30 results
Neo-Assyrian Empire
event · 911 BCEnirari II took the throne in 911 BCE, he initiated the Neo-Assyrian Empire, a state that would grow into the largest empire the world had yet seen … kings focused on reclaiming territories lost during the collapse of the Middle Assyrian Empire. Under Ashurnasirpal II, Assyria reestablished its undisputed dominance over northern Mesopotamia and shifted
Roman Empire
event · 27 BCEgranted Octavian overarching military power and the title of Augustus, establishing the Roman Empire. For two centuries, this vast state enjoyed the Pax Romana, a period of unprecedented … stability that allowed the empire to reach its greatest territorial extent under Trajan. Power was managed through a division of territories into senatorial provinces, ruled by proconsuls chosen
Assyrian Empire
event · 2025 BCELong before it became the largest empire the world had yet seen, Assyria was a single city-state named Assur, clinging to independence in the 21st century … fourteenth century BCE, the state began its transition into the Middle Assyrian Empire, but it was during the subsequent Neo-Assyrian period, from 911 to 609 BCE, that
Byzantine Empire
event · 395 CEthousand years, the citizens of the state we now call the Byzantine Empire lived and died under the conviction that they were, simply and indisputably, Romans. They called … Emerging from the partition of the Roman world in 395 CE, this eastern empire survived the collapse of its western counterpart, anchoring its identity in the monumental, wealthy
Mughal Empire
event · 1526 CEdown from the region of modern Uzbekistan, aided by the Safavid and Ottoman empires, to defeat the sultan of Delhi at the First Battle of Panipat. This victory … laid the foundations of the Mughal Empire, a domain that would eventually span from the outer fringes of the Indus River Basin and northern Afghanistan to the highlands
Sasanian Empire
event · 224 CEBattle of Hormozdgan, initiating a four-century reign that would elevate Eranshahr—the Empire of the Iranians—to the height of its power in late antiquity. Driven … desire to reclaim the legacy of the ancient Achaemenid Empire, the House of Sasan constructed a highly centralized government bureaucracy and revived Zoroastrianism as a unifying, legitimizing force
Ottoman Empire
event · 1299 CEBalkans, and in 1453 CE, Mehmed II captured Constantinople, extinguishing the Byzantine Empire and establishing a formidable new capital. At its zenith under Suleiman the Magnificent … sixteenth century, the Ottoman Empire was a global colossus straddling Southeast Europe, West Asia, and North Africa. It ruled its diverse population through the millet system, granting confessional
Ethiopian Empire
event · 1270 CEthat would endure for seven centuries. This was the birth of the Ethiopian Empire, historically known as Abyssinia. Surrounded by hostile forces, the empire clung to its ancient … cultural and administrative peak under Zara Yaqob in the 15th century, the empire consolidated its authority, built grand churches, and expanded its hegemony over neighboring Islamic territories. Survival
Akkadian Empire
event · 2334 BCESumerian king Lugal-zage-si, forging what is widely recognized as the first empire in human history. Operating from a capital city, Akkad, whose physical ruins remain lost … bound together Sumerian and Semitic Akkadian speakers. Under Sargon and his successors, the empire projected its power across a vast geographic canvas, stretching from the Mediterranean and Anatolia
Tibetan Empire
event · 618 CEseventh century, the Yarlung dynasty erupted from its southern valley to forge an empire of astonishing scale. Under Songtsen Gampo, the thirty-third king of the dynasty … localized power transformed into a militarized state. For over two centuries, this empire expanded across fiercely diverse terrain. At its zenith, its borders reached east to the Tang
Hephthalites
event · 408 CEWhite Huns. This nomadic and settled tribal confederation rapidly carved out an empire centered in the fertile valleys of Tokharistan. By 479 CE, they had conquered Sogdia … functioned as a geopolitical pivot, holding the balance of power between the great empires of late antiquity. Though often conflated with the contemporary Alchon Huns who pushed past
Achaemenid Empire
event · 550 BCEBefore it was a colossus, the realm that would become the Achaemenid Empire began with the Parsa, a nomadic people of the seventh century BCE moving through … religious tolerance, backed by a formidable professional army and navy. Though the empire fractured its strength against the Greek mainland over decades of difficult warfare, its ultimate undoing
Ashanti Empire
event · 1670 CEunderstand the Asante Empire, one must understand that its very name, derived from the Twi words for war and because of, translates to because of war. Born … Asante. Crafted by the king Osei Tutu and his adviser Okomfo Anokye, the empire quickly transformed from a defensive coalition into a dominant territorial power. With their conquest
Gupta Empire
event · 320 CELong before its grandest courts took shape, the foundations of the Gupta Empire were quietly laid in the ancient region of Magadha, where the monarch Sri Gupta issued … Under the patronage of rulers like Samudragupta, Chandragupta II, and Kumaragupta I, the empire became a crucible for the human intellect. Here, the scholars Aryabhata, Varahamihira, Kalidasa
Srivijaya
event · 650 CEwater. Emerging in the seventh century on the island of Sumatra, the thalassocratic empire of Srivijaya became the first polity to dominate western Maritime Southeast Asia. Rather than … relying on massive land conquests, this fortunate and victorious empire—whose name derives from the Sanskrit words for prosperity and triumph—projected its power through a sophisticated naval
Majapahit
event · 1293 CErise of the Majapahit Empire began in 1292 when Raden Wijaya established a stronghold on the island of Java, capitalizing on the chaos of a Mongol invasion. Named … century, under the rule of Queen Tribhuvana and her son Hayam Wuruk, the empire projected its power across vast maritime distances. Guided by the ambitious prime minister Gajah
Mali Empire
event · 1235 CEBefore it was an empire, Mali was a modest Mandinka kingdom huddled along the upper reaches of the Niger River, waiting for history to shift. As the neighboring … Ghana Empire declined in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, the trade routes that fed the region drifted south, bringing wealth and momentum with them. It was a warrior
Kingdom of Aksum
event · 4th c. BCEbefore the medieval world shrank into isolated pockets of power, a single merchant empire commanded the critical maritime arteries linking Rome to India. Rising in the first century … that halted the ancient practice of erecting monumental stone steles. Under Ezana, the empire conquered Kush and claimed the Greek name Ethiopia. Aksumite power peaked in the sixth
Aztec Empire
event · 1367 CEthat would redefine the geography of Mesoamerica. Known to history as the Aztec Empire, this Triple Alliance of Mexico-Tenochtitlan, Tetzcoco, and Tlacopan began as an association … self-governed partners, but it quickly became an empire ruled in all but name from the island capital of Tenochtitlan. Through wars of conquest, the alliance stretched
Pagan kingdom
event · 849 CEeleventh century, King Anawrahta forged these conquests into a unified empire. At its height in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Pagan stood alongside the Khmer Empire … stretching from the borders of China down to the Malay Peninsula. As the empire expanded, the Burmese language and Bamar culture gradually eclipsed older Pyu and Mon traditions
Tuʻi Tonga Empire
event · 950s CEquietening the waves of Oceania. Beginning around 950 CE, the Tuʻi Tonga Empire expanded outward from its capital at Muʻa, on the island of Tongatapu, to project … whom oral traditions record as the son of the god Tangaloa. Through an empire built upon the swift hulls of a long-distance double-canoe navy, subsequent rulers
Kanem-Bornu Empire
event · 11th c. CECentral Africa revolved around the shifting waters of Lake Chad. The Kanem-Bornu Empire, one of the longest-lived states in human history, survived from … among Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Libya, Algeria, Sudan, and Chad. Wealth flowed into the empire through its tight grip on trans-Saharan trade routes, where merchants exchanged ivory, slaves
Ilkhanate
event · 1256 CEWhen the riders of the Mongol Empire swept across West Asia, they did not merely conquer; they eventually established a state that would resurrect an ancient identity. Founded … Pakistan, the realm was born from the violent fragmentation of the Mongol Empire following the death of Möngke Khan in 1259. Though these Mongol rulers were outsiders, they
Timurid Empire
event · 1370 CEFounded in 1370 CE by the Turco-Mongol warlord Timur, the Timurid Empire was forged in the furnace of Eurasian conquest. Timur envisioned himself as the true heir … Genghis Khan, yet the empire he built was far more than a nomadic war machine. It was a dual world, known in its own literature as Iran
Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
event · 1250 CEcontrol of Egypt, transforming their status from owned men to rulers of an empire. The Mamluk Sultanate, governed from a rapidly expanding Cairo, arose from the overthrow … Ashraf Khalil had expelled the Crusader states and pushed the borders of the empire into Nubia, Cyrenaica, the Hejaz, and southern Anatolia. At its height, the sultanate positioned
Benin Empire
event · 1170 CEtreasury of resources. This was the origin of the Benin Empire, a state in what is now southern Nigeria that began to coalesce around 1170 CE from … flourish alongside hunting. By the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the empire reached the zenith of its prosperity. It expanded its territory, established robust trade networks with European powers
Ghana Empire
event · 100 CEtitle of a warrior king who ruled a vast western-Sahelian empire. Known to its Soninke people as Wagadu, this state flourished from about … gold. This mythical pact eventually fractured, and by the second millennium, the empire began a long decline, culminating in its thirteenth-century absorption as a vassal state
Mitanni
event · 1650 BCEcenturies, a great empire in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia commanded the respect of the ancient world's most formidable dynasties, yet left behind no royal annals, chronicles … formed the core population of Mitanni. At the height of its power, the empire established a vast sphere of influence, bounded by the Hittites to the north
Neo-Babylonian Empire
event · 626 BCElong resurrection. For nearly a millennium, since the fall of Hammurabi’s old empire, southern Mesopotamia had lived under the shadow of rival powers. The collapse … Assyrian Empire between 612 and 609 BCE shattered this subjugation, allowing a native Chaldean dynasty to reclaim dominance over the ancient Near East and launch a deliberate, grand
Oyo Empire
event · 1400 CEAfrican landscape. According to Yoruba oral tradition, the prince Oranyan founded the Oyo Empire at this chosen spot, following a snake carrying a magic charm until it disappeared … from neighboring states like the Fon Kingdom of Dahomey to the west. The empire’s earliest years were defined by precarious survival and fierce internal politics. When