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  1. 1 maj 2024 · These were simply three of numerous Italic-speaking communities that existed in Latium, a plain on the Italian peninsula, by the 1st millennium BC. The origins of the Italic peoples lie in prehistory and are therefore not precisely known, but their Indo-European languages migrated from the east in the second half of the 2nd ...

  2. för 6 dagar sedan · List of years - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) 1st millennium BC. 2nd millennium. 3rd millennium. See also. List of years. This page indexes the individual years pages. Each year is ordered. 1st millennium BC. 8th Century BC. 719. 718. 717. 716. 715. 713. 7th century BC. 700. 699. 698. 697. 696. 695. 694. 693. 692. 691. 690. 689. 688. 687. 686.

  3. för 3 dagar sedan · In the Pre-Columbian Americas, the Maya civilization that flourished in Mexico and Central America during the 1st millennium AD developed a unique tradition of mathematics that, due to its geographic isolation, was entirely independent of existing European, Egyptian, and Asian mathematics.

  4. för 3 dagar sedan · 6th millennium BC: Irrigation in Khuzistan, Iran; 6000 BC - 3200 BC: Proto-writing in present-day Egypt, Iraq, Romania, China, India and Pakistan. 5500 BC: Sailing - pottery depictions of sail boats, in Mesopotamia, and later ancient Egypt; 5000 BC: Copper smelting in Serbia; 5000 BC: Seawall in Tel Hreiz.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SumerSumer - Wikipedia

    för 4 dagar sedan · Sumer (/ ˈ s uː m ər /) is the earliest known civilization, located in the historical region of southern Mesopotamia (now south-central Iraq), emerging during the Chalcolithic and early Bronze Ages between the sixth and fifth millennium BC.

    • c. 5500 – c. 1800 BC
  6. För 1 dag sedan · By the 1st millennium BC iron working had reached Northwestern Africa, Egypt, and Nubia. Zangato and Holl document evidence of iron-smelting in the Central African Republic and Cameroon that may date back to 3,000 to 2,500 BC.

  7. 23 apr. 2024 · With few exceptions that is still the area occupied by the Greek language today. In the second quarter of the 1st millennium bce, a vast “colonial” movement took place, resulting in establishments founded by various Greek cities all around the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, especially in southern Italy and Sicily.