Egypt

By 2lo38
  • 6000 BCE

    Agriculture Begins

    Hunter-gatherers start turning to settled agriculture along the Nile Valley
  • 4000 BCE

    Simple Village

    At Naqada, near modern Luxor, a simple village culture flourishes
  • 3500 BCE

    Walled Towns

    Rectangular brick houses replace circular huts at Naqada, and other Egyptian sites. Walled towns appear
  • 3300 BCE

    Sailing Boats

    By this date Egyptians are using both river- and ocean-going sailing boats
  • 3200 BCE

    Hieroglyphics

    The first known examples of Egyptian hieroglyphic writing date from this time
  • 2950 BCE

    Old Kingdom Begins

    Egypt's Early Dynastic Period begins when the First Dynasty is established under the Pharaoh Menes
  • 2900 BCE

    365-Day Calendar

    Egyptian astronomer-priests devise the first 365-day calendar
  • 2800 BCE

    Papyrus

    Egyptian scribes begin to write on papyrus made from the crushed stems of a fibrous plant along the banks of the Nile River
  • 2550 BCE

    Great Pyramid

    The Great Pyramid at Giza is built as a 480-foot-high tomb for Pharaoh Khufu
  • 2500 BCE

    Cats

    The cat is first domesticated in Egypt
  • 2125 BCE

    First Intermediate Period

    Egypt's Old Kingdom gives way to a time of troubles called by modern scholars the "First Intermediate Period"
  • 2040 BCE

    Middle Kingdom

    Beginning of the Middle Kingdom as Mentuhotep II, ruler of Upper Egypt, conquers Lower Egypt to reunite the country
  • 1640 BCE

    Second Intermediate Period

    Egypt's Middle Kingdom comes to an end and the Second Intermediate Period begins as the Hyksos kings take power in northern Egypt. They bring with them the horse-drawn chariot
  • 1550 BCE

    New Kingdom

    Ahmose reunites Egypt, driving out the Hyksos and begins the New Kingdom
  • 1473 BCE

    Hatshepsut

    Queen Hatshepsut becomes Egypt's second female pharaoh
  • 1333 BCE

    Tutankhamen

    The boy-king Tutankhamen comes to power in Egypt
  • 1290 BCE

    Ramses II

    Accession of Ramses II, whose 66-year reign marks the peak of Egyptian power
  • 1220 BCE

    The Exodus

    The Israelites leave Egypt on the migration to Canaan known as the Exodus
  • 1070 BCE

    New Kingdom Ends

    Egypt's New Kingdom comes to an end as civil war divides the nation
  • 530 BCE

    Persian Empire

    Persian Emperor Cambyses conquers Egypt
  • 332 BCE

    Alexander the Great

    Alexander takes control of Egypt, and the following year founds the city of Alexandria on Egypt's Mediterranean coast.
  • 305 BCE

    Alexander the Great dies

    In the power vacuum following Alexander's death, Ptolemy, Egypt's Macedonian governor, proclaims himself pharaoh; the Ptolemaic Dynasty that he founds will rule Egypt until 30 BCE
  • 300 BCE

    Euclid

    Euclid, a Greek mathematician working at the court of Ptolemy I in Alexandria, outlines the main principles of geometry
  • 196 BCE

    Rosetta Stone

    Text celebrating Pharaoh Ptolemy V are carved on the Rosetta Stone in Greek and Egyptian scripts; 2,000 years later they will be key to deciphering hieroglphics
  • 51 BCE

    Cleopatra

    Cleopatra becomes ruler of Egypt as coregent with her brother. The two become involved in a power struggle that Cleopatra wins with the help of the visiting Julius Caesar
  • 40 BCE

    Library of Alexandria

    Mark Antony gives Cleopatra 200,000 volumes to add to the library in Alexandria, making it the greatest library in the world
  • 30 BCE

    Antony & Cleopatra

    Antony and Cleopatra commit suicide, and Rome annexes Egypt
  • 168

    Ptolemy dies

    Egyptian astronomer and geographer Ptolemy dies. His legacy is the Earth-centered view of the universe that becomes known as the Ptolemaic-System
  • 248

    Anti-Christian rioting

    Anti-Christian rioting breaks out in Alexandria
  • 391

    Christianity - Official Religion

    Christianity is proclaimed the official religion of Egypt. Many temples of the old gods are destroyed
  • 415

    Hypatia is murdered

    Hypatia, a mathematician and philosopher of Alexandria, is murdered by a Christian mob, perhaps on the instructions of Cyril, archbishop of Alexandria, who resented her influence
  • 639

    Rashidun Caliphate

    The Arabs conquest of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Syria seriously weakens the Byzantine Empire
  • 651

    The Koran

    Caliph Uthman brings Muhammad's teachings together to form a single sacred volume, the Koran.
  • 656

    First Muslim Civil War

    Ali ibn Abi Talib eventually becomes caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate, but his succession is disputed. Outbreak of the first civil war between Ali and dissident Muslims led by Muawiya, governor of Syria
  • 661

    Umayyad Caliphate

    The civil war ends with Ali's murder and Muawiya's recognition as caliph. His Umayyad descendants hold power over the Islamic world for the next 90 years.
  • 750

    Trade

    Arab merchants from North Africa trade across the Sahara, exchanging salt, glass, and horses for African gold, ivory, and slaves
  • 750

    Abbasid Caliphate

    As-Saffah, a descendent of Ali, mounts a successful revolt against the Umayyads. He massacres almost the entire Umayyad family and establishes his own Abbasid Dynasty, which reigns throughout the Middle East and North Africa
  • 750

    Paper

    The first paper mill is established in the Islamic empire
  • 760

    "Arabic" Numerals

    The Arabs adopt Indian numerals, they are the "Arabic" numerals in general use today
  • 969

    Fatimid Dynasty

    Fatimid general Jawhar conquered Egypt
  • 1005

    House of Knowledge

    The House of Knowledge, a science library, is founded in Cairo
  • 1009

    Caliph al-Hakim

    Caliph al-Hakim orders the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem
  • 1171

    Saladin

    Saladin establishes himself as Egypt's first Ayyubid sultan
  • 1318

    al-Nasir Muhammad Mosque

    The al-Nasir Muhammad Mosque is completed in 1335, and is considered Cairo's best-preserved building from the Mamluk Sultanate
  • 1517

    Ottoman Empire

    Ottoman sultan Selim I captured Cairo from the Mamluks and transferred the center of power in Egypt to Constantinople.