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  1. c. 1300–1200 BC: approximately 4,000 men fight a battle at a causeway over the Tollense valley in Northern Germany, the largest known prehistoric battle north of the Alps. [17] c. 1300–500 BC: the Lusatian culture in Poland, parts of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, eastern Germany and northern Ukraine. [18]

  2. May 20, 2015 · JW: 1177 BC is the date in which Ramses III of Egypt (r. 1186-1155 BC) defeated the Sea Peoples for a second time at the Battle of the Delta. (The Battle of Djahy, which pitted the Egyptians against the Sea Peoples occurred a few years earlier.) You characterize this as a “pyrrhic victory,” which symbolically ends the Bronze Age networks of ...

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  4. Jun 12, 2020 · Location. The bustling city of Thebes, which is known to the locals as 'Waset', lies around 800 kilometres (500 miles) south of the Mediterranean on the banks of the river Nile. Thebes is the main city of 'Upper Egypt', the southern region of the country that extends to Nubia. The Egyptian king (or pharaoh) rules over both Upper Egypt and Lower ...

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  5. Jul 6, 2022 · A map illustrating the rise and expansion (c. 1750 - 1200 BCE) of the Hittites, ancient Anatolian people who spoke an Indo-European language. At its height around the mid-14th century BCE, the Hittite empire ruled most of Asia Minor from the northern Levant to Upper Mesopotamia. After c. 1180 BCE, during the Bronze Age Collapse, with increased ...

  6. Jun 15, 2021 · By the mid 14th century BC, the southern Adriatic experienced a change in site location. Particularly during the 13th and 12th centuries BC, based on ceramic indicators (but see Recchia and Ruggini 2009), there were fewer sites, but they were more frequently located in coastal and semi-coastal areas, with a greater proportion having fortifications.

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