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Timeline of the Palestine region

The timeline of the Palestine region is a timeline of major events in the history of Palestine. For more details on the history of Palestine see History of Palestine. In cases where the year or month is uncertain, it is marked with a slash, for example 636/7 and January/February.

Satellite image of the Palestine region from 2003

Mesozoic/Cenozoic geological eras

Palaeolithic

 
The Qesem Cave was occupied by prehistoric humans at approximately 420,000–220,000 BCE .

Epipalaeolithic

  • c. 9000 BCENatufian hunter-gatherer groups form a permanent settlement that would come to be known as Jericho.

Neolithic

Neolithic (8,500–4,500 BCE).[4]

Chalcolithic (Copper Age)

Chalcolithic (4,500–3,500 BCE).[4]

Bronze Age

Early Bronze Age

Early Bronze Age (3,500–2,350 BCE).[4]

Intermediate Bronze Age

Intermediate Bronze Age (2,350–2000 BCE).

Middle Bronze Age

Middle Bronze Age (2000–1550 BCE).[4]

Late Bronze Age

Late Bronze Age (1550–1200 BCE).[4]

Iron Age

Iron Age I

Iron Age I (1200–1000 BCE).[4]

IAI can be split into Iron Age IA (1200–1150 BCE) and Iron Age IB (1150–1000 BCE).[4]

Iron Age II

Iron Age II (1000–586 BCE).[4]

IAII can be split into Iron Age IIA (1000–900 BCE), Iron Age IIB (900–700 BCE), and Iron Age IIC (700–586 BCE).[4]

Babylonian and Persian periods

Babylonian and Persian periods (586–332 BCE).[4]

The Babylonian period began with the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar II in 587 or 586 BCE. The Persian period spans the years 539–332 BCE, from the time Cyrus II of Persia ("the Great") conquered the Neo-Babylonian Empire, to the conquest of the region by Alexander the Great.

Hellenistic period

The Hellenistic period began with Alexander the Great's conquest of Palestine in 332 BCE and ended with Pompey's conquest of Palestine in 63 BCE. Alternatively, it can be considered to end with the victory of Rome's client king, Herod the Great, over the last Hasmonean king of Judea in 37 BCE.[4]

  • c. 260 BCEBeit She'an is refounded as the poleis Scythopolis by Ptolemy II Philadelphus.[8]
  • 200 BCE – The Seleucid emperor Antiochus III the Great conquers Palestine.[9]
     
    Model of the Second Temple at the Israel Museum
  • 175 BCE:
  • 174 BCE – Antiochus appoints Jason as high priest of the Jerusalem Temple.[12]
  • 172 BCE – Antiochus replaces Jason with Menelaus as high priest of the Jerusalem Temple as the latter offers to pay a much bigger tribute.[13]
  • Late 170 BCE/early 169 BCE – Antiochus invades Egypt but decides to return. Perhaps because of disturbances in Palestine. His return is triumphant and he brings many spoils.[14]
  • 169 BCE, autumn – On his way back from Egypt, Antiochus raids the Jerusalem Temple and confiscates its treasures.[15]
  • 168 BCE, spring – Antiochus invades Egypt but the Romans force him to withdraw.[16] Meanwhile, rumors spread in Judea that the king has died and Jason launches a surprise attack on Jerusalem, captures the city, and kills supporters of his rival Menelaus.[17] Antiochus interprets Jason's attack as a rebellion and sends an army that retakes Jerusalem and drives Jason's followers away.[18]
  • 167 BCE, autumnAntiochus IV Epiphanes outlaws Judaism in Judea and allows pagan worship at the Jerusalem temple.[19]
  • 165 BCE, spring – Antiochus campaigns against the Parthians.[20]
  • 164 BCE:
    • spring – Antiochus issues a letter repealing the ban on Judaism and promising amnesty for the insurgents who return before March 164. The provincial land-tax from 167 BCE is abolished. The Maccabees does not take up the Seleucids offer and the insurgency continues.[21]
    • summer – The Maccabees carries out a number of punitive expeditions, likely led by Judas, against people who had participated in the persecution against Jews.[22]
    • autumn/winter – Judas enters Jerusalem and the altar to Zeus and other pagan artifacts are removed from the Temple.[23] Meanwhile, Antiochus dies in Persis,[24] igniting a century-long war of succession in Antioch, the capital of the Seleucid empire.[25]
  • 161 BCEJudas Maccabeus is killed in battle and his army is routed.[26]
  • 152 BCEJonathan Apphus is appointed high priest of the Jerusalem temple by the Seleucids.[27]
  • c. 145 BCE – The Seleucid ruler Demetrius II Nicator lets Judea annex the three southern Samarian districts Lydda, Aphairema, and Ramathaim.[27]
  • 135/4 BCEJohn Hyrcanus becomes Hasmonean king.[28]
  • 129 BCE – The Seleucid emperor Antiochus VII Sidetes dies.[29]
  • c. 112–107 BCE – The Hasmoneans destroy the Samaritan temple at Mount Gerizim and devastates Shechem.[30]
  • c. 108/7 BCE – The Hasmoneans destroy Scythopolis.[8]
  • 104 BCEAristobulus I succeeds Hyrcanus as king of Judea.[31]
  • 103 BCEAlexander Jannaeus succeeds Aristobulus. He greatly extends the Hasmonean kingdom, concentrating on Greek cities along the Palestinian coast.[32]
  • 76 BCEHyrcanus II succeeds Alexander Jannaeus.[33]
 
Birth of Jesus (painting by Gerard van Honthorst from 1622)

Roman period

The Roman period lasted from Pompey's conquest of Palestine in 66 BCE, until the legal establishment of Christianity in the realm. Suggestions for the end date vary between the Edict of Milan in 313 CE by which Constantine the Great declares Christianity a permitted religion, and the declaration of Nicene Christianity as the sole state religion by three co-emperors including Theodosius, emperor of the East, through the Edict of Thessalonica of 380.

 
The destruction of Jewish Temple (painting by David Roberts from 1850)

Byzantine period

 
Church of the Holy Sepulchre (photo from 1900)

Allowing for varying starting dates (see above under Roman period), this timeline chooses for convenience's sake to set the starting year of the Byzantine period as 313, when Constantine declared Christianity a permitted religion. The period ends with the Muslim conquest of Palestine in 637–641.

 
The Madaba Map depiction of 6th-century Jerusalem

Early Muslim period

Rashidun period

  • 637 (or 638) – Jerusalem falls to the armies of Rashidun caliph Umar Ibn el-Khatab.[89] Jews are permitted to return to the city after 568 years of Roman and Byzantine rule.[90]
    • June/July – The Rashiduns capture Gaza.[89]
    • summer – Ascalon surrenders to the Rashiduns.[89]
    • late – The Rashiduns and the Byzantines consent to a truce.[89]
  • 640 – The Rashiduns capture Caesarea.[72]
  • 641 – The Rashiduns capture Ashkelon, completing their conquest of the Holy Land.
  • 659 – Earthquake.[91]

Umayyad period

 
The Dome of the Rock (photograph from 1856)

Abbasid period

  • 747–750 – Civil war resulting in the overthrow of the Umayyads; the Abbasid family seize control of the caliphate.[97]
  • 758 – The Caliph Al-Mansur visits Jerusalem and possibly orders the renovation of the Dome of the Rock.[98]
  • 762 – The Abbasids found Baghdad and designate it the caliphate's new capital.[99]
  • 792/3War between the tribes of Palestine[100]
  • 796 – Battles between the tribes of Palestine.[101]
  • 799 – The Patriarch of Jerusalem sends a mission to the Frankish king Charlemagne and the latter returns the favor.[102]
  • c. 800 – The Jewish High Council, headed by Gaon, moves from Tiberias to Jerusalem.[103]
  • 800 – The Patriarch of Jerusalem sends another mission to Charlemagne carrying the keys to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, together with a banner.[104]
  • 807 – A rebellion breaks out. Led by Abu'l-Nida', it has its epicenter in Eilat.[105]
  • 813 – Earthquake.[106]
  • c. 820 – The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is repaired.[107]
  • 820 – Basil is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem.[108]
  • 855 – Solomon is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem.[107]
  • 885 – The Abbasids reconquer Damascus.[109]
  • 873 – The governor of Egypt, Ahmad Ibn Tulun, breaks with the Abbasids and establishes independent rule.[109]
  • 878 – The Tulunids occupy most of the former Byzantine Diocese of the East, enabling them to defend Egypt against Abbasid attacks.[110]
  • 879Elias III is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem.[111]
  • c. 881Elias III of Jerusalem appeals to the Franks.[112]
  • c. 903 – Persian geographer Ibn al-Faqih visits Jerusalem.[113]
  • 905/6 – The Abbasids regain control of Palestine.[109]
  • 908/9Al-Muqtadir forbids Christians from serving in administrative positions.[114]
  • c. 913 – Spanish scholar Ibn Abd Rabbih visits Jerusalem.[113]
  • 935Al-Ikhshid takes control of Egypt and establishes independent rule.[109]
  • 937 March 26 – Rioting Muslims burn down the Church of the Resurrection and loot the Chapel of Golgotha.[115]
  • 939:
  • 946 JulySayf al-Dawla invades Palestine.[117]
  • 966 – A Muslim-Jewish mob torches the Church of Resurrection, plunders it, and kills Jerusalem's Patriarch John VII.[118]

Fatimid period

  • 969/70 – The Fatimids, a self-proclaimed Shia caliphate, defeat the Ikhshidids and appoint a Jewish governor.[109]
  • 971 – The Qarmatians attack Damascus.[109]
    • September 5 – The Qarmatians conquer Ramla.[119]
    • December – The Fatimids ward off a Qarmatian invasion near Fustat.[119]
  • 972 or 975 – Byzantine emperor John I Tzimiskes leads an expedition that reaches as far south as Caesarea and Tiberias in Palestine.[120]
  • 975:
    • winter – The Turkish officer Alptakin conquers Sidon and slaughters the population.[121]
    • spring – Alptakin conquers Tiberias.[122]
    • April – Alptakin conquers Damascus.[122]
  • 977 March 12 – Ramla is again conquered by the Qarmatians.[123]
  • 978:
    • Joseph II is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem.[123]
    • August 15 – A massive Fatimid army defeats Alptakin and the Qarmatians in southern Palestine.[124]
  • 978–979 winter – The Jewish Fatimid general tries to negotiate with the leader of the Hamdanids, but their leader Abu Taghlib refuses because Fadl is a Jew.[125] He later agrees to negotiations with Fadl who offers him Ramla in exchange for ousting the Jarrahids.[126]
  • 979 August – Abu Taghlib launches a failed offensive on Ramla and is taken captive and executed.[126]
  • 981:
    • June – Damascus is besieged by a Fatimid army.[123]
    • July – The Bedouins, led by the Jarrahids, rebel against the Fatimids.[127]
  • 983 July 5 – Damascus is conquered by a Fatimid army.[123]
  • 984Orestes is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem.[123]
  • 991 February 24Ya'qub ibn Killis dies.[128]
  • 996–998Revolt in Tyre. The rebels call for and receive support from the Byzantines. The Fatimids put the city under siege and it falls in May 998. The rebel leader is tortured and crucified.[129]
  • 1006–1007 – Russian abbot Daniel makes pilgrimage to Palestine.[130]
  • 1008 – Caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah forbids Jerusalem Christians from performing the Palm Sunday procession.[106]
  • 1009 October 18 – Caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah orders the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.[131]
  • 1011–1013 February – Uprising of the Yemenite Djarrahid Bedouin tribe who seize Ramla and establish a mini-caliphate.[132]
  • 1012 – Beginning of al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah's oppressive decrees against Christians and Jews.[133]
  • 1015 September 4 – Earthquake. The dome of the Dome of the Rock collapses.[134]
  • 1021 February 13 – Caliph Al-Hakim is assassinated and succeeded by his son al-Zahir.[135]
  • 1024 September – Bedouin rebellion erupts over tax-collecting privileges (iqta'a). The Bedouins attack and loot Ramla and Tiberias.[136]
  • 1026–1027Richard of Verdun makes pilgrimage to Palestine.[137]
  • 1027 – A treaty is signed between the Byzantine emperor and the Fatimid caliph. It permits the rebuilding of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and allows Christians who had converted to Islam under duress to return to their former faith. It also granted the emperor the right to designate the patriarch of Jerusalem. In return, the mosque of Constantinople would be reopened.[138]
  • 1029 – Anushtakin defeats a Bedouin coalition that challenges Fatimid rule in Palestine and Syria.[139]
  • 1032 – Renovations of the Dome of the Rock ordered by Caliph al-Zahir are finished.[140]
  • 1033:
  • 1047 – Persian poet and traveler Nasir Khusraw visits Palestine.[143]
  • 1063 – The Fatimids strengthen or rebuild the walls of Jerusalem.[144]
  • 1064–1065 – The Great German Pilgrimage takes place.[145]
  • 1068 – An earthquake destroys Ramla, killing an estimated 15,000.[146]
  • 1071 – The Seljuk Turks invade large portions of West Asia, including Asia Minor and the Eastern Mediterranean; they capture Ramla and lay siege to Jerusalem.[147]
  • 1073 – The Seljuks invade Palestine.[148]
  • 1075:
    • The Seljuks capture Damascus.[147]
    • A severe drought hits Palestine.[149]
  • 1077 – The Seljuks capture Jaffa.[147]
  • 1089 – The Fatimids conquer Tyre.[150]
  • 1092–1095Abu Bakr ibn al-Arabi stays in Jerusalem.[151]
  • 1093 – Muslims in coastal communities bar Christians from entering Palestine.[152]
  • 1095 November 27Pope Urban II launches the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont. Its principal objectives are Catholic reconquest of the sacred city of Jerusalem and the Holy Land, and the freeing of Eastern Christians from Islamic rule.
  • 1098:
    • July – The Fatimids lay siege to Jerusalem.[144]
    • August 26 – The Fatimids recapture Jerusalem.[153]

Crusader/Ayyubid period

 
Conquest of Jerusalem in 1099 during the First Crusade (painting from the 19th century)

The Crusader period, sometimes referred to as the medieval period, as it was the only time when the Western-type societal organisation was transplanted to the region, lasted from 1099 when the Crusaders captured Jerusalem, to 1291 when the Kingdom of Jerusalem's last major possession in the Holy Land, Acre, was overrun by the Mamluks. In part of that period, almost every part of the territory changed hands repeatedly between the Crusaders and the Ayyubids.

Mamluk period

The Mamluk period lasted from 1291 when the Mamluks capture Acre, to 1517 when the Ottomans conquered Palestine.

Ottoman period

16th century

 
Walls of Jerusalem (photo taken in 2005)

17th century

18th century

 
Battle of Nazareth (painting by Antoine-Jean Gros from 1801)

19th century

 
Galilee earthquake of 1837
 
Ottoman machine gunners during the Second Battle of Gaza, 1917
 
Emir Feisal and Chaim Weizmann during their meeting in 1918

20th century

OETA and Mandatory Palestine

 
1927 Jericho earthquake: Destruction in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem
 
1948: declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel
 
Palestinian Arab refugees in 1948

Israel, Jordan-occupied West Bank, Egypt-occupied Gaza

  • 1948 May 14Israeli Declaration of Independence: Jewish leadership in the region of Palestine announces the establishment of a Jewish state in Eretz-Israel, to be known as the State of Israel.[191]
  • 1948 May 14–1949 January 7 – The 1948 Arab–Israeli War: a large-scale war between Israel and five Arab countries and the Palestinian-Arabs. The war results in an Israeli victory, with Israel annexing territory beyond the borders of the proposed Jewish state and into the borders of the proposed Arab state and West Jerusalem.[192] Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt signed the 1949 Armistice Agreements with Israel. The Gaza Strip and the West Bank, were occupied by Egypt and Transjordan, respectively, until 1967. In 1951, the UN Conciliation Commission for Palestine estimated that some 711,000 Palestinian refugees were displaced by the war.[193]
  • 1949:
    • February 24 – Israel and Egypt sign an armistice agreement.[194]
    • March 23 – Israel and Lebanon sign an armistice agreement.[194]
    • April 3 – Israel and Jordan sign an armistice agreement.[194]
    • July 20 – Israel and Syria sign an armistice agreement.[194]
  • 1950 Spring – Jordan annexes the West Bank.[194]
  • 1956 October 29–November 5 – The Sinai Campaign. This war followed Egypt's decision of 26 July 1956 to nationalize the Suez Canal. Initiated by United Kingdom and France, the war was conducted in cooperation with Israel, and aimed at occupying the Sinai Peninsula, with the Europeans regaining control over the Suez Canal. Although the Israeli occupation of the Sinai was successful, the US and USSR forced it to abandon this conquest. Israel, however, managed to re-open the Straits of Tiran and secure its southern border.
  • 1967 June 5–10 – The Six-Day War between Israel and all of its neighboring countries: Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon which were aided by other Arab countries. The war lasted for six days and concluded with Israel expanding its territory significantly — Gaza Strip and Sinai from Egypt, the West Bank and Jerusalem from Jordan, and the Golan Heights from Syria.

Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories

  • 1973 October 6–24 – The Yom Kippur War was fought. The war began with a surprise joint attack on two fronts by the armies of Syria (in the Golan Heights) and Egypt (in the Suez Canal), deliberately initiated during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. The Egyptian Army got back Sinai that was occupied by the Israeli armies for almost 7 years.
  • 1974 – The PLO is allowed to represent the Palestinian Arab refugees in the UN as their sole political representative organisation.
  • 1978 September 18 – Israel and Egypt sign a comprehensive peace agreement at Camp David which included a condition of Israel's withdrawal from the Rest of Sinai.
  • 1979 March 26 – The peace treaty with Egypt was signed by the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and U.S. President Jimmy Carter.
  • 1982 June–December – The First Lebanon War took place during which Israel invaded southern Lebanon due to the constant terror attacks on northern Israel by the Palestinian guerrilla organizations resident there. The war resulted in the expulsion of the PLO from Lebanon, and created an Israeli Security Zone in southern Lebanon.
  • 1984 November 21–1985 January 5 – Operation Moses: IDF forces conduct a secret operation in which approximately 8,000 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel from Sudan.
  • 1987–1991 – The First Intifada: The first Palestinian uprising took place in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories.
  • 1988 November 15Palestinian Declaration of Independence (1988) – The Palestinian National Council, the legislative body of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), in Algiers on 15 November 1988 unilaterally proclaimed the establishment of a new independent state called the "State of Palestine".
  • 1991 May 24–25Operation Solomon: IDF forces conduct a secret operation in which approximately 14,400 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel within 34 hours in 30 IAF and El Al aircraft.
 
1993: Bill Clinton , Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat after signing the Oslo Accords
 
Summer 2006: The Second Lebanon War (photograph taken on August 15, 2006)
  • 2002 June – As a result of the significant increase of suicide bombing attacks within Israeli population centers during the first years of the Second Intifada, Israel began the construction of the West Bank Fence along the Green Line border arguing that the barrier is necessary to protect Israeli civilians from Palestinian militants. The significantly reduced number of incidents of suicide bombings from 2002 to 2005 has been partly attributed to the barrier.[195] The barrier's construction, which has been highly controversial, became a major issue of contention between the two sides.
  • 2005 August 23Israel's unilateral disengagement plan: The evacuation of 25 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and West Bank is completed.
  • 2006 July 12–August 14 – The Second Lebanon War took place, which began as a military operation in response to the abduction of two Israeli reserve soldiers by the Hezbollah, and gradually grew to a wider conflict. 1,191 Lebanese were killed, 4,409 were injured.
  • 2008 December 27–2009 January 18Operation Cast Lead: IDF forces conducted a large-scale military operation in the Gaza Strip during which dozens of targets were attacked in the Gaza Strip in response to ongoing rocket fire on the western Negev. 1,291 Palestinians were killed.
  • 2012:
    • November 14–November 21Operation Pillar of Cloud: IDF forces launches a large-scale military operation in the Gaza Strip in response to Palestinian militants firing over a hundred rockets from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel beginning on 10 November, with the aims of restoring quiet to southern Israel and to strike at what it considers terror organizations.[196] The operation officially began with the assassination of Ahmed Jabari, chief of the Gaza military wing of Hamas.[197] 158 Palestinians were killed.
    • November 29United Nations General Assembly resolution 67/19: Upgrading of Palestine to non-member observer state status in the United Nations.[198]
  • 2016 December 23 – United Nations Security Council resolution 2334: Condemning Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands.[199]
  • 2017 December 6 – US President Donald Trump announced the United States recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.[200]
  • 2023 October 72023 Israel–Hamas war: Hamas launched a large-scale offensive against Israel, during which Hamas initially fired thousands of rockets at Israel from the Gaza Strip, while at the same time over a thousand Palestinian militants broke through the border and entered Israel by foot and with motor vehicles, as they engaged in gun battles with the Israeli security forces, conducting massacres and shootings of Israeli civilians, took over Israeli towns and military bases, as well as kidnapped over 200 Israeli soldiers and civilians. As a result Israel's Security Cabinet formally declares war for the first time since the Yom Kippur War in 1973.[201]

See also

Notes and references

Citations

  1. ^ Vertebrates – dinosaurs – University of Copenhagen geologi.snm.ku.dk[dead link]
  2. ^ Discovery Online, Discovery News Brief
  3. ^ Fornai, Cinzia; Benazzi, Stefano; Gopher, Avi; Barkai, Ran; Sarig, Rachel; Bookstein, Fred L.; Hershkovitz, Israel; Weber, Gerhard W. (2016). "The Qesem Cave hominin material (part 2): A morphometric analysis of dm2-QC2 deciduous lower second molar". Quaternary International. 398: 175–189. Bibcode:2016QuInt.398..175F. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2015.11.102. ISSN 1040-6182. The Qesem Cave...site...has yielded...teeth associated to the...(AYCC) and dated to about 420-220 ka.[dead link]
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Negev, Avraham; Gibson, Shimon, eds. (2001). Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land - Chronological Tables. New York and London: Continuum. p. 556. ISBN 0-8264-1316-1. Retrieved 26 September 2021. (Snippet view).
  5. ^ Davis, Paul K. 100 Decisive Battles. Oxford University Press.
  6. ^ Joseph P. Free, Howard F. Vos. 1992. Archaeology and Bible history. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-310-47961-1
  7. ^ Burgess, Henry (2003). Journal of Sacred Literature and Biblical Record, April 1855 to July 1855. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7661-5612-8.
  8. ^ a b c d Wagemakers 2014, p. 219.
  9. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 53; Bourgel 2019, p. 2
  10. ^ Gera 1998, p. 109.
  11. ^ Lendering, Antiochus IV Epiphanes; Britannica, Antiochus IV Epiphanes
  12. ^ Lendering, Antiochus IV Epiphanes.
  13. ^ Britannica, Antiochus IV Epiphanes: In 172, for an even bigger tribute, he appointed Menelaus in place of Jason.
  14. ^ Grabbe 2010, pp. 14–5; Britannica, Antiochus IV Epiphanes
  15. ^ Grabbe 2010, p. 15; Morkholm 2008, p. 283
  16. ^ Schäfer 2003, p. 40; Grabbe 2010, p. 15
  17. ^ Morkholm 2008, p. 283.
  18. ^ Morkholm 2008, p. 284; Grabbe 2010, p. 15
  19. ^ Schwartz 2009, pp. 54–5; Morkholm 2008, p. 286
  20. ^ Schäfer 2003, p. 47; Morkholm 2008, p. 287
  21. ^ Morkholm 2008, pp. 289–90; Schäfer 2003, p. 47
  22. ^ Morkholm 2008, p. 290
  23. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 33; Morkholm 2008, p. 290; Britannica, Antiochus IV Epiphanes: in December 164 was able to tear down the altar of Zeus and reconsecrate the Temple
  24. ^ Morkholm 2008, p. 290.
  25. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 33.
  26. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 33; Bourgel 2019, p. 8
  27. ^ a b Bourgel 2019, p. 8.
  28. ^ Bourgel 2019, p. 10.
  29. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 37.
  30. ^ Bourgel 2019, p. 9; Hjelm 2010, p. 28
  31. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 38; Hjelm 2010, p. 35
  32. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 38.
  33. ^ a b Schwartz 2009, p. 42.
  34. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 45.
  35. ^ Meyers & Chancey 2012, p. 50.
  36. ^ Greetham, The Rev. Phil. "King Herod the Great." "The Nativity Pages". Archived from the original on 2012-07-23., 2001.
  37. ^ Richardson 1996, p. 344.
  38. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 74.
  39. ^ Magness 2012, p. 133.
  40. ^ Richardson 1996, p. 303; Magness 2012, p. 133
  41. ^ Menahem MANṠŪR (1964). The Dead Sea Scrolls: A College Textbook and a Study Guide. Brill Archive. p. 14. GGKEY:EP1DFQRSATU.
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  44. ^ Meyers & Chancey 2012, p. 62.
  45. ^ Richardson 1996, p. 282.
  46. ^ Millar 1993, p. 354.
  47. ^ Temple of Herod, Jewish Encyclopedia
  48. ^ Richardson 1996, p. 265.
  49. ^ Richardson 1996, p. 363.
  50. ^ Rahner (page 731) states that the consensus among historians is c. 4 BCE. Sanders supports c. 4 BCE. Vermes supports c. 6/5 BCE. Finegan supports c. 3/2 BCE. Sanders refers to the general consensus, Vermes a common 'early' date, Finegan defends comprehensively the date according to early Christian traditions.
  51. ^ Schwartz 2009, p. 48.
  52. ^ Haensch 2010, p. 2; Ben-Sasson 1976, p. 246: When Archelaus was deposed from the ethnarchy in 6 CE, Judea proper, Samaria and Idumea were converted into a Roman province under the name Iudaea.; Schwartz 2009, p. 48
  53. ^ Millar 1993, p. 346.
  54. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 86.
  55. ^ a b Magness 2012, p. 138.
  56. ^ Haensch 2010, p. 2; Millar 1993, p. 356
  57. ^ Haensch 2010, p. 2; Magness 2012, p. 139
  58. ^ a b Magness 2012, p. 139.
  59. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 78; McLaren & Goodman 2016, p. 215; Schwartz 2009, p. 47
  60. ^ Haensch 2010, p. 2; Chancey 2005, p. 71
  61. ^ a b Schwartz 2009, p. 52.
  62. ^ Magness 2012, p. 140.
  63. ^ Millar 1993, p. 366.
  64. ^ Schwartz 2016, p. 234.
  65. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 62; Millar 1993, p. 371
  66. ^ Bonne 2014, p. 1.
  67. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 103.
  68. ^ Weksler-Bdolah 2019, p. 53.
  69. ^ Weksler-Bdolah 2019, p. 58.
  70. ^ Chancey 2005, p. 62; Schwartz 2016, p. 238; Weksler-Bdolah 2019, p. 53
  71. ^ Donaldson 2000, p. 127; Viviano 2007, p. 17
  72. ^ a b Viviano 2007, p. 17.
  73. ^ a b c Slavik 2001, p. 60.
  74. ^ a b Lewin 2005, p. 39.
  75. ^ Lewin 2005, p. 36; Bijovsky 2007, p. 182
  76. ^ Moser 2018, p. 225.
  77. ^ Lewin 2005, p. 38.
  78. ^ Lewin 2005, p. 38; Bijovsky 2007, p. 182
  79. ^ Lewis 2011, p. 155.
  80. ^ Sivan 2008, p. 213.
  81. ^ Donaldson 2000, p. 128; Viviano 2007, p. 17
  82. ^ Lewin 2005, pp. 40–1.
  83. ^ Lewin 2005, p. 41; Stewart Evans 2005, p. 26
  84. ^ Stewart Evans 2005, p. 26.
  85. ^ Lewin 2005, p. 41; Stewart Evans 2005, p. 26; Sivan 2008, pp. 141–2
  86. ^ a b c Dignas & Winter 2007, p. 117.
  87. ^ Schäfer 2003, p. 198.
  88. ^ Kaegi 1992, p. 93.
  89. ^ a b c d Kaegi 1992, p. 146.
  90. ^ Schäfer 2003, p. 198: the capture of Jerusalem in 638; Dignas & Winter 2007, p. 49: The conquerors had already taken Damascus in 635, and in 637 Jerusalem fell.
  91. ^ Avni 2014, p. 325.
  92. ^ Masalha 2018, p. 155.
  93. ^ Olszowy-Schlanger 1998, p. 55; Meri 2006, p. 590
  94. ^ a b c d e f Gil 1997, p. 841.
  95. ^ Barkat, Amiram (August 8, 2003). "The big one is coming". Haaretz. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
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Sources

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Ancient history

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Hellenistic period

  • Lendering, Jona (24 September 2020). "Antiochus IV Epiphanes". Livius. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
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  • Gera, Dov (1998). Judaea and Mediterranean Politics: 219 to 161 B.C.E. BRILL. ISBN 90-04-09441-5.

Roman period

  • McLaren, James; Goodman, Martin (August 25, 2016). "The Importance of Perspective: The Jewish-Roman Conflict of 66–70 CE as a Revolution". Revolt and Resistance in the Ancient Classical World and the Near East: In the Crucible of Empire. BRILL. pp. 205–218. ISBN 978-90-04-33018-4.
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  • Weksler-Bdolah, Shlomit (December 16, 2019). Aelia Capitolina – Jerusalem in the Roman Period: In Light of Archaeological Research. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-41707-6.
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  • Dignas, Beate; Winter, Engelbert (2007) [2001]. Rome and Persia in Late Antiquity: Neighbours and Rivals. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84925-8.

Byzantine period

  • Slavik, Diane (2001). Daily Life in Ancient and Modern Jerusalem. Lerner Publications. ISBN 978-0-8225-3218-7.
  • Stewart Evans, James Allan (2005). The Emperor Justinian and the Byzantine Empire. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-0-313-32582-3.
  • Bijovsky, Gabriela (2007). "Numismatic Evidence for the Gallus Revolt: The Hoard from Lod". Israel Exploration Journal. 57 (2): 187–203. JSTOR 27927173.
  • Moser, Muriel (December 6, 2018). Emperor and Senators in the Reign of Constantius II. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-48101-4.
  • Lewis, Bernard (April 15, 2011). Islam in History: Ideas, People, and Events in the Middle East. Open Court. ISBN 978-0-8126-9757-5.
  • Sivan, Hagith (February 14, 2008). Palestine in Late Antiquity. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-160867-4.

Early Muslim period

  • Goitein, S.D.; Grabar, O. (2007). "Jerusalem". In Clifford Edmund Bosworth (ed.). Historic Cities of the Islamic World. BRILL. pp. 224–255. ISBN 978-90-04-15388-2.
  • Pringle, Denys (1993). The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: Volume 3, The City of Jerusalem: A Corpus. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-39038-5.
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  • Harris, Jonathan (2014). Byzantium and the Crusades. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78093-671-0.
  • Preiser-Kapeller, Johannes (2021). "The Medieval Roman Empire of the East as a Spatial Phenomenon". In Yuri Pines; Michal Biran; Jörg Rüpke (eds.). The Limits of Universal Rule: Eurasian Empires Compared. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-48863-1.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2004). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century (Second ed.). Harlow: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-40525-7.
  • Jotischky, Andrew (2016). Benjamin Z. Kedar; Jonathan Phillips; Jonathan Riley-Smith (eds.). Crusades: Volume 7. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-351-98557-4.
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  • Lev, Yaacov (2006). "Palestine". In Josef W. Meri (ed.). Medieval Islamic Civilization: L-Z, index. Taylor & Francis. pp. 590–2. ISBN 978-0-415-96692-4.
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  • Olszowy-Schlanger, Judith (1998). Karaite Marriage Documents from the Cairo Geniza: Legal Tradition and Community Life in Mediaeval Egypt and Palestine. BRILL. pp. 55–. ISBN 90-04-10886-6.
  • Burke, Aaron A; Peilstocker, Martin (2011). The History and Archaeology of Jaffa 1. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press. ISBN 978-1-938770-56-2.
  • Khadduri, Majid (2006). War and Peace in the Law of Islam. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-58477-695-6.
  • Janin, Hunt (2015). Four Paths to Jerusalem: Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Secular Pilgrimages, 1000 BCE to 2001 CE. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-0880-8.

Crusader period

  • Tyerman, Christopher (2006). God's War: A New History of the Crusades. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02387-1.
  • Maalouf, Amin (1984). The Crusades Through Arab Eyes. SAQI. ISBN 978-0-86356-023-1.
  • Asbridge, Thomas (2004). The First Crusade: A New History. Simon&Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2084-2.
  • Lock, Peter (2006). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. ISBN 9-78-0-415-39312-6.
  • Barber, Malcolm (2012). The Crusader States. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11312-9.
  • Baldwin, Marshall W. (1969). "The Latin States under Baldwin III and Amalric I, 1143–1174; The Decline and Fall of Jerusalem, 1174–1189". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades, Volume One: The First Hundred Years. The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 528–561, 590–621. ISBN 1-58684-251-X.
  • Jotischky, Andrew (2017). Crusading and the Crusader States. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-80806-5.
  • Hickman, Kennedy (October 15, 2019). "The Crusades: Battle of Ascalon". ThoughtCo. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  • "Palestine - The Crusades". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  • "Crusades". Encyclopedia Britannica. December 29, 2020. Retrieved January 24, 2021.
  • Asbridge, Thomas (2010). The Crusades: The Authoritative History of the War for the Holy Land. HarperCollins e-books. ISBN 978-0-06-198136-4.
  • Roth, Norman (2014). Medieval Jewish Civilization: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-77155-2.
  • Boas, Adrian J. (2001). Jerusalem in the Time of the Crusades: Society, Landscape and Art in the Holy City Under Frankish Rule. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-58272-3.
  • Madden, Thomas F. (2014). The Concise History of the Crusades. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4422-3116-0.

Ottoman period

  • Farsoun, Samih K. (2004). Culture and Customs of the Palestinians. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-32051-4.

Further reading

External links

timeline, palestine, region, timeline, palestine, region, timeline, major, events, history, palestine, more, details, history, palestine, history, palestine, cases, where, year, month, uncertain, marked, with, slash, example, january, february, satellite, imag. The timeline of the Palestine region is a timeline of major events in the history of Palestine For more details on the history of Palestine see History of Palestine In cases where the year or month is uncertain it is marked with a slash for example 636 7 and January February Satellite image of the Palestine region from 2003 This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Contents 1 Mesozoic Cenozoic geological eras 2 Palaeolithic 3 Epipalaeolithic 4 Neolithic 5 Chalcolithic Copper Age 6 Bronze Age 6 1 Early Bronze Age 6 2 Intermediate Bronze Age 6 3 Middle Bronze Age 6 4 Late Bronze Age 7 Iron Age 7 1 Iron Age I 7 2 Iron Age II 8 Babylonian and Persian periods 9 Hellenistic period 10 Roman period 11 Byzantine period 12 Early Muslim period 12 1 Rashidun period 12 2 Umayyad period 12 3 Abbasid period 12 4 Fatimid period 13 Crusader Ayyubid period 14 Mamluk period 15 Ottoman period 15 1 16th century 15 2 17th century 15 3 18th century 15 4 19th century 15 5 20th century 16 OETA and Mandatory Palestine 17 Israel Jordan occupied West Bank Egypt occupied Gaza 18 Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories 19 See also 20 Notes and references 20 1 Citations 21 Sources 21 1 Ancient history 21 1 1 Hellenistic period 21 1 2 Roman period 21 1 3 Byzantine period 21 1 4 Early Muslim period 21 1 5 Crusader period 21 1 6 Ottoman period 22 Further reading 23 External linksMesozoic Cenozoic geological erasc 65 70 million BCE A Prognathodon dies in the Negev region its complete skull was discovered in a phosphate mine in the Negev in 1993 1 2 Palaeolithic nbsp The Qesem Cave was occupied by prehistoric humans at approximately 420 000 220 000 BCE 420 220 ka BP archaic humans occupy the Qesem Cave 3 EpipalaeolithicSee also Epipalaeolithic Near East c 9000 BCE Natufian hunter gatherer groups form a permanent settlement that would come to be known as Jericho NeolithicNeolithic 8 500 4 500 BCE 4 Chalcolithic Copper Age Chalcolithic 4 500 3 500 BCE 4 Bronze AgeEarly Bronze Age Early Bronze Age 3 500 2 350 BCE 4 Intermediate Bronze Age Intermediate Bronze Age 2 350 2000 BCE Middle Bronze Age Middle Bronze Age 2000 1550 BCE 4 Late Bronze Age Late Bronze Age 1550 1200 BCE 4 c 1469 BCE In the Battle of Megiddo Egyptian forces under the command of Pharaoh Thutmose III defeat a large Canaanite coalition under the king of Kadesh 5 Iron AgeMain articles History of ancient Israel and Judah and Philistines Iron Age I Iron Age I 1200 1000 BCE 4 IAI can be split into Iron Age IA 1200 1150 BCE and Iron Age IB 1150 1000 BCE 4 Iron Age II Iron Age II 1000 586 BCE 4 IAII can be split into Iron Age IIA 1000 900 BCE Iron Age IIB 900 700 BCE and Iron Age IIC 700 586 BCE 4 925 BCE Sack of Jerusalem 925 BC Pharaoh Sheshonk I of the Third Intermediate Period invades Canaan following the Battle of Bitter Lakes Possibly the same as Shishak the Pharaoh mentioned in the Bible in the book of Kings 1 who captured and pillaged Jerusalem 1 Kings 14 25 853 BCE The Battle of Qarqar in which Jerusalem s forces were likely involved in an indecisive battle against Shalmaneser III of Neo Assyria Jehoshaphat King of Judah was allied with Ahab King of the Israel according to the Jewish Bible 6 c 720 BCE The Kingdom of Israel is conquered by Neo Assyrian Empire and parts of the local population is deported and replaced with deportees from other parts of the empire 7 nbsp The Babylonian captivity painting by James Tissot from c 1896 to 1902 Babylonian and Persian periodsMain articles Samaritans History Yehud Babylonian province and Yehud Persian province Babylonian and Persian periods 586 332 BCE 4 The Babylonian period began with the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar II in 587 or 586 BCE The Persian period spans the years 539 332 BCE from the time Cyrus II of Persia the Great conquered the Neo Babylonian Empire to the conquest of the region by Alexander the Great Hellenistic periodThe Hellenistic period began with Alexander the Great s conquest of Palestine in 332 BCE and ended with Pompey s conquest of Palestine in 63 BCE Alternatively it can be considered to end with the victory of Rome s client king Herod the Great over the last Hasmonean king of Judea in 37 BCE 4 c 260 BCE Beit She an is refounded as the poleis Scythopolis by Ptolemy II Philadelphus 8 200 BCE The Seleucid emperor Antiochus III the Great conquers Palestine 9 nbsp Model of the Second Temple at the Israel Museum 175 BCE Seleucus IV r 187 BCE 175 BCE dies and is succeeded by Antiochus son of Seleucus IV 10 Antiochus IV Epiphanes r 175 BCE 164 BCE becomes the Seleucid emperor 11 174 BCE Antiochus appoints Jason as high priest of the Jerusalem Temple 12 172 BCE Antiochus replaces Jason with Menelaus as high priest of the Jerusalem Temple as the latter offers to pay a much bigger tribute 13 Late 170 BCE early 169 BCE Antiochus invades Egypt but decides to return Perhaps because of disturbances in Palestine His return is triumphant and he brings many spoils 14 169 BCE autumn On his way back from Egypt Antiochus raids the Jerusalem Temple and confiscates its treasures 15 168 BCE spring Antiochus invades Egypt but the Romans force him to withdraw 16 Meanwhile rumors spread in Judea that the king has died and Jason launches a surprise attack on Jerusalem captures the city and kills supporters of his rival Menelaus 17 Antiochus interprets Jason s attack as a rebellion and sends an army that retakes Jerusalem and drives Jason s followers away 18 167 BCE autumn Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlaws Judaism in Judea and allows pagan worship at the Jerusalem temple 19 165 BCE spring Antiochus campaigns against the Parthians 20 164 BCE spring Antiochus issues a letter repealing the ban on Judaism and promising amnesty for the insurgents who return before March 164 The provincial land tax from 167 BCE is abolished The Maccabees does not take up the Seleucids offer and the insurgency continues 21 summer The Maccabees carries out a number of punitive expeditions likely led by Judas against people who had participated in the persecution against Jews 22 autumn winter Judas enters Jerusalem and the altar to Zeus and other pagan artifacts are removed from the Temple 23 Meanwhile Antiochus dies in Persis 24 igniting a century long war of succession in Antioch the capital of the Seleucid empire 25 161 BCE Judas Maccabeus is killed in battle and his army is routed 26 152 BCE Jonathan Apphus is appointed high priest of the Jerusalem temple by the Seleucids 27 c 145 BCE The Seleucid ruler Demetrius II Nicator lets Judea annex the three southern Samarian districts Lydda Aphairema and Ramathaim 27 135 4 BCE John Hyrcanus becomes Hasmonean king 28 129 BCE The Seleucid emperor Antiochus VII Sidetes dies 29 c 112 107 BCE The Hasmoneans destroy the Samaritan temple at Mount Gerizim and devastates Shechem 30 c 108 7 BCE The Hasmoneans destroy Scythopolis 8 104 BCE Aristobulus I succeeds Hyrcanus as king of Judea 31 103 BCE Alexander Jannaeus succeeds Aristobulus He greatly extends the Hasmonean kingdom concentrating on Greek cities along the Palestinian coast 32 76 BCE Hyrcanus II succeeds Alexander Jannaeus 33 nbsp Birth of Jesus painting by Gerard van Honthorst from 1622 67 BCE Salome Alexandra dies and her son Hyrcanus II becomes king of Judea 34 A war of succession leads to a civil war among the Hasmoneans in Judea 33 Roman periodThe Roman period lasted from Pompey s conquest of Palestine in 66 BCE until the legal establishment of Christianity in the realm Suggestions for the end date vary between the Edict of Milan in 313 CE by which Constantine the Great declares Christianity a permitted religion and the declaration of Nicene Christianity as the sole state religion by three co emperors including Theodosius emperor of the East through the Edict of Thessalonica of 380 63 BCE Roman troops occupy Palestine 35 57 54 BCE Scythopolis is rebuilt by the Roman proconsul Gabinius 8 47 BCE Herod the Great is appointed governor of Galilee 36 Herod clears out Hezekiah s brigands 37 who had been harassing people in southern Syria citation needed 40 BCE The Parthians invade Judea seize Jerusalem and appoint Antigonus II Mattathias King of Judea citation needed Herod visits Rome to seek Mark Antony s support 38 He is appointed king by the Roman senate 39 37 BCE Herod the Great conquers Judea with the help of Roman and Jewish troops Antigonus II Mattathias who had barricaded himself in the city is beheaded by Mark Antony 40 31 BCE 31 BC Judea earthquake A powerful earthquake occurs in Judea 41 27 BCE King Herod rebuilds Samaria and renames it Sebastia 42 23 BCE King Herod builds a palace and fortress called Herodium about 7 5 miles 12 km south of Jerusalem 43 22 BCE Herod begins construction of a new city and harbor called Caesarea Maritima at the old settlement Straton s Tower 44 20 BCE Herod is awarded large swathes of northern territory by emperor Augustus to add to his kingdom 45 Citizens of Gadara appeal to Augustus to be excluded from Herod s kingdom 46 19 BCE King Herod the Great further extends the Temple Mount s natural plateau and rebuilds the temple 47 c 10 BCE Caesarea is completed 48 7 BCE Herod has his two sons Alexander and Aristobulus executed 49 7 2 BCE Birth of Jesus 50 4 BCE Herod dies and a wave of unrest sweeps Palestine 51 6 CE Leading Jews and Samaritans ask Augustus to remove Herod Archelaus from the throne He obliges and Archelaus is deposed and exiled His territory consisting of Judea Samaria and Idumea is organized into the Roman district Iudaea 52 First Roman census of Judea 53 nbsp The destruction of Jewish Temple painting by David Roberts from 1850 c 20 Tiberias in the Galilee is founded by Herod Antipas one of Herod the Great s successors 54 26 33 Jesus is crucified 37 Herod Philip dies 55 39 Antipas is removed from his post and banished to Gaul Herod Agrippa I receives his territories 55 41 Agrippa I becomes king of parts of the Herodian kingdom which in 6 CE had been divided by Herod s sons 56 44 Herod Agrippa I dies 57 Judea comes under direct Roman administration 58 62 64 Completion of the renovations of the Jerusalem temple begun by Herod 59 66 70 First Jewish revolt 60 66 The revolt breaks out in the summer 61 67 Roman legions invade Palestine 61 69 Vespasian is declared emperor and leaves for Rome His older son Titus takes command of the Roman legions in Palestine 58 70 The Romans takes Jerusalem and destroy the Second Temple 62 73 4 The Romans takes Masada the last rebel holdout 63 70 1 Provincia Iudaea is established 64 106 The Romans annex Nabataean territory reorganizing it as the province of Arabia 65 120 First imperial road built through the Galilee 66 129 130 The Roman emperor Hadrian visits Syria Palestine and Arabia 67 and founds the Roman colony Aelia Capitolina at Jerusalem 68 Presumably the outbreak of the Bar Kokhba revolt is directly linked to this event 69 132 135 Bar Kokhba revolt 70 195 The bishops of Caesarea and Jerusalem Theophilus and Narcissus preside over a council in Caesarea to settle a growing dispute over the proper date of the celebration of Easter 71 222 Caesarea becomes the metropolitan see for Palestine 72 270 Zenobia ruler of the Palmyrene Empire conquers most of the Roman east including Palestine 272 Palestine is recaptured by Rome Byzantine period nbsp Church of the Holy Sepulchre photo from 1900 Allowing for varying starting dates see above under Roman period this timeline chooses for convenience s sake to set the starting year of the Byzantine period as 313 when Constantine declared Christianity a permitted religion The period ends with the Muslim conquest of Palestine in 637 641 313 Roman co emperors Constantine I and Licinius declare that Christianity is an acceptable religion 73 324 Constantine having defeated Emperor Maximian Caesar of the Western Roman Empire at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge becomes the sole ruler of the re united Roman Empire with its capital at Byzantium New Rome Queen Helena a devout Christian wife of Eastern Roman Emperor Constantius and mother of Constantine the Great departs for the Holy Land and begins the construction of churches 326 333 Concurrent construction of the world s first 4 state sponsored purpose built churches under the tutelage of Constantine and Helena the Church of the Nativity is built in Bethlehem marking the site where according to Christian tradition Jesus was born Eleona Greek Olive on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem also called Chapel of the Apostles marking the site where according to Christian tradition Jesus ascended to heaven the Church of the Holy Cross citation needed later called the Church of the Resurrection and Church of the Holy Sepulchre is built in Jerusalem around the hill of Golgotha marking the site where according to Christian tradition Jesus was crucified buried and resurrected and the basilica of St George at Mamre Ramat el Khalil near Hebron c 350 The Christian monk Hilarion founds the first church in Haluza and converts a large portion of the population 74 351 2 Jewish revolt centered around Sepphoris against the Caesar of the Byzantine Eastern Roman Emperor Constantius Gallus The revolt is quickly subdued by Gallus general Ursicinus 75 c 357 Palestine is divided into the provinces Palaestina Prima and Palaestina Salutaris 76 361 363 Roman emperor Julian the Apostate orders Alypius of Antioch to rebuild the Jewish Temple 77 363 An earthquake with its epicenter in the Galilee rocks Palestine 78 The earthquake results in among other things a halt in the construction of the Jewish Temple mainly because it ruins the early stages of the construction Ultimately the plan to rebuild the Temple is scrapped after the death of emperor Julian in June 363 374 5 Melania the Elder founds a monastery on the Mount of Olives which also functions as a hostel for pilgrims 74 c 400 Palestine proper is split into the provinces Palaestina Prima and Palaestina Secunda Palaestina Salutaris is renamed Palaestina Tertia 79 425 The Sanhedrin is disbanded by the Byzantine Empire nbsp The Madaba Map depiction of 6th century Jerusalem 438 439 Empress Aelia Eudocia Augusta visits Jerusalem for the first time 80 451 The Council of Chalcedon declares that Jerusalem shall be a patriachate 81 484 Samaritans revolt as Emperor Zeno has a church built on their holy mountain Gerizim 82 529 The Samaritans rebel against the Romans 83 Samaritanism loses its religio licita status as punishment 84 541 2 The bubonic plague sweeps Palestine 8 555 6 Uprising by Samaritans and Jews centered around Caesarea 85 571 Muhammad founder of Islam is born in Mecca 73 613 The Sasanian Empire Persian Empire captures several Palestinian cities on the coast 86 614 May The Sasanian Empire under general Shahrbaraz captures and sacks Jerusalem 86 the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is damaged by fire and the True Cross is captured 86 629 Byzantine Emperor Heraclius retakes Jerusalem after the decisive defeat of the Sassanid Empire at the Battle of Nineveh in 627 Heraclius personally returns the True Cross to the city 87 634 February 4 The Rashidun Caliphate defeats a 300 man strong Byzantine force led by Dux Sergius at the Battle of Dathin near Gaza 88 Early Muslim periodSee also Early Muslim conquests and Muslim conquest of the Levant Rashidun period 637 or 638 Jerusalem falls to the armies of Rashidun caliph Umar Ibn el Khatab 89 Jews are permitted to return to the city after 568 years of Roman and Byzantine rule 90 June July The Rashiduns capture Gaza 89 summer Ascalon surrenders to the Rashiduns 89 late The Rashiduns and the Byzantines consent to a truce 89 640 The Rashiduns capture Caesarea 72 641 The Rashiduns capture Ashkelon completing their conquest of the Holy Land 659 Earthquake 91 Umayyad period nbsp The Dome of the Rock photograph from 1856 661 The Umayyad family takes control of the caliphate and moves its capital to Damascus following the assassination of the Caliph Ali ibn Abi Talib 92 687 691 The Dome of the Rock is built on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem at the site where according to Islam Muhammad ascended to heaven 73 c 715 Sulayman ibn Abd al Malik founds Ramla it becomes the capital and administrative center of Palestine 93 744 February Caliph Hisham ibn Abd al Malik dies and is succeeded by Al Walid II 94 spring Beginning of widespread mutinies against the Umayyads 94 April Caliph Al Walid II is assassinated and succeeded by Yazid III 94 October Yazid III is assassinated and succeeded by Ibrahim ibn al Walid 94 November Caliph Ibrahim is defeated in battle by Marwan II who becomes the new caliph 94 745 Theodore is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 94 749 January 18 The Galilee earthquake destroys Tiberias Scythopolis Hippos and Pella Many other cities throughout the Jordan valley suffer heavy damage Tens of thousands of lives are lost 95 96 nbsp Scythopolis Beit She an was one of the cities destroyed during 749 Galilee earthquake Abbasid period 747 750 Civil war resulting in the overthrow of the Umayyads the Abbasid family seize control of the caliphate 97 758 The Caliph Al Mansur visits Jerusalem and possibly orders the renovation of the Dome of the Rock 98 762 The Abbasids found Baghdad and designate it the caliphate s new capital 99 792 3 War between the tribes of Palestine 100 796 Battles between the tribes of Palestine 101 799 The Patriarch of Jerusalem sends a mission to the Frankish king Charlemagne and the latter returns the favor 102 c 800 The Jewish High Council headed by Gaon moves from Tiberias to Jerusalem 103 800 The Patriarch of Jerusalem sends another mission to Charlemagne carrying the keys to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre together with a banner 104 807 A rebellion breaks out Led by Abu l Nida it has its epicenter in Eilat 105 813 Earthquake 106 c 820 The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is repaired 107 820 Basil is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 108 855 Solomon is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 107 885 The Abbasids reconquer Damascus 109 873 The governor of Egypt Ahmad Ibn Tulun breaks with the Abbasids and establishes independent rule 109 878 The Tulunids occupy most of the former Byzantine Diocese of the East enabling them to defend Egypt against Abbasid attacks 110 879 Elias III is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 111 c 881 Elias III of Jerusalem appeals to the Franks 112 c 903 Persian geographer Ibn al Faqih visits Jerusalem 113 905 6 The Abbasids regain control of Palestine 109 908 9 Al Muqtadir forbids Christians from serving in administrative positions 114 c 913 Spanish scholar Ibn Abd Rabbih visits Jerusalem 113 935 Al Ikhshid takes control of Egypt and establishes independent rule 109 937 March 26 Rioting Muslims burn down the Church of the Resurrection and loot the Chapel of Golgotha 115 939 October 17 Muhammad ibn Ra iq conquers Ramla 116 late Battle of al Arish between Ibn Ra iq and al Ikhshid 116 946 July Sayf al Dawla invades Palestine 117 966 A Muslim Jewish mob torches the Church of Resurrection plunders it and kills Jerusalem s Patriarch John VII 118 Fatimid period 969 70 The Fatimids a self proclaimed Shia caliphate defeat the Ikhshidids and appoint a Jewish governor 109 971 The Qarmatians attack Damascus 109 September 5 The Qarmatians conquer Ramla 119 December The Fatimids ward off a Qarmatian invasion near Fustat 119 972 or 975 Byzantine emperor John I Tzimiskes leads an expedition that reaches as far south as Caesarea and Tiberias in Palestine 120 975 winter The Turkish officer Alptakin conquers Sidon and slaughters the population 121 spring Alptakin conquers Tiberias 122 April Alptakin conquers Damascus 122 977 March 12 Ramla is again conquered by the Qarmatians 123 978 Joseph II is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 123 August 15 A massive Fatimid army defeats Alptakin and the Qarmatians in southern Palestine 124 978 979 winter The Jewish Fatimid general tries to negotiate with the leader of the Hamdanids but their leader Abu Taghlib refuses because Fadl is a Jew 125 He later agrees to negotiations with Fadl who offers him Ramla in exchange for ousting the Jarrahids 126 979 August Abu Taghlib launches a failed offensive on Ramla and is taken captive and executed 126 981 June Damascus is besieged by a Fatimid army 123 July The Bedouins led by the Jarrahids rebel against the Fatimids 127 983 July 5 Damascus is conquered by a Fatimid army 123 984 Orestes is appointed patriarch of Jerusalem 123 991 February 24 Ya qub ibn Killis dies 128 996 998 Revolt in Tyre The rebels call for and receive support from the Byzantines The Fatimids put the city under siege and it falls in May 998 The rebel leader is tortured and crucified 129 1006 1007 Russian abbot Daniel makes pilgrimage to Palestine 130 1008 Caliph al Hakim bi Amr Allah forbids Jerusalem Christians from performing the Palm Sunday procession 106 1009 October 18 Caliph al Hakim bi Amr Allah orders the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre 131 1011 1013 February Uprising of the Yemenite Djarrahid Bedouin tribe who seize Ramla and establish a mini caliphate 132 1012 Beginning of al Hakim bi Amr Allah s oppressive decrees against Christians and Jews 133 1015 September 4 Earthquake The dome of the Dome of the Rock collapses 134 1021 February 13 Caliph Al Hakim is assassinated and succeeded by his son al Zahir 135 1024 September Bedouin rebellion erupts over tax collecting privileges iqta a The Bedouins attack and loot Ramla and Tiberias 136 1026 1027 Richard of Verdun makes pilgrimage to Palestine 137 1027 A treaty is signed between the Byzantine emperor and the Fatimid caliph It permits the rebuilding of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and allows Christians who had converted to Islam under duress to return to their former faith It also granted the emperor the right to designate the patriarch of Jerusalem In return the mosque of Constantinople would be reopened 138 1029 Anushtakin defeats a Bedouin coalition that challenges Fatimid rule in Palestine and Syria 139 1032 Renovations of the Dome of the Rock ordered by Caliph al Zahir are finished 140 1033 Jerusalem s city walls are rebuilt 141 December 5 1033 Jordan Rift Valley earthquake 142 1047 Persian poet and traveler Nasir Khusraw visits Palestine 143 1063 The Fatimids strengthen or rebuild the walls of Jerusalem 144 1064 1065 The Great German Pilgrimage takes place 145 1068 An earthquake destroys Ramla killing an estimated 15 000 146 1071 The Seljuk Turks invade large portions of West Asia including Asia Minor and the Eastern Mediterranean they capture Ramla and lay siege to Jerusalem 147 1073 The Seljuks invade Palestine 148 1075 The Seljuks capture Damascus 147 A severe drought hits Palestine 149 1077 The Seljuks capture Jaffa 147 1089 The Fatimids conquer Tyre 150 1092 1095 Abu Bakr ibn al Arabi stays in Jerusalem 151 1093 Muslims in coastal communities bar Christians from entering Palestine 152 1095 November 27 Pope Urban II launches the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont Its principal objectives are Catholic reconquest of the sacred city of Jerusalem and the Holy Land and the freeing of Eastern Christians from Islamic rule 1098 July The Fatimids lay siege to Jerusalem 144 August 26 The Fatimids recapture Jerusalem 153 Crusader Ayyubid periodMain article Timeline of the Kingdom of Jerusalem nbsp Conquest of Jerusalem in 1099 during the First Crusade painting from the 19th century The Crusader period sometimes referred to as the medieval period as it was the only time when the Western type societal organisation was transplanted to the region lasted from 1099 when the Crusaders captured Jerusalem to 1291 when the Kingdom of Jerusalem s last major possession in the Holy Land Acre was overrun by the Mamluks In part of that period almost every part of the territory changed hands repeatedly between the Crusaders and the Ayyubids 1096 1099 First Crusade and the establishment of the Catholic Kingdom of Jerusalem in Outremer 1099 June 7 The crusaders reach Jerusalem and besieges the city 154 June 17 A Genoese fleet captures Jaffa 155 156 July 15 Catholic soldiers under Godfrey of Bouillon Robert II of Flanders Raymond IV of Toulouse and Tancred take Jerusalem after a difficult siege killing nearly every inhabitant 157 July 22 Godfrey is elected as the ruler of Jerusalem but he is not crowned king 158 159 August 12 The Crusaders defeat the Fatimids at the Battle of Ascalon 160 nbsp Battle of Cresson from a copy of the Passages d outremer c 1490 Godfrey of Bouillon enters Jaffa 152 1100 December 25 The Kingdom of Jerusalem is established 161 1113 1115 Earthquakes hits the region 162 1116 The Latins repair the walls of Jerusalem 162 1153 August 23 The Franks capture Ascalon thus completing the conquest of the Western coast of the Mediterranean Sea 163 164 1177 November 25 Battle of Montgisard Baldwin IV of Jerusalem and Raynald of Chatillon defeat Saladin 1124 Crusaders conquer Tyre 165 1177 The Latins repair the walls of Jerusalem 162 1187 May 1 Battle of Cresson Saladin defeats the crusaders June Saladin captures Tiberias 161 July 4 Saladin defeats Guy of Lusignan King of Jerusalem at the Battle of Hattin 161 October 2 Saladin captures Jerusalem from Crusaders 166 1189 August 28 Guy of Lusignan besieges Acre 167 1189 1192 Third Crusade led by the armies of Richard the Lionhearted 1191 June 8 Richard arrives at Acre 167 July 12 The Muslim garrison at Acre surrenders to the Crusaders 168 August 20 Richard executes Muslim prisoners from Acre outside the city 167 September 7 Richard I of England defeats Saladin at the Battle of Arsuf forcing him to retreat with heavy losses 169 nbsp Siege of Acre painting by Dominique Papety from 1840 1192 September 2 Richard and Saladin signs the Treaty of Jaffa a peace treaty to run for three years 170 October 9 Richard leaves Palestine 171 1193 March 3 4 Saladin dies in Damascus Conflicts between his sons brothers and nephews cause the disintegration of his empire 172 1202 Major earthquake 173 1219 March The Ayyubid sultan Al Mu azzam Isa orders the destruction of Jerusalem s city walls to prevent the crusaders from capturing a fortified city 174 1229 February 18 Frederick II and the Ayyubid sultan Al Kamil signs the Treaty of Jaffa a 10 year truce hudna that restores Jerusalem Nazareth and Bethlehem to Christian control in exchange for protection 175 March 17 Frederick enters Jerusalem 176 1239 The Ayyubid ruler An Nasir Dawud destroys some of the refortifications built by the Franks in Jerusalem 173 1243 The Franks recover Jerusalem 173 1244 July 11 The Khwarezmians capture Jerusalem and slaughter its inhabitants 177 October 18 Battle of La Forbie north east of Gaza The Crusaders and their allies the Ayyubids of Damascus Homs and Kerak suffer a crushing defeat by the Egyptian army and their Khwarezmian mercenaries 178 c 1250 Rabbi Yehiel ben Joseph founds a Yeshiva Jewish religious school in Acre 179 1258 The Mongols execute the last Abbasid caliph 97 1260 Battle of Ain Jalut Jezreel Valley between the Egyptian Mamluks and the Mongols 1265 The Mamluk Bahri dynasty of Egypt captures several cities and towns from Crusader states in the Middle East including the cities of Haifa Arsuf and Caesarea Maritima 1267 According to tradition Nachmanides visits Jerusalem and establishes the Ramban Synagogue However it is doubtful whether Nachmanides ever visited Jerusalem 180 1291 May 18 Fall of Acre Al Ashraf Khalil of Egypt captures Acre thus exterminating the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem the final Catholic landholding remaining from the Crusades and ending the Ninth Crusade 161 Mamluk periodThe Mamluk period lasted from 1291 when the Mamluks capture Acre to 1517 when the Ottomans conquered Palestine Ottoman period16th century nbsp Walls of Jerusalem photo taken in 2005 1517 The Ottomans conquer Palestine 181 1517 1517 Hebron pogrom 1538 1535 Suleiman the Magnificent restores the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem and the Jerusalem city walls which are the current walls of the Old City of Jerusalem 1541 Ottoman Sultan Suleiman I seals off the Golden Gate to prevent the Jewish Messiah s entrance 1546 January 14 A devastating earthquake shook the Jordan Rift Valley region The epicenter of the earthquake was in the Jordan River in a location between the Dead Sea and the Sea of Galilee The cities of Jerusalem Hebron Nablus Gaza and Damascus were heavily damaged 17th century 1660 The towns of Safed and nearby Tiberias with substantial Jewish communities were destroyed in the turmoil following the 1658 death of Mulhim Ma n 182 with only Safed being repopulated shortly after the destruction 183 184 Some sources place the destruction of Safed in 1662 185 1604 First Protectorate of missions under the Capitulations of the Ottoman Empire Ahmad I agreed that the subjects of Henry IV of France were free to visit the Holy Places of Jerusalem French missionaries begin to travel to Jerusalem and other major Ottoman cities 1663 1665 Sabbatai Zevi founder of the Sabbateans preaches in Jerusalem before travelling back to his native Smyrna where he proclaimed himself the Messiah 18th century nbsp Battle of Nazareth painting by Antoine Jean Gros from 1801 1700 Judah the Pious and 1 000 followers settle in Jerusalem 1742 1777 Several Jewish Hassidic leaders including Rabbi Abraham Gershon of Kitob and Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk move to the Holy Land with many followers of the Baal Shem Tov Historians mark their arrival as the beginning of the current Jewish Hassidic community in the region 1759 October 30 Another devastating earthquake shook the Jordan Rift Valley region The epicenter of the earthquake was again in the Jordan River in a location between the Sea of Galilee and the Hula Valley The cities of Safed Tiberias Acre and Sidon were heavily damaged 1798 Napoleon Bonaparte leads the French Campaign in Egypt and Syria 1799 March 3 4 Napoleonic Wars Siege of Jaffa Napoleon captures the city of Jaffa March 20 May 21 Napoleonic Wars Siege of Acre An unsuccessful attempt by Napoleon to capture the city of Acre April 8 Napoleonic Wars Battle of Nazareth April 11 Napoleonic Wars Battle of Cana April 16 Napoleonic Wars The Battle of Mount Tabor Napoleon drives Ottoman Turks across the River Jordan near Acre 19th century nbsp Galilee earthquake of 1837 1808 1810 Students of Elijah ben Solomon Zalman Gr a amounting to 501 families arrive in the Holy Land Historians mark their arrival as the beginning of the current Jewish Ashkenazi community in the region 1832 May 10 Mohammed Ali leading Egyptian forces and aided by local Maronites seizes Acre from the Ottoman Empire after a 7 month siege 1834 Peasants revolt in Palestine revolt by Arab Palestinian peasants against Egyptian conscription and taxation policies 1837 January 1 Galilee earthquake of 1837 A devastating earthquake shakes the Galilee region killing thousands of people 186 1840 July 15 The Austrian Empire the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland the Kingdom of Prussia and the Russian Empire sign the Convention of London with the ruler of the Ottoman Empire The signatories offered to Muhammad Ali and his heirs permanent control over Egypt and the Acre Sanjak roughly what is now Israel provided that these territories remain part of the Ottoman Empire and that Ali agreed within ten days to withdraw from the rest of Syria and return to Sultan Abdulmecid I the Ottoman fleet which had defected to Alexandria Muhammad Ali was also to immediately withdraw his forces from Arabia the Holy Cities Crete the district of Adana and all of the Ottoman Empire 1860 The first Jewish neighborhood Mishkenot Sha ananim is built outside the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem 187 1874 Jerusalem becomes a Mutesarrifiyyet gaining a special administrative status 1882 1903 The First Aliyah took place 25 000 35 000 Jews immigrate to Ottoman Syria 1887 1888 Ottoman Syria is divided into Jerusalem Sanjak Nablus Sanjak and Acre Sanjak 1897 August 29 31 The First Zionist Congress is held in Basel Switzerland During it the World Zionist Organization is founded and the Basel Declaration is approved The latter determine that the Zionist movement s ultimate aim is to establish and secure under public law a homeland for the Jewish people The homeland is to be located in the Biblical region dubbed variously The Holy Land or Palestine by the European Christians during the Catholic and later secular Enlightenment 1898 German Kaiser Wilhelm visits Jerusalem to dedicate the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer He meets Theodor Herzl outside city walls nbsp Ottoman machine gunners during the Second Battle of Gaza 1917 nbsp Emir Feisal and Chaim Weizmann during their meeting in 1918 20th century 1901 The Jewish National Fund is founded at the Fifth Zionist Congress in Basel with the aim of buying and developing land in the southern region of Ottoman Syria for Jewish settlement 1909 April 11 Tel Aviv is founded on the outskirts of the ancient port city of Jaffa 1911 The Arabic newspaper Filasṭin is founded 188 1915 January 26 February 4 A German led Ottoman Army advances from Southern Palestine and conducts a Raid on the Suez Canal in an attempt to stop traffic through the canal March October The 1915 locust plague breaks out in the Eastern Mediterranean coastal region 1916 1918 The Arab Revolt 1916 16 May Britain and France conclude the secret Sykes Picot Agreement which defines their respective spheres of influence and control in Western Asia after the expected demise of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I It was largely a trade agreement with a large area set aside for indirect control through an Arab state or a confederation of Arab states August 3 5 A German led Ottoman Army attacks British Empire forces defending the Suez Canal at the Battle of Romani December 23 The Anzac Mounted Division occupies El Arish and captures the Ottoman garrison during the Battle of Magdhaba 1917 January 9 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Rafa British Empire forces defeat the Ottoman Empire garrison at Rafah after re capturing the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula by the Egyptian Expeditionary Force March 26 Sinai and Palestine Campaign First Battle of Gaza British attack strong Ottoman defences at Gaza but fail after 17 000 German led Ottoman troops block their advance in the Southern Coastal Plain April 6 Sinai and Palestine Campaign The Tel Aviv and Jaffa deportation Ottoman authorities deport the entire civilian population of Jaffa and Tel Aviv pursuant to the order from Ahmed Jamal Pasha the military governor of Ottoman Syria during the First World War Although Muslim evacuees are allowed to return before long Jewish evacuees were not able to return until after the British conquest of Palestine 189 April 19 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Second Battle of Gaza Ottoman defenders repel the second British assault on Gaza October 31 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Beersheba XX Corps infantry and Desert Mounted Corps mounted infantry attack Beersheba on the Gaza to Beersheba defensive line on the northern edge of the Negev Desert capturing it from the Ottoman Empire October 31 November 7 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Third Battle of Gaza British forces capture Gaza November 2 Publication of the Balfour Declaration in which the British Government declares its support for the establishment of a Jewish national home in what is to become Mandate Palestine November 15 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Australian and New Zealand troops capture Jaffa after the Battle of Mughar Ridge fought on November 13 November 17 December 30 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Jerusalem The Ottoman Empire is defeated by British Empire forces at the Battle of Jerusalem The British Army s General Allenby enters Jerusalem on foot in a reference to the entrance of Caliph Umar in 637 1918 February 21 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Capture of Jericho the Egyptian Expeditionary Force s Occupation of the Jordan Valley begins March 8 12 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Tell Asur series of attacks along the Jaffa to Jerusalem line which pushed the front line a few miles north March 21 April 2 Sinai and Palestine Campaign First Transjordan attack on Amman including the First Battle of Amman an infantry and a mounted division invade Ottoman Empire territory only to be forced by superior Ottoman forces to retreat back to the Jordan Valley April 30 May 4 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Second Transjordan attack on Shunet Nimrin and Es Salt second attempt to capture Ottoman Empire territory east of the Jordan River when three divisions are again forced back to the Jordan Valley by superior Ottoman defenders June First meeting between Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann and the son of the Sharif of Mecca Hashemite Prince Faisal who led the Arab forces in the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War The meeting takes place in Faisal s headquarters in Aqaba and attempts to establish favourable relations between Arabs and Jews in the Middle East July 14 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Abu Tellul September 19 25 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Battle of Megiddo including the Battle of Sharon the Battle of Nablus and the Third Transjordan attack The Egyptian Expeditionary Force attacks and captures large numbers of Ottoman and German soldiers and Ottoman territory These battles included the capture of Amman Arara Capture of Afulah and Beisan Haifa Jenin Nablus Samakh Tabsor Tiberias and Tulkarm including a series of air raids in the Judean Hills during which bombs are dropped on retreating German and Ottoman columns September 26 October 1 Sinai and Palestine Campaign Capture of Damascus continuation of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force attacks with capture of almost two Ottoman armies plus territory extending into Syria During this advance Irbid Jisr Benat Yakub Kaukab and Kiswe are captured The British Empire offensive continues into Syria with the Charge at Khan Ayash and the Pursuit to Haritan as well as the Battle of Aleppo and ends with the Charge at Haritan on October 26 October 30 Sinai and Palestine Campaign The British Sinai and Palestine Campaign officially ends with the signing of the Armistice of Mudros Shortly thereafter the Ottoman Empire is dissolved OETA and Mandatory Palestine nbsp 1927 Jericho earthquake Destruction in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem 1927 July 11 1927 Jericho earthquake A powerful earthquake occurs in the Jordan Rift Valley region 1929 Outbreak of the 1929 Palestine riots 1936 1939 The Great Arab Revolt 1947 November 29 UN General Assembly adopts a resolution containing proposal to divide Mandatory Palestine into independent Arab and Jewish States with a Special International Regime for the city of Jerusalem and its environs 190 nbsp 1948 declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel nbsp Palestinian Arab refugees in 1948Israel Jordan occupied West Bank Egypt occupied Gaza1948 May 14 Israeli Declaration of Independence Jewish leadership in the region of Palestine announces the establishment of a Jewish state in Eretz Israel to be known as the State of Israel 191 1948 May 14 1949 January 7 The 1948 Arab Israeli War a large scale war between Israel and five Arab countries and the Palestinian Arabs The war results in an Israeli victory with Israel annexing territory beyond the borders of the proposed Jewish state and into the borders of the proposed Arab state and West Jerusalem 192 Jordan Syria Lebanon and Egypt signed the 1949 Armistice Agreements with Israel The Gaza Strip and the West Bank were occupied by Egypt and Transjordan respectively until 1967 In 1951 the UN Conciliation Commission for Palestine estimated that some 711 000 Palestinian refugees were displaced by the war 193 1949 February 24 Israel and Egypt sign an armistice agreement 194 March 23 Israel and Lebanon sign an armistice agreement 194 April 3 Israel and Jordan sign an armistice agreement 194 July 20 Israel and Syria sign an armistice agreement 194 1950 Spring Jordan annexes the West Bank 194 1956 October 29 November 5 The Sinai Campaign This war followed Egypt s decision of 26 July 1956 to nationalize the Suez Canal Initiated by United Kingdom and France the war was conducted in cooperation with Israel and aimed at occupying the Sinai Peninsula with the Europeans regaining control over the Suez Canal Although the Israeli occupation of the Sinai was successful the US and USSR forced it to abandon this conquest Israel however managed to re open the Straits of Tiran and secure its southern border 1967 June 5 10 The Six Day War between Israel and all of its neighboring countries Egypt Jordan Syria and Lebanon which were aided by other Arab countries The war lasted for six days and concluded with Israel expanding its territory significantly Gaza Strip and Sinai from Egypt the West Bank and Jerusalem from Jordan and the Golan Heights from Syria Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories1973 October 6 24 The Yom Kippur War was fought The war began with a surprise joint attack on two fronts by the armies of Syria in the Golan Heights and Egypt in the Suez Canal deliberately initiated during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur The Egyptian Army got back Sinai that was occupied by the Israeli armies for almost 7 years 1974 The PLO is allowed to represent the Palestinian Arab refugees in the UN as their sole political representative organisation 1978 September 18 Israel and Egypt sign a comprehensive peace agreement at Camp David which included a condition of Israel s withdrawal from the Rest of Sinai 1979 March 26 The peace treaty with Egypt was signed by the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and U S President Jimmy Carter 1982 June December The First Lebanon War took place during which Israel invaded southern Lebanon due to the constant terror attacks on northern Israel by the Palestinian guerrilla organizations resident there The war resulted in the expulsion of the PLO from Lebanon and created an Israeli Security Zone in southern Lebanon 1984 November 21 1985 January 5 Operation Moses IDF forces conduct a secret operation in which approximately 8 000 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel from Sudan 1987 1991 The First Intifada The first Palestinian uprising took place in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories 1988 November 15 Palestinian Declaration of Independence 1988 The Palestinian National Council the legislative body of the Palestinian Liberation Organization PLO in Algiers on 15 November 1988 unilaterally proclaimed the establishment of a new independent state called the State of Palestine 1991 May 24 25 Operation Solomon IDF forces conduct a secret operation in which approximately 14 400 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel within 34 hours in 30 IAF and El Al aircraft nbsp 1993 Bill Clinton Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat after signing the Oslo Accords 1993 September 13 The first Oslo Accords are signed at an official ceremony in Washington in the presence of Yitzhak Rabin for Israel Yasser Arafat for PLO and Bill Clinton for the United States 1994 October 26 The Peace agreement between Israel and Jordan is signed 1995 November 4 Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by right wing Israeli radical Yigal Amir 2000 2005 unclear The Second Intifada The second Palestinian uprising took place in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories The uprising which began as massive protests carried out by Palestinians in the Palestinian Territories soon turned into a violent Palestinian guerrilla campaign which included numerous suicide attacks carried out against Israeli civilians within the state of Israel nbsp Summer 2006 The Second Lebanon War photograph taken on August 15 2006 2002 June As a result of the significant increase of suicide bombing attacks within Israeli population centers during the first years of the Second Intifada Israel began the construction of the West Bank Fence along the Green Line border arguing that the barrier is necessary to protect Israeli civilians from Palestinian militants The significantly reduced number of incidents of suicide bombings from 2002 to 2005 has been partly attributed to the barrier 195 The barrier s construction which has been highly controversial became a major issue of contention between the two sides 2005 August 23 Israel s unilateral disengagement plan The evacuation of 25 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and West Bank is completed 2006 July 12 August 14 The Second Lebanon War took place which began as a military operation in response to the abduction of two Israeli reserve soldiers by the Hezbollah and gradually grew to a wider conflict 1 191 Lebanese were killed 4 409 were injured 2008 December 27 2009 January 18 Operation Cast Lead IDF forces conducted a large scale military operation in the Gaza Strip during which dozens of targets were attacked in the Gaza Strip in response to ongoing rocket fire on the western Negev 1 291 Palestinians were killed 2012 November 14 November 21 Operation Pillar of Cloud IDF forces launches a large scale military operation in the Gaza Strip in response to Palestinian militants firing over a hundred rockets from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel beginning on 10 November with the aims of restoring quiet to southern Israel and to strike at what it considers terror organizations 196 The operation officially began with the assassination of Ahmed Jabari chief of the Gaza military wing of Hamas 197 158 Palestinians were killed November 29 United Nations General Assembly resolution 67 19 Upgrading of Palestine to non member observer state status in the United Nations 198 2016 December 23 United Nations Security Council resolution 2334 Condemning Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands 199 2017 December 6 US President Donald Trump announced the United States recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel 200 2023 October 7 2023 Israel Hamas war Hamas launched a large scale offensive against Israel during which Hamas initially fired thousands of rockets at Israel from the Gaza Strip while at the same time over a thousand Palestinian militants broke through the border and entered Israel by foot and with motor vehicles as they engaged in gun battles with the Israeli security forces conducting massacres and shootings of Israeli civilians took over Israeli towns and military bases as well as kidnapped over 200 Israeli soldiers and civilians As a result Israel s Security Cabinet formally declares war for the first time since the Yom Kippur War in 1973 201 See also nbsp Israel portal nbsp Palestine portal Land of Israel Palestine region List of years in Israel List of years in the Palestinian territories Time periods in the Palestine region Timeline of Haifa Timeline of Hebron Timeline of Jerusalem Timeline of Tel Aviv Timeline of Middle Eastern history Timeline of the Kingdom of Jerusalem Timeline of Israeli history Timeline of the Israeli Palestinian conflict British foreign policy in the Middle East United States foreign policy in the Middle EastNotes and referencesCitations Vertebrates dinosaurs University of Copenhagen geologi snm ku dk dead link Giant Marine Dino Surfaces Discovery Online Discovery News Brief Fornai Cinzia Benazzi Stefano Gopher Avi Barkai Ran Sarig Rachel Bookstein Fred L Hershkovitz Israel Weber Gerhard W 2016 The Qesem Cave hominin material part 2 A morphometric analysis of dm2 QC2 deciduous lower second molar Quaternary International 398 175 189 Bibcode 2016QuInt 398 175F doi 10 1016 j quaint 2015 11 102 ISSN 1040 6182 The Qesem Cave site has yielded teeth associated to the AYCC and dated to about 420 220 ka dead link a b c d e f g h i j k Negev Avraham Gibson Shimon eds 2001 Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land Chronological Tables New York and London Continuum p 556 ISBN 0 8264 1316 1 Retrieved 26 September 2021 Snippet view Davis Paul K 100 Decisive Battles Oxford University Press Joseph P Free Howard F Vos 1992 Archaeology and Bible history p 150 ISBN 978 0 310 47961 1 Burgess Henry 2003 Journal of Sacred Literature and Biblical Record April 1855 to July 1855 Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 0 7661 5612 8 a b c d Wagemakers 2014 p 219 Schwartz 2009 p 53 Bourgel 2019 p 2 Gera 1998 p 109 Lendering Antiochus IV Epiphanes Britannica Antiochus IV Epiphanes Lendering Antiochus IV Epiphanes Britannica Antiochus IV Epiphanes In 172 for an even bigger tribute he appointed Menelaus in place of Jason Grabbe 2010 pp 14 5 Britannica Antiochus IV Epiphanes Grabbe 2010 p 15 Morkholm 2008 p 283 Schafer 2003 p 40 Grabbe 2010 p 15 Morkholm 2008 p 283 Morkholm 2008 p 284 Grabbe 2010 p 15 Schwartz 2009 pp 54 5 Morkholm 2008 p 286 Schafer 2003 p 47 Morkholm 2008 p 287 Morkholm 2008 pp 289 90 Schafer 2003 p 47 Morkholm 2008 p 290 Schwartz 2009 p 33 Morkholm 2008 p 290 Britannica Antiochus IV Epiphanes in December 164 was able to tear down the altar of Zeus and reconsecrate the Temple Morkholm 2008 p 290 Schwartz 2009 p 33 Schwartz 2009 p 33 Bourgel 2019 p 8 a b Bourgel 2019 p 8 Bourgel 2019 p 10 Schwartz 2009 p 37 Bourgel 2019 p 9 Hjelm 2010 p 28 Schwartz 2009 p 38 Hjelm 2010 p 35 Schwartz 2009 p 38 a b Schwartz 2009 p 42 Schwartz 2009 p 45 Meyers amp Chancey 2012 p 50 Greetham The Rev Phil King Herod the Great The Nativity Pages Archived from the original on 2012 07 23 2001 Richardson 1996 p 344 Chancey 2005 p 74 Magness 2012 p 133 Richardson 1996 p 303 Magness 2012 p 133 Menahem MANṠuR 1964 The Dead Sea Scrolls A College Textbook and a Study Guide Brill Archive p 14 GGKEY EP1DFQRSATU Sebaste Holy Land Atlas Travel and Tourism Agency Entry for Herod The Jewish Virtual Library American Jewish Cooperative Enterprise 2007 Retrieved June 18 2007 Meyers amp Chancey 2012 p 62 Richardson 1996 p 282 Millar 1993 p 354 Temple of Herod Jewish Encyclopedia Richardson 1996 p 265 Richardson 1996 p 363 Rahner page 731 states that the consensus among historians is c 4 BCE Sanders supports c 4 BCE Vermes supports c 6 5 BCE Finegan supports c 3 2 BCE Sanders refers to the general consensus Vermes a common early date Finegan defends comprehensively the date according to early Christian traditions Schwartz 2009 p 48 Haensch 2010 p 2 Ben Sasson 1976 p 246 When Archelaus was deposed from the ethnarchy in 6 CE Judea proper Samaria and Idumea were converted into a Roman province under the name Iudaea Schwartz 2009 p 48 Millar 1993 p 346 Chancey 2005 p 86 a b Magness 2012 p 138 Haensch 2010 p 2 Millar 1993 p 356 Haensch 2010 p 2 Magness 2012 p 139 a b Magness 2012 p 139 Chancey 2005 p 78 McLaren amp Goodman 2016 p 215 Schwartz 2009 p 47 Haensch 2010 p 2 Chancey 2005 p 71 a b Schwartz 2009 p 52 Magness 2012 p 140 Millar 1993 p 366 Schwartz 2016 p 234 Chancey 2005 p 62 Millar 1993 p 371 Bonne 2014 p 1 Chancey 2005 p 103 Weksler Bdolah 2019 p 53 Weksler Bdolah 2019 p 58 Chancey 2005 p 62 Schwartz 2016 p 238 Weksler Bdolah 2019 p 53 Donaldson 2000 p 127 Viviano 2007 p 17 a b Viviano 2007 p 17 a b c Slavik 2001 p 60 a b Lewin 2005 p 39 Lewin 2005 p 36 Bijovsky 2007 p 182 Moser 2018 p 225 Lewin 2005 p 38 Lewin 2005 p 38 Bijovsky 2007 p 182 Lewis 2011 p 155 Sivan 2008 p 213 Donaldson 2000 p 128 Viviano 2007 p 17 Lewin 2005 pp 40 1 Lewin 2005 p 41 Stewart Evans 2005 p 26 Stewart Evans 2005 p 26 Lewin 2005 p 41 Stewart Evans 2005 p 26 Sivan 2008 pp 141 2 a b c Dignas amp Winter 2007 p 117 Schafer 2003 p 198 Kaegi 1992 p 93 a b c d Kaegi 1992 p 146 Schafer 2003 p 198 the capture of Jerusalem in 638 Dignas amp Winter 2007 p 49 The conquerors had already taken Damascus in 635 and in 637 Jerusalem fell Avni 2014 p 325 Masalha 2018 p 155 Olszowy Schlanger 1998 p 55 Meri 2006 p 590 a b c d e f Gil 1997 p 841 Barkat Amiram August 8 2003 The big one is coming Haaretz Retrieved May 11 2011 Avni 2014 p 325 Gil 1997 p 89 a b Meri 2006 p 1 Gil 1997 pp 297 8 842 Gil 1997 p 279 Gil 1997 p 283 842 Gil 1997 p 284 Khadduri 2006 p 248 Goitein amp Grabar 2007 p 230 Khadduri 2006 p 248 Jotischky 2016 p 53 Gil 1997 p 283 a b Pringle 1993 p 10 a b Gil 1997 p 844 Gil 1997 p 843 a b c d e f Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 114 Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 114 Goitein amp Grabar 2007 p 231 Gil 1997 p 845 Jotischky 2016 p 54 a b Janin 2015 p 76 Gil 1997 p 162 Gil 1997 p 848 Pringle 1993 p 10 a b Gil 1997 p 848 Gil 1997 p 849 Pringle 1993 p 10 Goitein amp Grabar 2007 p 232 a b Gil 1997 p 339 Kennedy 2004 p 277 Harris 2014 p 29 Gil 1997 p 343 a b Gil 1997 p 344 a b c d e Gil 1997 p 851 Kennedy 2004 p 322 Gil 1997 p 851 Gil 1997 p 354 a b Gil 1997 p 355 Gil 1997 pp 358 851 Gil 1997 p 366 Gil 1997 p 369 70 Janin 2015 p 77 Lev 2006 p 592 Jotischky 2016 p 50 Janin 2015 p 77 Gil 1997 p 853 Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 116 Pringle 1993 p 11 Gil 1997 p 853 Gil 1997 p 854 Gil 1997 p 386 Masalha 2018 p 185 Lev 2006 p 591 Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 174 Jotischky 2016 p 55 Harris 2014 p 29 Preiser Kapeller 2021 p 165 Lev 2006 p 591 Gil 1997 p 397 Gil 1997 p 398 Avni 2014 p 325 Lev 2006 p 592 Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 116 Gil 1997 p 399 Lev 2006 p 591 Pringle 1993 p 12 a b Goitein amp Grabar 2007 p 233 Janin 2015 p 83 Avni 2014 p 325 Lev 2006 p 592 Gil 1997 p 408 a b c Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 116 Masalha 2018 p 186 Gil 1997 p 415 Gil 1997 p 419 Lev 2006 p 592 a b Burke amp Peilstocker 2011 p 117 Gil 1997 p 414 Jotischky 2017 p 56 Asbridge 2004 pp 298 309 Barber 2012 p 358 Asbridge 2004 p 304 Chareyron 2005 p 79 Pringle 1993 p 12 Asbridge 2004 p 321 Barber 2012 p 19 Hickman 2019 a b c d Britannica Palestine The Crusades a b c Boas 2001 p 44 Lock 2006 p 53 Baldwin 1969 p 538 Meri 2006 p 591 Chareyron 2005 p 79 Avni 2014 p 336 Jotischky 2016 p 49 a b c Asbridge 2010 p 564 Britannica Crusades Asbridge 2010 p 564 Britannica Crusades Asbridge 2010 p 564 Britannica Crusades Asbridge 2010 p 564 Britannica Crusades Britannica Crusades Asbridge 2010 p 564 Tyerman 2006 p 472 Maalouf 1984 pp 216 218 a b c Boas 2001 p 45 Boas 2001 p 45 Madden 2014 p 141 Britannica Palestine The Crusades Asbridge 2010 p 469 Asbridge 2010 p 470 Asbridge 2010 p 474 Asbridge 2010 p 475 Chareyron 2005 p 82 Roth 2014 p 622 Farsoun 2004 p 8 Abu Husayn Abdul Rahim 2004 The view from Istanbul Lebanon and the Druze Emirate in the Ottoman chancery documents 1546 1711 I B Tauris pp 22 23 ISBN 978 1 86064 856 4 Barnai Jacob The Jews in Palestine in the Eighteenth Century under the patronage of the Istanbul Committee of Officials for Palestine University of Alabama Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8173 0572 7 p 14 Joel Rappel History of Eretz Israel from Prehistory up to 1882 1980 Vol 2 p 531 In 1662 Sabbathai Sevi arrived to Jerusalem It was the time when the Jewish settlements of Galilee were destroyed by the Druze Tiberias was completely desolate and only a few of former Safed residents had returned Gershom Gerhard Scholem 1976 01 01 Sabbatai Sevi the Mystical Messiah 1626 1676 Princeton University Press p 368 ISBN 978 0 691 01809 6 In Safed too the Sabbatai movement gathered strength during the autumn of 1665 The reports about the utter destruction in 1662 sic of the Jewish settlement there seem greatly exaggerated and the conclusions based on them are false Rosanes account of the destruction of the Safed community is based on a misunderstanding of his sources the community declined in numbers but continued to exist A very lively account of the Jewish community is given by French trader d Arvieux who visited Safed in 1660 Sbeinati M R Darawcheh R amp Mouty M 2005 The historical earthquakes of Syria an analysis of large and moderate earthquakes from 1365 B C to 1900 A D Annals of Geophysics 48 347 435 Mishkenot Sha ananim Archived from the original on 2016 09 14 Retrieved 2011 04 21 Lewis 2011 p 158 Friedman Isaiah 1971 German Intervention on Behalf of the Yishuv 1917 Jewish Social Studies Vol 33 pp 23 43 Lewis 2011 p 163 Provisional Government of Israel Official Gazette Number 1 Tel Aviv 5 Iyar 5708 14 5 1948 Page 1 The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel Baylis Thomas 1999 How Israel was won a concise history of the Arab Israeli conflict Lexington Books ISBN 0 7391 0064 5 p xiv General Progress Report and Supplementary Report of the United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine Covering the Period from 11 December 1949 to 23 October 1950 Archived 20 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine published by the United Nations Conciliation Commission 23 October 1950 U N General Assembly Official Records 5th Session Supplement No 18 Document A 1367 Rev 1 Retrieved 5 January 2015 a b c d e Lewis 2011 p 164 Nissenbaum Dion 10 January 2007 Death toll of Israeli civilians killed by Palestinians hit a low in 3015 Washington Bureau McClatchy Newspapers Archived from the original on November 20 2008 Retrieved April 16 2007 Fewer Israeli civilians died in Palestinian attacks in 2006 than in any year since the Palestinian uprising began in 2000 Palestinian militants killed 23 Israelis and foreign visitors in 2006 down from a high of 289 in 2002 during the height of the uprising Most significant successful suicide bombings in Israel nearly came to a halt Last year only two Palestinian suicide bombers managed to sneak into Israel for attacks that killed 11 people and wounded 30 others Israel has gone nearly nine months without a suicide bombing inside its borders the longest period without such an attack since 2000 An Israeli military spokeswoman said one major factor in that success had been Israel s controversial separation barrier a still growing 250 mile 400 km network of concrete walls high tech fencing and other obstacles that cuts through parts of the West Bank The security fence was put up to stop terror and that s what it s doing said Capt Noa Meir a spokeswoman for the Israel Defense Forces Opponents of the wall grudgingly acknowledge that it s been effective in stopping bombers though they complain that its route should have followed the border between Israel and the Palestinian territories known as the Green Line IDF spokeswoman Meir said Israeli military operations that disrupted militants planning attacks from the West Bank also deserved credit for the drop in Israeli fatalities IAF strike kills Hamas military chief Jabari Defense Jerusalem Post Massed Israeli troops poised for invasion of Gaza Independent co uk 2012 11 15 Archived from the original on 2022 06 21 Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 29 November 2012 without reference to a Main Committee A 67 L 28 and Add 1 67 19 Status of Palestine in the United Nations Resolution 2334 unscr com Retrieved 2019 01 24 Proclamation 9683 of December 6 2017 82 FR 58331 Israel Gaza Conflict Air Raid Sirens in Israel Warn of Continued Strikes on Sunday www nytimes com accessed 2024 02 27SourcesHaensch Rudolf August 19 2010 The Roman Provincial Administration In Catherine Hezser ed The Oxford Handbook of Jewish Daily Life in Roman Palestine OUP Oxford pp 1 13 ISBN 978 0 19 921643 7 Ben Sasson H H 1976 Abraham Malamat Hayim Tadmor eds A History of the Jewish People Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 39731 6 Chancey Mark A December 15 2005 Greco Roman Culture and the Galilee of Jesus Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 44798 0 Meyers Eric M Chancey Mark A September 25 2012 Alexander to Constantine Archaeology of the Land of the Bible Volume III Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14179 5 Chareyron Nicole March 2 2005 Pilgrims to Jerusalem in the Middle Ages Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 52961 7 Ancient history Masalha Nur 2018 Palestine A Four Thousand Year History Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 78699 274 1 Viviano Benedict 2007 Matthew and His World The Gospel of the Open Jewish Christians Studies in Biblical Theology Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 7278 1584 3 Donaldson Terence L 11 May 2000 Religious Rivalries and the Struggle for Success in Caesarea Maritima Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press ISBN 978 1 55458 670 7 Schafer Peter 2003 The History of the Jews in the Greco Roman World Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 30585 3 Schwartz Seth 9 February 2009 Imperialism and Jewish Society 200 B C E to 640 C E Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2485 4 Magness Jodi 27 August 2012 The Archaeology of the Holy Land From the Destruction of Solomon s Temple to the Muslim Conquest Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 12413 3 Hjelm Ingrid 2010 Mt Gerizim and Samaritans in Recent Research In Waltraud Winkler ed Samaritans Past and Present Current Studies Walter de Gruyter pp 25 44 ISBN 978 3 11 019497 5 Wagemakers Bart February 28 2014 Archaeology in the Land of Tells and Ruins A History of Excavations in the Holy Land Inspired by the Photographs and Accounts of Leo Boer Oxbow Books pp 219 ISBN 978 1 78297 245 7 Avni Gideon 2014 The Byzantine Islamic Transition in Palestine An Archaeological Approach OUP Oxford pp 325 ISBN 978 0 19 968433 5 Hellenistic period Lendering Jona 24 September 2020 Antiochus IV Epiphanes Livius Retrieved January 21 2021 Grabbe Lester L August 12 2010 An Introduction to Second Temple Judaism History and Religion of the Jews in the Time of Nehemiah the Maccabees Hillel and Jesus A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 55248 8 Bourgel Jonathan 2019 The Samaritans during the Hasmonean Period The Affirmation of a Discrete Identity Religions 10 11 628 doi 10 3390 rel10110628 ISSN 2077 1444 Morkholm Otto 2008 Antiochus IV In William David Davies Louis Finkelstein eds The Cambridge History of Judaism Volume 2 The Hellenistic Age Cambridge University Press pp 278 291 ISBN 978 0 521 21929 7 Antiochus IV Epiphanes Biography Reign Jerusalem Revolt amp Death Encyclopedia Britannica 5 January 2021 Gera Dov 1998 Judaea and Mediterranean Politics 219 to 161 B C E BRILL ISBN 90 04 09441 5 Roman period McLaren James Goodman Martin August 25 2016 The Importance of Perspective The Jewish Roman Conflict of 66 70 CE as a Revolution Revolt and Resistance in the Ancient Classical World and the Near East In the Crucible of Empire BRILL pp 205 218 ISBN 978 90 04 33018 4 Schwartz Seth August 25 2016 The Impact of the Jewish Rebellions 66 135 CE Destruction or Provincialization Revolt and Resistance in the Ancient Classical World and the Near East In the Crucible of Empire BRILL pp 234 252 ISBN 978 90 04 33018 4 Lendering Jona October 10 2020 Herod the Great Livius Retrieved December 19 2020 Gabba Emilio 2008 The social economic and political history of Palestine 63 bce ce 70 In William David Davies Louis Finkelstein William Horbury eds The Cambridge History of Judaism The early Roman period Cambridge University Press pp 94 167 ISBN 978 0 521 24377 3 Weksler Bdolah Shlomit December 16 2019 Aelia Capitolina Jerusalem in the Roman Period In Light of Archaeological Research BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 41707 6 Millar Fergus 1993 The Roman Near East 31 B C A D 337 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 77886 3 Bonne Rick April 2014 Galilee during the Second Century AD An Archaeological Examination of a Period of Socio Cultural Change Thesis KU Leuven Richardson Peter 1996 Herod King of the Jews and Friend of the Romans Univ of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 136 6 Lewin Ariel 2005 The Archaeology of Ancient Judea and Palestine Getty Publications ISBN 978 0 89236 800 6 Dignas Beate Winter Engelbert 2007 2001 Rome and Persia in Late Antiquity Neighbours and Rivals Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84925 8 Byzantine period Slavik Diane 2001 Daily Life in Ancient and Modern Jerusalem Lerner Publications ISBN 978 0 8225 3218 7 Stewart Evans James Allan 2005 The Emperor Justinian and the Byzantine Empire Greenwood Publishing Group pp 26 ISBN 978 0 313 32582 3 Bijovsky Gabriela 2007 Numismatic Evidence for the Gallus Revolt The Hoard from Lod Israel Exploration Journal 57 2 187 203 JSTOR 27927173 Moser Muriel December 6 2018 Emperor and Senators in the Reign of Constantius II Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 48101 4 Lewis Bernard April 15 2011 Islam in History Ideas People and Events in the Middle East Open Court ISBN 978 0 8126 9757 5 Sivan Hagith February 14 2008 Palestine in Late Antiquity OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 160867 4 Early Muslim period Goitein S D Grabar O 2007 Jerusalem In Clifford Edmund Bosworth ed Historic Cities of the Islamic World BRILL pp 224 255 ISBN 978 90 04 15388 2 Pringle Denys 1993 The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem Volume 3 The City of Jerusalem A Corpus Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 39038 5 Gil Moshe 1997 1983 A History of Palestine 634 1099 Translated by Ethel Broido Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 59984 9 Harris Jonathan 2014 Byzantium and the Crusades Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 78093 671 0 Preiser Kapeller Johannes 2021 The Medieval Roman Empire of the East as a Spatial Phenomenon In Yuri Pines Michal Biran Jorg Rupke eds The Limits of Universal Rule Eurasian Empires Compared Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 48863 1 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 Jotischky Andrew 2016 Benjamin Z Kedar Jonathan Phillips Jonathan Riley Smith eds Crusades Volume 7 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 98557 4 Kaegi Walter E 1992 Byzantium and the early Islamic conquests Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41172 6 Lev Yaacov 2006 Palestine In Josef W Meri ed Medieval Islamic Civilization L Z index Taylor amp Francis pp 590 2 ISBN 978 0 415 96692 4 Meri Josef W 2006 Medieval Islamic Civilization L Z index Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 96692 4 Olszowy Schlanger Judith 1998 Karaite Marriage Documents from the Cairo Geniza Legal Tradition and Community Life in Mediaeval Egypt and Palestine BRILL pp 55 ISBN 90 04 10886 6 Burke Aaron A Peilstocker Martin 2011 The History and Archaeology of Jaffa 1 Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press ISBN 978 1 938770 56 2 Khadduri Majid 2006 War and Peace in the Law of Islam The Lawbook Exchange Ltd ISBN 978 1 58477 695 6 Janin Hunt 2015 Four Paths to Jerusalem Jewish Christian Muslim and Secular Pilgrimages 1000 BCE to 2001 CE McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 0880 8 Crusader period Tyerman Christopher 2006 God s War A New History of the Crusades The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02387 1 Maalouf Amin 1984 The Crusades Through Arab Eyes SAQI ISBN 978 0 86356 023 1 Asbridge Thomas 2004 The First Crusade A New History Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2084 2 Lock Peter 2006 The Routledge Companion to the Crusades Routledge ISBN 9 78 0 415 39312 6 Barber Malcolm 2012 The Crusader States Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11312 9 Baldwin Marshall W 1969 The Latin States under Baldwin III and Amalric I 1143 1174 The Decline and Fall of Jerusalem 1174 1189 In Setton Kenneth M Baldwin Marshall W eds A History of the Crusades Volume One The First Hundred Years The University of Wisconsin Press pp 528 561 590 621 ISBN 1 58684 251 X Jotischky Andrew 2017 Crusading and the Crusader States Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 80806 5 Hickman Kennedy October 15 2019 The Crusades Battle of Ascalon ThoughtCo Retrieved January 19 2021 Palestine The Crusades Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved January 21 2021 Crusades Encyclopedia Britannica December 29 2020 Retrieved January 24 2021 Asbridge Thomas 2010 The Crusades The Authoritative History of the War for the Holy Land HarperCollins e books ISBN 978 0 06 198136 4 Roth Norman 2014 Medieval Jewish Civilization An Encyclopedia Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 77155 2 Boas Adrian J 2001 Jerusalem in the Time of the Crusades Society Landscape and Art in the Holy City Under Frankish Rule Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 58272 3 Madden Thomas F 2014 The Concise History of the Crusades Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1 4422 3116 0 Ottoman period Farsoun Samih K 2004 Culture and Customs of the Palestinians Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 32051 4 Further readingPhilip Mattar 2005 Chronology Encyclopedia of the Palestinians Facts on File ISBN 978 0 8160 6986 6 External links Timeline Palestinian Territories Discoverislamicart org Vienna Museum With No Frontiers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of the Palestine region amp oldid 1220359128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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