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  1. It lasted from c. 1200 BC – c. 600 AD and can be subdivided into the following periods: Greek Dark Ages (or Iron Age, Homeric Age), 1100–800 BC. Archaic period, 800–490 BC. Classical period, 490–323 BC. Hellenistic period, 323–146 BC. Roman Greece, covering the period of the Roman conquest of Greece from 146 BC – 324 AD.

  2. Location within Israel. The Battle of Megiddo (fought 15th century BC) was fought between Egyptian forces under the command of Pharaoh Thutmose III and a large rebellious coalition of Canaanite vassal states led by the king of Kadesh. [4] It is the first battle to have been recorded in what is accepted as relatively reliable detail.

  3. 1300 a. C.: surge la cultura de los campos de urnas. 1300 a. C.: en Poverty Point ( Luisiana) los lugareños empiezan a construir enormes trabajos en tierra y montañas de piedra. 1300 a. C.: los frigios destruyen a los hititas. 1300 a. C.: los amorreos arrebatan Canaán a los hititas. 1300 a. C.: aparecen los ilirios.

  4. 1307–1275 BC: the first Assyrian mention of the Ahlamu, proto- Aramaic people, during the reign of Adad-nirari I, in the region of the north of the Euphrates. The Aramaeans, a Semitic people reported from the 14th century BC by the archives of Amarna and then Ugarit, settled in North Mesopotamia, then in Aram (now Syria) and Lebanon where ...

  5. For much of the Middle Ages, England's climate differed from that in the 21st century. Between the 9th and 13th centuries England went through the Medieval Warm Period, a prolonged period of warmer temperatures; in the early 13th century, for example, summers were around 1 °C warmer than today and the climate was slightly drier.

  6. c. 1900 BC: The Mokaya along the Pacific coast of present-day Chiapas, Mexico were preparing cacao beverages. [3] c. 1900 BC: Port of Lothal is abandoned. c. 1897 BC: Senwosret II ( Twelfth Dynasty) started to rule. He built Kahun near his pyramide tomb complex at el-Lahun.

  7. c. 1600 BC: The creation of one of the oldest surviving astronomical documents, a copy of which was found in the Babylonian library of Ashurbanipal: a 21-year record of the appearances of Venus (which the early Babylonians called Nindaranna): Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa. c. 1600 BC: The date of the earliest discovered rubber balls.