Date |
Event |
2126 B.C. |
God calls Abraham to the land of Canaan (Gen. 12:1-3) |
1913 B.C. |
God cuts an unconditional covenant with Abraham and tells him the boundaries of the land He has given to him and his seed forever (Gen. 15) |
1800 B.C. |
God confirms the Abrahamic Covenant with Isaac (Gen. 26:1-5). |
1760 B.C. |
God confirms the covenant with Jacob (Gen. 28: 13-15). |
1728 B.C. |
Joseph is sold into slavery in Egypt (Gen. 37:36). |
1706 B.C. |
Jacob (now called Israel, Gen.32:28) and family move to Egypt. |
1446 B.C. |
The Exodus from Egypt (Ex. 14). |
1406 B.C. |
The Israelite conquest of Canaan begins. |
1375 B.C. |
Period of the judges. |
1050-930 B.C. |
The united kingdom (Saul, David, Solomon). In 1000 B.C. David conquers Jerusalem and makes it Israel's capital. |
930-722 B.C. |
The divided kingdom (called Israel in the north, Judah in the south). Jerusalem is the capital of Judah. |
722 B.C. |
Assyria conquers the northern kingdom. |
605-586 B.C. |
Babylon conquers the southern kingdom and destroys Solomon's Temple. The Babylonian captivity begins. |
Date |
Event |
539 B.C. |
Babylon falls to Media-Persia (Dan.5). |
538 B.C. |
Persian King Cyrus allows the Jewish people to return home (Ezra 1). |
537 B.C. |
Jewish people return to Jerusalem under Zerubbabel. |
516 B.C. |
Second Temple is completed. |
458 B.C. |
More Jewish people return under Ezra. |
445 B.C. |
Artaxerxes II sends Nehemiah to Jerusalem to rebuild its walls (Neh. 2). |
430 B.C. |
Malachi becomes the last prophetic voice, after which begin the 400 "silent" years. |
333 B.C. |
Alexander the Great conquers Persia, beginning the Greek, or Hellenistic, period. |
323 B.C. |
Alexander the Great dies and his kingdom is divided between his four generals. |
167 B.C. |
Antiochus IV (Epiphanes) defiles the Temple. |
165 B.C. |
Judas, or Judah, Maccabee leads a revolt against Antiochus, cleanses the Temple, and reestablishes Jewish independence under a Hasmonean dynasty. |
63 B.C. |
Roman General Pompey enters Jerusalem, ending Jewish independence; Julius Caesar assassinated |
37 B.C. |
The Romans appoint Herod the Great "king of the Jews" and give him authority over Judea, Samaria, and Galilee. |
Date |
Event |
20 B.C. |
Herod begins remodeling the Temple |
6-5 B.C. |
Jesus is born in Bethlehem. |
4. B.C. |
Herod dies, Caesar Augustus divides the territory: Archelaus gets Judea, Antipas gets the Galilee, and Philip gets northeast of Galilee. |
A.D. 30 |
Messiah Jesus dies, arises, and ascends to heaven. Church Age begins on Day of Pentecost (Shavuot). |
A.D. 66-73 |
First Jewish uprising. Romans destroy Jerusalem and the Temple (A.D.70) and attack Masada, where 960 Jews commit suicide rather than surrender (A.D.73). |
A.D. 132-135 |
Second Jewish uprising. Emperor Hadrian attempts to rebuild Jerusalem as a pagan city called Aeolia Capitolina. Rabbi Akiva leads a rebellion and proclaims military leader Simon Bar Kochba messiah. Jewish people lose access to Jerusalem only and disperse throughout the land. Rome renames Judah, Samaria, and Galilee Palestina, later known as Palestine. |
A.D.200 |
Many dispersed Jews return. |
A.D. 312 -313 |
Emperor Constantine embraces Christianity. |
A.D. 330 |
Constantine moves to Byzantium, renames it Constantinople (Istanbul, Turkey), and keeps control over palestine. |
A.D. 570 |
Muhammad ibn Abd Allah is born in Mecca (Saudi Arabia). |
Date |
Event |
622 |
Muhammad moves to Medina (Saudi Arabia). His move is called hijrah, Arabic for "emigrate." The Muslim calendar begins with this date, which is 1 A.H. |
610 |
Muhammad claims the angel Gabriel showed him a tablet stating he was to become God's messenger. From then until his death, Muhammad has "visions." Thus begins the Muslim religion of Islam, meaning "submission to Allah." |
630 |
Arab Omayyads become the first Muslim presence in Jerusalem. |
632 |
Muhammad dies. |
639-661 |
Arab Muslims rule. This 22-year period is the only time Arabs ever rule the land. Even then it was part of a greater empire. |
661-1099 |
Muslims rule Palestine, however, they are not Arabs. The Abbassids came from Baghdad; the Fatimids, from Cairo; the Seljuks from Turkey. |
1099-1187 |
Catholic Crusaders under Pope Urban ll conquer Jerusalem and massacre Jews and Muslims. |
1244-1303 |
Asian Mongols depose Saladin's dynasty. Muslim Mameluks and Mongols struggle for power. The Crusader presence ends in 1291. |
1513-17 |
Muslim Ottoman Turks conquer Palestine. |
Date |
Event |
1517 |
Muslim Ottoman Turks rule Palestine as part of the empire. |
1840 |
Turkish rule fully restored. English leaders begin to discuss the possibility of restoring the Jewish people to their homeland. |
1882 |
Jewish people make aliyah from Romania to Palestine. |
1890-91 |
Large wave of Jewish people arrive from Russia. |
1894-5 |
French Capt. Alfred Dreyfus is convicted of espionage on falsified evidence amid rampant anti-Semitism. |
1896 |
Theodor Herzl writes Der Judenstaat, "The Jewish State." |
1897 |
First Zionist Congress meets in Basle, Switzerland, convened by Herzl. More than 200 participate from 17 countries, establishing the World Zionist Organization "to create for the Jewish people a home in Eretz-Israel secured by law." The Congress met every year from 1897 to 1901, then every second year, and still meets today. |
1901 |
Zionist Congress establishes the Jewish National Fund (JNF) to raise funds to purchase land in Eretz Yisrael. The JNF is the largest landowner in Israel (12.5 percent of all land) and purchased more than half of that amount before the reestablishment of the nation. |
1904 |
Second wave of immigration, mainly from Russia and Poland. |
1906 |
First Hebrew high school is founded in Jaffa and art school founded in Jerusalem. |
1908-14 |
Second Yemenite Aliyah. |
1909 |
Tel-Aviv, the first all-Jewish city, is founded in Palestine. |
1910 |
Kibbutz Degania is founded. |
1914-18 |
World War 1. |
1917 |
British General Edmund Allenby conquers Palestine, east and west of the Jordan, ending the Ottoman reign. In November the British issue the Balfour Declaration, supporting a "Jewish Homeland." |
1920 |
League of Nations gives Britain a mandate over Palestine, with orders to implement the Balfour Declaration. |
Written by Thomas Simcox. Published in Israel My Glory, a publication of Friends of Israel Ministries. Jan./Feb 2003.
Thomas C. Simcox is the Northeastern States director for the Friends of Israel.