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| | | World History timeline |
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| 41 |
| | Herod Agrippa, a grandson of Herod the Great, restores a brief calm to Palestine | |
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| 43 |
| | The Romans invade Britain and the tribal leader Caractacus fails to hold them in an encounter near the Medway | |
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| 43 |
| | The emperor Claudius catches up with the Roman army, waiting at the Thames for him to lead the final victory over the English tribes | |
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| 43 |
| | The Roman emperor Claudius reaches Colchester, where a temple is erected to him as a god | |
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| 47 |
| | Roman legions build the Fosse Way, a raised road with a ditch on each side stretching from Lincoln to Devon | |
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| c. 48 |
| | St Paul, taking ship to Cyprus, begins the first of his great missionary journeys | |
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| c. 48 |
| | St Paul, on his travels within the Roman empire, begins converting non-Jews (or Gentiles) to the new Christian faith | |
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| c. 50 |
| | The Roman surgeon Cornelius Celsus describes in De Medicina how to cut stones from a patient's bladder | |
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| c. 50 |
| | The Thessalonians receive the first of Paul's epistles - the earliest text in the New Testament, written in Greek | |
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| c. 50 |
| | A western adaptation of the Persian cult of Mithras, evolving probably in Anatolia, is spread through the empire by the Roman army | |
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| c. 50 |
| | A working week of seven days is adopted in Rome, based on the seven known planets (whose names provide the days) | |
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| c. 50 |
| | The leaders of the Christian church gather in Jerusalem to decide an urgent question - must Gentile converts undergo circumcision? | |
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| c. 50 |
| | Tribes speaking Finno-Ugric languages are by now settled around the northeast of the Baltic, in modern Estonia and Finland | |
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| 54 |
| | The 16-year-old Nero is proclaimed emperor by the praetorian guards after the death of Claudius, supposedly poisoned by toadstools | |
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| c. 60 |
| | St Peter, believed to have come to Rome as leader of the Christian community, is subsequently considered the first pope | |
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| c. 60 |
| | St Paul arrives in Rome a prisoner, but then spends two years freely preaching Christianity | |
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| 60 |
| | Boudicca launches a devastating attack on Roman soldiers and settlers, destroying their headquarters at Colchester | |
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| 64 |
| | A great fire in Rome is popularly believed to have been started by Nero, whom legend also accuses of fiddling while the city burns | |
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| c. 64 |
| | Early Christian tradition states that both Peter and Paul meet death in Rome as martyrs, possibly as a result of the fire of AD 64 | |
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| 66 |
| | The Zealots play a prominent part in the uprising which expels the Romans from Jerusalem | |
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| 66 |
| | Josephus is in Jerusalem at the start of the rebellion against the Romans, and will later describe its suppression in his Jewish War | |
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| 66 |
| | Nero comes to Athens to give some of his officially celebrated performances at the Greek games | |
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| c. 68 |
| | The Essenes hide their sacred scrolls in caves near the Dead Sea, to save them from the Romans | |
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| 69 |
| | A rebellion in Spain prompts such chaos that Rome has four emperors within a year, after the suicide of Nero in 68 | |
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| 69 |
| | Vespasian, proclaimed emperor by his troops in Alexandria, is the survivor among this year's four emperors | |
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| 70 |
| | Titus recovers Jerusalem for Rome, after four years of Jewish rule | |
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| 70 |
| | The complete destruction of the Jewish Temple follows the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans | |
|  | The Western Wall supporting the Temple built by Herod Fotofile CG
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| 70 |
| | The first yeshiva, established by Johanan ben Zakkai at Yavne, begins a strong tradition of Jewish scholarship in the Diaspora | |
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| 73 |
| | The last of the Jewish insurgents are besieged in the stronghold of Masada, eventually killing each other to end their ordeal | |
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| c. 75 |
| | Hero, a Greek scientist in Alexandria, devises various forms of steam engine | |
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| c. 75 |
| | The Acts of the Apostles are written, probably by Luke – the evangelist and companion of Paul on his final journey to Rome | |
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| c. 75 |
| | The dioptra, developed by Hero of Alexandria for surveying land, is an early form of theodolite | |
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| 77 |
| | Agricola, appointed Roman governor of Britain in AD 77, establishes Chester as a stronghold from which to control the Welsh tribes | |
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