus 310 305 240 B C lyric poet Manetho Aegyptiaca Theocritus lyric poet Euclid Elements Menander Dyskolos Theophrastus Enquiry into Plants Old Latin Livius Andronicus Gnaeus Naevius Plautus Quintus Fabius Pictor Lucius Cincius Alimentus Classical Latin Cicero Julius Caesar Virgil Lucretius Livy CatullusChinese literature I Ching date unknown between the 10th and 4th centuries BC Classic of Poetry Shijing Classic of Documents Shujing authentic portions Classic of Changes I Ching Spring and Autumn Annals Chunqiu 722 481 BC chronicles of the state of Lu Confucius Analects Lunyǔ Classic of Rites Lǐji Commentaries of Zuo Zuǒzhuan Laozi or Lao Tzu Tao Te Ching Zhuangzi Zhuangzi book Mencius MenciusSanskrit literature Vedic Sanskrit Vedas Brahmanas Vedanga Mukhya Upanishads Early layers of the Sanskrit epics c 3rd century BC to 4th century AD Hebrew c 8th to 7th c the Book of Nahum Book of Hosea Book of Amos Book of Isaiah c 6th c Psalms c 5th century redaction of the Torah 3rd century Ecclesiastes 2nd century Book of WisdomAvestanYasht Avesta VendidadOther 2nd to 1st century BC Pali literature Tipitaka Tamil Sangam literature Aramaic Book of DanielArchaeologyCulture Region Period NotesUrnfield culture Europe Central 1300 750 BC Bronze Age EuropeAtlantic Bronze Age Europe Western 1300 700 BC Bronze Age EuropePainted Grey Ware culture South Asia 1200 600 BC Bronze Age India Indo Aryan migrationLate Nordic Bronze Age Europe North 1100 550 BC Bronze Age EuropeVillanovan culture Europe Italy 1100 700 BC Iron Age EuropeGreek Dark Ages Greece 1100 800 BC Dorian invasionIron Age II Near East 1000 586 BC Ancient Near East List of archaeological periods Levant Sa Huỳnh culture Southeast Asia Vietnam 1000 BC AD 200Woodland period North America 1000 BC AD 1000 List of archaeological periods North America Bantu expansion Sub Saharan Africa 1000 BC AD 500Middle Nok Period Sub Saharan Africa West 900 300 BC Iron metallurgy in AfricaNovocherkassk culture Europe Eastern 900 650 BCChavin de Huantar South America Peru 1200 500 BCPoverty Point earthworks North America Louisiana 1650 700 BCOlmecs Mesoamerica 1500 400 BCAdena culture North America Ohio 1000 200 BCLiaoning bronze dagger culture East Asia 800 600 BCMiddle Mumun East Asia Korea 800 300 BCEtruscan civilization Europe Italy 800 264 BCParacas culture South America Peru 800 100 BCHallstatt culture Europe Central 800 BC 500 BC Iron Age Europe Thraco Cimmerian CeltsBritish Iron Age Europe Britain 700 50 BC Insular CeltsZapotec civilization Mesoamerica 700 BC AD 700Pazyryk culture Central Asia 600 300 BC Scythians Saka Pazyryk burialsAldy Bel culture Central Asia 600 300 BC Scythians SakaLa Tene culture Europe Central Western 500 50 BC GaulsPre Roman Iron Age Europe North 500 50 BC Proto GermanicNorthern Black Polished Ware South Asia 500 300 BC Vedic periodLate Mumun East Asia Korea 550 300 BCUrewe Sub Saharan Africa 400 BC AD 500 Iron metallurgy in AfricaLate Nok Period Sub Saharan Africa West 300 1 BC Iron metallurgy in AfricaNasca culture South America Peru 100 BC 800 ADCalima culture South America Colombia 200 BC 400 ADHopewell tradition North America 100 BC AD 400Teotihuacan Mesoamerica 100 BC AD 550Ipiutak site North America Alaska 100 BC AD 800AstronomyHistorical solar eclipsesYear BC Date Eclipse Type Saros Series Eclipse Magnitude Gamma Ecliptic Conjunction UT Greatest Eclipse UT Duration Min amp Sec Description899 21 Apr Annular 53 0 9591 0 8964 22 32 15 22 21 56 00 03 04 China s Double Dawn Eclipse 2 3 763 15 Jun Total 44 1 0596 0 2715 08 11 13 08 14 01 00 05 00 Assyrian Eclipse 4 5 648 6 Apr Total 38 1 0689 0 6898 08 24 05 08 31 03 00 05 02 Archilochus Eclipse 6 7 585 28 May Total 57 1 0798 0 3201 14 25 41 14 22 26 00 06 04 Thales Eclipse Medes vs Lydians firstly recorded in Herodotus History 8 9 10 557 19 May Total 48 1 0258 0 3145 12 49 02 12 52 26 00 02 22 The Siege of Larisa firstly recorded by Xenophon 11 480 2 Oct Annular 65 0 9324 0 4951 11 56 54 11 51 01 00 07 57 Xerxes Eclipse recorded by Herodotus History 12 431 3 Aug Annular 48 0 9843 0 8388 14 45 34 14 54 52 00 01 05 Peloponnesian War 13 14 424 21 Mar Annular 42 0 9430 0 9433 07 43 30 07 54 29 00 04 39 8th Year of Peloponnesian War 15 Centuries and decades10th century BC 990s BC 980s BC 970s BC 960s BC 950s BC 940s BC 930s BC 920s BC 910s BC 900s BC9th century BC 890s BC 880s BC 870s BC 860s BC 850s BC 840s BC 830s BC 820s BC 810s BC 800s BC8th century BC 790s BC 780s BC 770s BC 760s BC 750s BC 740s BC 730s BC 720s BC 710s BC 700s BC7th century BC 690s BC 680s BC 670s BC 660s BC 650s BC 640s BC 630s BC 620s BC 610s BC 600s BC6th century BC 590s BC 580s BC 570s BC 560s BC 550s BC 540s BC 530s BC 520s BC 510s BC 500s BC5th century BC 490s BC 480s BC 470s BC 460s BC 450s BC 440s BC 430s BC 420s BC 410s BC 400s BC4th century BC 390s BC 380s BC 370s BC 360s BC 350s BC 340s BC 330s BC 320s BC 310s BC 300s BC3rd century BC 290s BC 280s BC 270s BC 260s BC 250s BC 240s BC 230s BC 220s BC 210s BC 200s BC2nd century BC 190s BC 180s BC 170s BC 160s BC 150s BC 140s BC 130s BC 120s BC 110s BC 100s BC1st century BC 90s BC 80s BC 70s BC 60s BC 50s BC 40s BC 30s BC 20s BC 10s BC 0s BCReferencesWikimedia Commons has media related to 1st millennium BC Julian Day Number from Date Calculator keisan casio com Klein Goldewijk K A Beusen M de Vos and G van Drecht 2011 The HYDE 3 1 spatially explicit database of human induced land use change over the past 12 000 years Global Ecology and Biogeography20 1 73 86 doi 10 1111 j 1466 8238 2010 00587 x pbl nl Goldewijk et al 2011 estimate 188 million as of AD 1 citing a literature range of 170 million low to 300 million high Out of the estimated 188M 116M are estimated for Asia East South Southeast and Central Asia excluding Western Asia 44M for Europe and the Near East 15M for Africa including Egypt and Roman North Africa 12M for Mesoamerica and South America North America and Oceania were at or below one million Jean Noel Biraben Essai sur l evolution du nombre des hommes Population 34 1 1979 13 25 p 22 estimates c 100 million at 1200 BC and c 250 million at AD 1 1 Who Built it First Ancient Discoveries A amp E Television Networks 2008 Archived from the original on 2009 04 29 Retrieved 2009 07 24 Although disputed some scholars see the emergence of monotheism proper in the context of the Babylonian exile during which the Israelites adopted aspects of Babylonian religion resulting in Second Temple Judaism by 515 BC No Other Gods Emergent Monotheism in Israel Also credited with early monotheism is Zoroastrianism founded at roughly the same time Zoroastrianism Temple 1986 Temple 1986 pp 15 World Timeline of the Americas 1000 BC AD 200 The British Museum 2005 Archived from the original on 2009 02 27 Retrieved 2009 07 25 World Timeline of the Americas 200 BC AD 600 The British Museum 2005 Archived from the original on 2009 02 27 Retrieved 2009 07 25 Temple Robert 1986 The Genius of China 3000 years of science discovery and invention New York Simon and Schuster Based on the works of Joseph Needham Zimmer Heinrich 1952 Joseph Campbell ed Philosophy of India London Routledge amp Kegan Paul Ltd Not in copyright