Chronology
The chronological history of the world from the ancient past to the distant future.
Pre-Cataclysm
Year | Event |
---|---|
1 | Jesus Christ is born.[1][1.1][note 1] |
4 | The second Germanic War begins.[1.1] |
30 | Jesus Christ is crucified.[1.1][note 2] |
64 | The Great Fire of Rome breaks out.[1.1]
Christians are persecuted by the violent Roman emperor Nero.[1.1] |
100 | The Roman Empire is on the rise.[1.1] |
165 | The 16th Germanic War begins, and Best disease spreads from West Asia into the Empire's territory.[1.1] |
250 | The Decian persecution of Christians takes place.[1.1] |
311 | The Edict of Toleration by Galerius is issued, and a flag with a cross is first created.[1.1] |
313 | The Edict of Milan is issued.[1.1] |
379 | Theodosius the Great is born.[1.1] |
395 | Theodosius the Great dies, resulting in the Roman Empire being split between East and West.[1.1] |
440 | Leo the Great, Bishop of Rome, is born.[1.1] |
449 | Anglo-Saxons invade Britannia.[1.1][note 3] |
476 | The Western Roman Empire falls.[1.1] |
585 | The Slavic migrations begin.[1.1] |
610 | Muhammad receives his first revelation, leading to the establishment of Islam.[1.1] |
726 | The Catholic Church bans religious icons.[1.1][note 5] |
731 | The Catholic Church banishes iconoclasts.[1.1][note 6] |
732 | The Battle of Tours, also called the Battle of Poitiers, takes place.[1.1] |
747 |
Post-Cataclysm
Year | Date | Event | Details |
---|
Notes
- ↑ In our world, Christian scholars generally place Jesus' birth between 6 to 4 BC.
- ↑ In our world, Christian scholars generally believe Jesus' crucifixion happened in either the year 30 or 33.
- ↑ This date seems to come from Bede the Venerable's Ecclesiastical History of the English People.
- ↑ In our world, Muhammad only began to preach publicly some three years later after his first revelation, circa 613. Further, the first caliphate (イスラム帝国, lit. "Islamic Empire"), the Rashidun Caliphate, was only established after Muhammad's death in 632.
- ↑ The Chronology in Drag-On Dragoon World Inside says the Catholic Church (ローマ教会, lit. "Roman Church") banned religious icons. However, in our world, the veneration of religious icons was actually banned by Byzantine emperor Leo III the Isaurian.
- ↑ In our world, Pope Gregory II summoned a synod in 727 to condemn iconoclasm.