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Prehistoric3500-1BCE1-1099 CE1100-13991400-15991600s1700s

1800s'10-'19'20-'29'30-'39'40-'49'50-'59'60-'69'70-'79'80-'89'90-'99

1900s'10-'19'20-'29'30-'39'40-'49'50-'59'60-'69'70-'79'80-'89'90-'99

2000s

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1st - 11th Centuries

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Swedish Runes
Swedish Runes
ca. 200 CE

Carolingian Script
Carolingian Script,
ca. 840;
note clarity
of letters
1-1099 C.E.
Most early dates are approximate
0: Reformed Chinese writing in li-shu style prefigures modern Chinese.
8: Ovid completes his mythological verse tales, Metamorphoses.
10: Livy's History of Rome reflects his admiration for its early civilization.
14: Rome sets up network of relay runners carrying messages 50 miles in a day.
20: Strabo's Geographia and histories describe the Mediterranean world.
37: Seneca the Elder dies after writing history of Rome.
46: Paul begins preaching Christianity.
47: Fire destroys estimated 40,000 of Alexandrian Library's 700,000 volumes.
50: Paul writes his Epistles.
50: Many books now assembled as codices, not scrolls.
50: Philo dies after trying to reconcile Greek philosophy, Jewish thought.
60: Petronius' satirical Satyricon describes vulgarity of Roman luxury.
65: Mark writes the first Gospel.
65: Lucan's epic poem tells of civil war between Caesar and Pompey.
65: Suicide of Seneca the Younger, author of Dialogues on Stoic thought.
68: History of the Jewish War by a general, Flavius Josephus.
78: Pliny the Elder dies after compiling the known science of his time.
 
80: John completes the last book of the Gospels while in Ephesus.
 
100: Mayas adorn pyramids with wall mural painting of mythology.
100: Tacitus' Annals of Imperial Rome describes corrupt emperors.
100: Roman couriers carry government mail across the empire.
100: Most books of the New Testament are completed.
100: In India, Vatsyayana writes of erotic arts, the Kama Sutra.
105: Chinese imperial eunuch T'sai Lun credited with inventing paper, old invention
113: Pliny the Younger dies; compiled letters describing the life of Rome.
120: Plutarch dies after writing of lives of important Greeks and Romans.
120: Epictetus' Discourses support Stoic concept of calm, disciplined life.
122: Suetonius dies; wrote sensational reports on the lives of The Twelve Caesars.
125: Juvenal's Satires speak of "bread and circuses" to keep Romans pacified.
150: Ptolemy's Almagest places the earth at center of a static universe.
160: Galen's medical treatises will influence but limit medicine for 1,300 years.
160: Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius writes Stoic Meditations in army camp.
160: Apuleius' The Golden Ass, only Latin fiction to survive in its entirety.
175: Chinese classics are carved in stone that will later be used for rubbings.
180: In China, an elementary zoetrope.
191: Rome's Palatine Library destroyed by fire.
 
 
200: In China, the "suan-pan" abacus; in Japan, the "soroban" abacus.
200: Monks start to use uncial script based on Greek alphabet.
220: Tertullian supports early Christianity: "It is certain because it is impossible."
230: Japanese begin keeping historical records.
231: In Caesarea, Origen founds school, ties Christianity to Greek philosophy.
235: Dio Cassius dies. His extant histories cover end of republic, rise of imperial Rome.
250: Paper use spreads west from China to central Asia.
270: Plotinus dies after Enneads creates foundation of Neo-Platonism.
272: Most of Alexandrian Library destroyed during civil war.
 
 
300: First evidence of Christian plays.
300: In Japan, sumo wrestling.
300: Chinese couriers during Han Dynasty reach Persia, other far countries.
300: Goths carve runic alphabet on wood and stone; will continue for 1,000 years.
325: Council of bishops at Nicaea sets course of Catholic Christianity.
338: Jewish calendar is improved by altering length of years.
350: In Egypt, parchment book of Psalms bound in wood covers.
350: Chinese develop xylography, printing of books from wooden blocks.
350: Chinese bucolic literature flourishes.
370: Rome is said to have 28 public libraries.
386: Singing, including "Hallelujah" hymns, introduced into Christian church.
391: Archbishop reportedly orders destruction of Alexandrian Library.
393: Church sanctions 27 books of the New Testament; Christian Bible is complete.
 
 
400: Books cut into pages and bound in codex manner are preferred to scrolls.
400: Writing systems, vocabulary, spread from India to Southeast Asia.
400: Palestinian Talmud, first of two, completed.
400: A poet, Claudian, writes biased accounts of last days of the Roman empire.
401: Augustine writes his Confessions.
405: Jerome translates the Bible into Latin, the Vulgate.
413: Augustine writes The City of God three years after Visigoths sack Rome.
415: Murder by monks of woman philosopher Hypatia held to be start of Medieval era.
425: Constantinople University is founded.
450: Ink on seals is stamped on paper in China. This is true printing.
450: Beginnings of Old English; it will last 700 years.
450: In India, Kalidasa, greatest of classical Sanskrit writers.
476: In India, mathematician Ayabhata writes of roots and powers of numbers.
496: Pope Gelasius I issues a list of banned books.
500: Indian epic poem, the Ramayana, is written.
500: Greek and Latin versions of the New Testament in the Codex Bezae.
510: Indian astronomer Aryabhata refers to the zero and place values.
520: The start of Western monasticism will keep learning alive in Christian Europe.
521: Boethius' On Music will be Western standard for 1,000 years.
524: Awaiting execution, Bo�thius writes The Consolation of Philosophy in prison.
525: Dionysius' Exiguus starts "B.C.", "A.D."; incorrectly dates birth of Jesus.
529: Emperor Justinian closes Athenian School of Philosophy, 1,000 years old.
535: Justinian codifies Roman law, the basis of modern civil law.
540: Cassiodorus founds monastery with focus on copying ancient manuscripts.
550: Chess is invented in India.
550: Buddhism enters Japan, leading to growth of literacy, book publishing.
560: Procopius writes biased first-hand histories of the Byzantine world.
590: Irish monks bring manuscripts to Luxeuil, first French monastery.
595: In India, calculations done with nine numerals and zero, the decimal system.
598: The first school in England, at Canterbury.
 
 
600: Beginnings of Gregorian plainsong chants.
600: Books printed in China.
600: Babylonian Talmud, second of two, completed.
600: In China, The Water Dragon Classic leads to the study of fengshui.
606: Chinese officials establish written examination for civil service positions.
615: The first records of the teachings of Mohammed.
619: In China, large orchestras.
622: Isidore of Seville's Origins, encyclopedic attempt to record world's knowledge.
622: Start of the Muslim lunar year calendar.
641: Arab invaders destroy book copying industry at Alexandria.
637: Conquering Arabs destroy library at Caesarea (modern Israel).
650: Muslim caliphs set up regular pigeon post.
650: Arab rulers create a news service.
650: The chapters of the Qur'an (Koran) are collected.
683: In the Khmer kingdom of Cambodia, the concept of zero appears as a dot.
691: Dome of the Rock inscriptions are earliest extant quotes from Qur'an.
 
700: Sizing agents are used to improve paper quality.
700: Lindisfarne Gospels are written, an example of handsome calligraphy.
712: In Japan, Records of Ancient Matters, the sacred book of Shinto.
716: Codex Amitianus combines Old and New Testaments in 1,030 folios.
731: In England, the Venerable Bede writes Ecclesiastical History.
740: A newspaper is printed in China.
740: Kibi no Makibi develops katakana, first of two syllabic Japanese alphabets.
740: Moors invade Spain, bringing learning and advanced culture.
750: The Chinese, with the world's most advanced technology, block-print on paper.
750: Golden age of Chinese poetry, art.
750: The Indian zero appears in China, Islamic countries.
751: Paper made outside of China, in Samarkand by Chinese captured in war.
760: Indian numerals, including zero, reach Java.
764: Japanese Empress Shotoku orders printing of one million Buddhist charms.
765: Picture books printed in Japan.
770: Oldest surviving printing: a Buddhist prayer for Japanese Empress Shotoku.
771: Mayan calculation includes place values and the zero.
793: Paper-making moves west to Baghdad at the height of Islamic culture.
 
 
800: Irish Book of Kells, masterpiece of illumination; now at Dublin's Trinity College.
800: Charlemagne encourages a revival of learning, the "Carolingian Renaissance."
800: Western Europe gets a small, neat script style, the "Carolingian Miniscule."
800: The Gregorian Chant originates in the Frankish Empire.
813: In Baghdad, "House of Knowledge" preserves ancient Greek scientific writing.
816: In Japan, Kobo Daishi founds Shingon Buddhism center at Mount Koya.
820: In Baghdad, al-Khwarizmi, develops algebra, algorithms.
830: Reference is made to a Chinese printed book.
850: In Moorish Spain, the gobar numerals are used, prefiguring modern numerals.
850: Arab and Jewish scholars raise European awareness of, interest in Aristotle.
850: Arab philosopher al-Kindi starts neoplatonic school of Islamic thought.
850: The Slavs get a writing system; the Cyrillic alphabet will soon follow.
863: Irish philosopher Erigena writes On the Distribution of Nature.
863: Two brothers, both monks, develop the Cyrillic alphabet.
868: The Diamond Sutra, block-printed book in China; it's the oldest existing book.
871: Monks begin Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, history of England, in Latin.
835: Japanese Buddhist priest, K�kai, develops hiragana, a syllabic alphabet.
875: Amazed Western travelers to China see toilet paper.
890: Alfred the Great supervises translation of Latin works into Old English.
 
 
900: The 1001 Arabian Nights of tales within a tale.
900: China's Tang Dynasty has courier system with more than 1,600 stations.
940: Jewish philosopher Saadiah translates Hebrew literature into Arabic.
942: Welsh prince orders laws to be written down.
950: Papermaking spreads west to Damascus and Cairo.
950: Folded books appear in China in place of rolls.
950: Women in a Chinese harem invent playing cards.
950: Lady Li Fu-jen, a Chinese calligrapher, paints on bamboo.
970: Chinese government introduces paper money.
972: First woman playwright since ancient Rome, Hroswitha of Gandersheim, dies.
975: First airmail parcel post: pigeons each carry one cherry to Arab caliph.
980: First appearance in Christian Europe (Spain) of Indian-Arabic numerals.
983: An encyclopedia, the Taiping Yulan, is produced in China
998: Archbishop Gerbert, scholar and book collector, becomes Pope Sylvester II.
 
 
1000: In Japan, Lady Sei Shonagon reveals her amours in The Pillow Book.
1000: Epic poems Beowulf and the Song of Roland are written down.
1000: Mayas in Yucatan, Mexico, make writing paper from tree bark.
1002: Murasaki Shikabu's Tale of Genji, is the world's first novel.
1020: India's Kandariya Mahedeva Hindu temple displays erotic friezes and statues.
1030: Italian monk Guido d'Arezzo creates solfège system to learn music by ear.
1030: Persian mystic philosopher-physician Avicenna (Ibn Sina) writes Book of Healing.
1035: Japanese use waste paper to make new paper.
1038: Arab scholar, Alhazen, describes a room-size camera obscura.
1048: Death in Afghanistan of famed Islamic scholar Abu Raiham al Biruni.
1048: Pi Sheng, a Chinese commoner, fabricates movable type using clay.
1068: Invading Turks destroy Fatimite Library in Cairo.
1083: Sima Guang completes history of China, a 17-year task.
1086: The Domesday Book, census of people and property, reveals life in England.
 


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Sources for the timeline and accompanying information.

Copyright © Irving Fang and Kristina Ross, 1995-1996. All rights reserved.