New Chronology
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The term "New Chronology" can refer to a number of attempts to rewrite the conventional chronology (the science of locating events in time):
- The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended, a book by Isaac Newton
- Revised Chronology, part of the theories of Immanuel Velikovsky, which sought to explain various events in myth and legend scientifically; detailed in his book Ages in Chaos
- The Glasgow Chronology, a different chronology of Egypt proposed by David Rohl
- The writings of Nikolai Alexandrovich Morozov
- New Chronology (Fomenko), a proposition by Anatoly Fomenko that world history started roughly around AD 1000, and nearly all "ancient" history is actually the history of the same culture
- The Phantom time hypothesis of Heribert Illig
- Hungarian Calendar, a work by Hunnivári