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  1. The world in the 11th century BC The world in 1000 BCE. Events David and Saul (1885) by Julius Kronberg. The two men are considered the first Kings of the United Monarchy of Israel. 1089 BC: Melanthus, legendary King of Athens, dies after a reign of 37 years and is succeeded by his son Codrus.

    • 12th Century BC

      The 12th century BC is the period from 1200 to 1101 BC. The...

    • 1090S BC

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  2. 1000 BC— World population: 50,000,000 [3] 1000 BC— Priene, Western Anatolia is founded. c. 1000 BC— Hungarian separates from its closest linguistic relatives, the Ob-Ugric languages. c. 1000 BC— Ancient Iranian peoples enter Persia. c. 1000 BC— Villanovans occupy the northern and western Italy. c. 1000 BC— Phoenician alphabet is ...

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    • Animals
    • Beginnings of Agriculture
    • Pottery
    • Other Cultural Developments
    • Environmental Changes
    • Bibliography

    The ability to sail was not only a Neolithic creation. Franchthi Cave provides indirect evidence of pre-Neolithic (11th Millennium BC) seafaring, as well as the early Holocene Mesolithic colonization of Corsica and other Mediterranean islands. It is possible to investigate the question posed by Cauvin's research in regard to both sides of the Middl...

    The Klementowice inventory is a member of the Magdalenian technocomplex, according to a typological examination. The frequency of the basic tool groups (end-scrapers, burins, truncated pieces, backed pieces, perforators, and combined tools) is most closely matched by that in Moravian inventories, which J. K. dated to horizon II of the Magdalenian c...

    Since diagnostic artifacts from the Jōmon period of Japanese prehistory contain pottery and polished stone tools, this period, which spans from the 11th millennium BC to roughly 300 BC (c. 2.3 ka or 2,250 BP), has been referred regarded as the Neolithic in the tradition of North-eastern Asian archaeology. With the use of shellfish, fish, nuts, and ...

    Near East

    There are several later masseboth that exist today, mostly Nabatean ones. This bulk reveals that masseboth initially arrived in the desert during the 11th millennium BC, became increasingly common starting in the 6th millennium BC (c. 8 ka or 7,950 BP), and maintained their dominance there until the early Islamic period. They typically outnumbered people from the rest of the Near East by a significant margin. However, despite being well-established in the desert for many millennia, masseboth...

    Europe and Russia

    Although this is the earliest Melian obsidian that we have found on Crete, the use of these raw materials for distant labor has a longer history, having been used by populations from mainland Greece in the Upper Palaeolithic period of the 11th millennium BC. The Kazachka site provides a unique collection of data spanning the era between 10,000 and 1000 BC. Data from the 11th millennium BC are available from the Ust-Karenga site. Mehmet Özdoğan summarizes new findings made around Anatolia. Pre...

    The light brown pumice found at the Mesolithic site of Staosnaig on Colonsay can be geochemically associated to the pumice deposits found on the southern flanks of Katla. Although the eruption that created this pumice cannot be precisely dated, it most likely took place between the late 8th and early 11th millennium BC. The brown pumice discovered ...

    Webpages

    1. Ibáñez-Estévez, Juan José; Anderson, Patricia C.; Arranz, Amaia; Urquijo, González; E., Jesús; Jörgensen-Lindahl, Anne; Mazzucco, Niccolò; Pichon, Fiona; Richter, Tobias (8 January 2021). "The Evolution of Plant Harvesting at The Dawn of Agriculture: Perspectives from Sickle Gloss Texture Analyses". Research Square. hdl:10261/226283. Retrieved 2 November 2023. 2. "Neolithic and Eneolithic copper artifacts in the area of the Lower Mureş and Crişul Alb Valleys". Revista Transilvania. 3 Decem...

    Books

    1. Areti, Chalkioti (6 November 2018). Reconstructing the coastal configuration of Lemnos Island (Northeast Aegean Sea, Greece). CNRS Alpha. CNRS Éditions. pp. 109–118. ISBN 9782271130457. Retrieved 1 November 2023. 2. Panagiotopoulou, Eleni (2018). Reconstructing diet, tracing mobility: Ιsotopic approach to social change during the transition from the Bronze to the Early Iron Age in Thessaly, Greece. University of Groningen. ISBN 9789403409351. Retrieved 28 October 2023. 3. Radivojević, Milj...

    Journals

    1. Al-Araimi, Nasser Ali; Al-Atiyat, Raed Mahmoud; Gaafar, Osman Mahgoub; Vasconcelos, Raquel; Luzuriaga-Neira, Agusto; Eisa, Mohamed Osman; Amir, Nadir; Benaissa, Mohammed Hocine; Alfaris, Abdulbari Abbas; Aljumaah, Riyadh Saleh; Elnakhla, Sayed M.; Salem, Mohamed M.I.; Ishag, Ibrahim A.; El Khasmi, Mohammed; Beja-Pereira, Albano (2017). "Maternal genetic diversity and phylogeography of native Arabian goats". Livestock Science. Elsevier BV. 206: 88–94. doi:10.1016/j.livsci.2017.09.017. ISSN...

  4. 1039 BC: Neferkare Amenemnisu, king of Egypt, dies. c. 1020 BC: Destruction of Troy VIIb 2. 1026 BC: Saul becomes the first king of the Israelites. 1020 BC: King Kang of Zhou succeeds King Cheng as ruler of the Zhou Dynasty in China. 1012 BC: Acastus, King of Athens, dies after a reign of 36 years. 1003 BC: David succeeds Saul.

  5. Pages in category "11th century BC". The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . 11th century BC. 1000s BC (decade) 1010s BC. 1020s BC. 1030s BC.

  6. 11th century BC. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Millennium: 2nd millennium BC. Centuries: 12th century BC - 11th century BC - 10th century BC. Decades: 1090s BC 1080s 1070s 1060s 1050s 1040s 1030s 1020s 1010s 1000s BC. English: The 11th century BC started the first day of 1100 BC and ended the last day of 1001 BC.

  7. Upload file; Languages. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. ... Pages in category "11th-century BC people" ... Wikipedia® is a ...

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