750s BC
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Millennia: | 1st millennium BC |
Centuries: | 9th century BC - 8th century BC - 7th century BC |
Decades: | 780s BC 770s BC 760s BC - 750s BC - 740s BC 730s BC 720s BC |
Years: | 759 BC 758 BC 757 BC 756 BC 755 BC 754 BC 753 BC 752 BC 751 BC 750 BC |
Categories: | Births - Deaths - State leaders - Sovereign states Establishments - Disestablishments |
[edit] Events and trends
- 756 BC — Founding of Cyzicus.
- 755 BC — Ashur-nirari V succeeds Ashur-Dan III as king of Assyria
- 755 BC — Aeschylus, King of Athens, dies after a reign of 23 years and is succeeded by Alcmaeon.
- 753 BC — Alcmaeon, King of Athens, dies after a reign of 2 years. He is replaced by Harops, elected Archon for a ten-year term.
- April 21, 753 BC — The city of Rome and the Roman Kingdom is founded and ruled by the first king (possibly Etruscan) Romulus (according to tradition). Beginning of the Roman 'Ab urbe condita' calendar. Rome adopts Etruscan alphabet, which the Etruscans themselves had adopted from the Greeks.
- c. 750 BC — Man and Centaur, perhaps from Olympia, is made. It is now at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
- c. 750 BC — Age of colonisation begins.
- c. 750 BC — First tyrants take their seats.
- c. 750 BC — 700 BC — Funerary Vase (Krater), from the Dipylon Cemetery, Athens, is made. Attributed to the Hirschfield workshop. It is now at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
[edit] Significant people
- Shoshenq V, Pharaoh of the Twenty-second dynasty of Egypt (767–730 BC)
- Osorkon III, Pharaoh of the Twenty-second dynasty of Egypt (787–759 BC)
- Takelot III, Pharaoh of the Twenty-third dynasty of Egypt (764–757 BC)
- Rudamun, Pharaoh of the Twenty-third dynasty of Egypt (757–754 BC)
- Iuput, Pharaoh of the Twenty-third dynasty of Egypt (754–715 BC)
- Niumateped, King of the Libyans (775–750 BC)
- Titaru, King of the Libyans (758–750 BC)
- Ker, King of the Libyans (750–745 BC)
- Manava, author of the Indian geometric text of Sulba Sutras. (b. 750 BC)
[edit] Deaths
[edit] Births
- 757 BC — Duke Zhuang of Zheng, China