790s BC: Difference between revisions
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*797 BC— [[Thespieus]], [[Archon of Athens]], dies after a reign of 27 years and is succeeded by his son [[Agamestor]]. |
*797 BC— [[Thespieus]], [[Archon of Athens]], dies after a reign of 27 years and is succeeded by his son [[Agamestor]]. |
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*796 BC- [[Adad-Nirari III]] captures [[Damascus]] after a siege against King [[Ben-Hadad III]]. |
*796 BC- [[Adad-Nirari III]] captures [[Damascus]] after a siege against King [[Ben-Hadad III]]. |
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*c.790 BC- [[Adad-Nirari III]] conducts a raid against the Chaldeans.<ref>http://www.geocities.com/garyweb65/midbaby.html</ref> |
*c.790 BC- [[Adad-Nirari III]] conducts a raid against the Chaldeans.<ref>{{cite web|title=midbabylon <!-- BOT GENERATED TITLE -->|url=http://www.geocities.com/garyweb65/midbaby.html|work=|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?id=1255996480871493|archivedate=2009-10-19|deadurl=yes}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Map of Assyria.png|thumb|300px|Map of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and its expansions.]] |
[[Image:Map of Assyria.png|thumb|300px|Map of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and its expansions.]] |
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Revision as of 05:18, 23 October 2009
The 790s BC witnessed the surging power of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, albeit a brief moment of weakness following in subsequent decades, the further decadence of Egypt, and the beginnings of civilization with the rise of the city-states in Ancient Greece.
Millennium |
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1st millennium BC |
Centuries |
Decades |
Years |
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Categories |
Events and trends
- 797 BC— Ardysus I becomes king of Lydia.
- 797 BC— Thespieus, Archon of Athens, dies after a reign of 27 years and is succeeded by his son Agamestor.
- 796 BC- Adad-Nirari III captures Damascus after a siege against King Ben-Hadad III.
- c.790 BC- Adad-Nirari III conducts a raid against the Chaldeans.[1]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c1/Map_of_Assyria.png/300px-Map_of_Assyria.png)
Significant people
- Adad-Nirari III, King of Assyria, r. 811–783 BC
- Thespieus, Archon of Athens, in office 824–797 BC
- Agamestor, Archon of Athens, in office 797–778 BC
- Ninurta-apla-X (full name unknown), King of Babylon, r. c.800–790 BC
- Marduk-bel-zeri, King of Babylon, r. c.790–780 BC
- Dido, former Queen of Tyre and current Queen (and founder) of Carthage, r. 814 – c.760 BC
- Xuan, King of Zhou dynasty China, r. 827–782 BC
- Hazael, King of Aramaean Damascus, r. 842–796 BC
- Ben-Hadad III, King of Aramaean Damascus, r. c.796–792 BC
- Shoshenq III, Pharaoh of Egypt (Twenty-Second Dynasty), r. 837–798 BC
- Shoshenq IV, Pharaoh of Egypt (Twenty-Second Dynasty), r. 798–785 BC
- Shoshenq VI, Pharaoh of Egypt (Twenty-Third Dynasty), r. 801–795 BC
- Osorkon III, Pharaoh of Egypt (Twenty-Third Dynasty), r. 795–767 BC
- Jehoahaz, King of Israel, r. c.814–798 BC
- Jehoash of Israel, King of Israel, r. c.798–782 BC
- Jeroboam, Israelite Prince, regent, and future king
- Jehoash of Judah, King of Judah, r. c.836–797 BC
- Amaziah, King of Judah, r. c.797–768 BC
- Alara, King of Kush, r. 795 – c.765
- Ardysus I, Legendary King of Lydia, r. 797–759 BC
- Caranus, King of Macedon, r. 808–778 BC
- Agesilaus I, Archilaus (Agiad Kings, r. 820–790 BC and 790–760 BC respectivily) and Eunomus (Eurypontid King r. 800–780 BC), Co-Kings of Sparta
- Pygmalion, King (formerly joint ruler with his sister, Dido) of Tyre, r. 831–785 BC
- Menuas, King of Urartu, r. 810–785
Contemporaries of future importance
- Jonah of Israel, future prophet (according to Bible)
- Amos of Israel, future prophet and author of the Book of Amos (according to Bible)
References
- ^ "midbabylon". Archived from the original on 2009-10-19.
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