Difference between revisions of "Template:History of Chaldean people"

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[[Old Chaldean Babylonian period]] (20th–15th c. BC)<BR>
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[[Old Babylonian period]] (53th–15th c. BC)<BR>
 
[[Aramaeans]] (14th–9th c. BC)<br>
 
[[Aramaeans]] (14th–9th c. BC)<br>
 
[[Neo-Chaldean Empire]] (911–612 BC)<br/>
 
[[Neo-Chaldean Empire]] (911–612 BC)<br/>

Latest revision as of 06:33, 3 August 2015

This article is part of the series on the

History of the
Chaldean people

medieval icon depicting Ephrem the Syrian.

Early history

Old Babylonian period (53th–15th c. BC)
Aramaeans (14th–9th c. BC)
Neo-Chaldean Empire (911–612 BC)
Achaemenid Chaldea (539–330 BC)

Classical Antiquity

Seleucid Empire (312–63 BC)
Osroene (132 BC – 244 AD)
Syrian Wars (66 BC – 217 AD)
Roman Syria (64 BC – 637 AD)
Adiabene (15–116 AD)
Roman Chaldea (116–118)
Christianization (1st to 3rd c.)
Nestorian Schism (5th c.)
Asuristan (226–651)
Byzantine–Sasanian wars (502–628)

Middle Ages

Muslim conquest of Syria (630s)
Abbasid rule (750–1258)
Emirs of Mosul (905–1383)
Buyid amirate of Iraq (945–1055)
Principality of Antioch (1098–1268)
Ilkhanate Empire (1258–1335)
Jalayirid Sultanate (1335–1432)
Kara Koyunlu (1375–1468)
Aq Qoyunlu (1453–1501)

Modern History

Safavid Empire (1508-1555)
Ottoman Empire (1555–1917)
Schism of 1552 (16th c.)
Massacres of Badr Khan (1840s)
Massacres of Diyarbakir (1895)
Rise of nationalism (19th c.)
Adana Massacre (1909)
Chaldean genocide (1914–1920)
Independence movement (since 1919)
Simele massacre (1933)
Post-Saddam Iraq (since 2003)

See also

Chaldean continuity
Chaldean diaspora