Dates
General History
Imperial History of Mesopotamia
Kings of Mesopotamia
Pharaohs of Egypt
100

The name of the age that ranges from 120,000-4000 BC

Stone Age

100
The civilization that invented Cuneiform 

The Sumerian Civilization 

100

The First Great Civilization in Mesopotamia. 

The Sumerians 

100
This is an early Assyrian King who used terror tactics to keep order in his empire by means of severe enslavement, torture, and mass deportation among the people that he conquered. 

Assurnasipal 

100

The Pharoah who built the Pyramid at Saqqara (the first pyramid in history) 

Djoser

200

The name of the period of that ranges from 120,000-12,000

The Paleolithic Age

200

The man who created the first Empire

Sargon

200

The Sumerians were taken over by this group of people. This was considered the first empire. 

The Akkadians 

200

The unpopular Neo-Babylonian King who changed the state god from Marduk to the moon-god Sin. He was so disliked that the people let the Persians come in and take them over.

Nabonidus

200

The second female Pharoah that was credited for expanding the trade route and building many buildings including many stone obelisks.

Hatshepsut

300

The name of the age of with the period that ranges from 12,000 BC through 8000 BC

Mesolithic Period

300

The Babylonian King that developed the first extensive and organized code of laws for his kingdom.

Hammurabi

300

This group of people came in and sacked Babylon and the Babylonian Empire. They left it devasted allowing for the Kassites to come and rule for 500 years.

The Hittites 

300

The son of the above Neo-Babylonian King. He was the one left in charge to rule in his father's place but did so unsuccessfully. 

Belshazzar

300

The Pharoah who changed the state god from Amun-Re to Aton and banned the worship of all other gods, thus making the Egyptian religion a monotheistic religion.  

Akhenaton

400

The First Complete Code of Laws in History (Hammurabi Code of Laws)

1700 BC to 2000 BC

400

The two groups of people that fought at the Battle of Kadesh.

The Hittites and the Egyptians

400

This group of people were a nomadic people from Levant who were assimilated into the Mesopotamian Culture (c. 1900 BC)

The Amorites 

400

The Neo-Babylonian King who is credited with having built the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and for having deported thousands of Jews from Judah to Babylon. 

Nebuchadnezzar II

400

The Pharaoh who was a relatively minor king, having died young, but whose burial artifacts are the only ones to have survived tomb-robbers.

Tutankhamun (King Tut)

500

The name of the age that begins in 1200 BC through 500 BC

Iron Age

500

This mysterious semitic people migrated into lower Egypt from the Levant.

The Hyksos

500

This group of people rose in military power and took over all of Mesopotamia from the Kassites. They were known for being very harsh and oppressive.

The Assyrians

500

The Chaldean governor of Babylonia who rose up, allied himself with the Medes in the East and destroyed Assyria. He was the first king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire.

Nabopolassar

500

The Pharaoh who expanded the Egyptian Empire into Palestine and demonstrated that he was perhaps the greatest military strategists of all time.

Thutmose III

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