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Facts
About Israel-
History | |
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HISTORICAL
HIGHLIGHTS | BIBLICAL
TIMES | SECOND
TEMPLE PERIOD | FOREIGN
DOMINATION | STATE
OF ISRAEL | ISRAEL
IN MAPS |
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History (2003 edition
- English, French & Spanish)
Highlights
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 Remember the days of old, consider the
years of ages past.... (Deuteronomy
32:7)
The birthplace of the Jewish people is the Land
of Israel (Eretz Israel). There, a significant
part of the nations long history was enacted, of
which the first thousand years are recorded in the
Bible; there, its cultural, religious and national
identity was formed; and there, its physical
presence has been maintained through the
centuries, even after the majority was forced into
exile. During the many years of dispersion, the
Jewish people never severed nor forgot its bond
with the Land. With the establishment of the State
of Israel in 1948, Jewish independence, lost two
thousand years earlier, was renewed.
 | Archeology
in Israel has provided a valuable link
between the country's past and present, with
thousands of years of history unearthed at some
3,500 sites. Many finds attest to the long
connection of the Jewish people with the Land of
Israel, including Solomon's stables at Megiddo
(Jezreel Valley), houses of the Israelite period
in the City of David (Jerusalem), ritual baths at
Masada, numerous synagogues and the Dead Sea
scrolls, containing the earliest extant copy of
the Book of Isaiah in still-legible Hebrew script.
Excavations have also revealed vestiges of other
civilizations which left their imprint on the Land
over the centuries. All finds are recorded, and
historical sites are carefully preserved and
marked, for scholar and visitor alike.
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| 17th-6th C. BCE |
BIBLICAL TIMES |
| (BCE -
Before the Common Era) |
| c.17th
century |
The
Patriarchs: Abraham, Isaac, Jacob -
patriarchs of the Jewish people and bearers of a
belief in one God - settle in the Land of
Israel. Famine forces Israelites to migrate
to Egypt. |
| c.13th
century |
Exodus
from Egypt: Moses leads Israelites from
Egypt, followed by 40 years of wandering in the
desert. Torah, including the Ten
Commandments, received at Mount
Sinai. |
13th-12th
centuries |
Israelites settle
in the Land of Israel |
| c.1020 |
Jewish
Monarchy established; Saul, first
king. |
| c.1000 |
Jerusalem made
capital of David's kingdom. |
| c.960 |
First Temple, the
national and spiritual center of the Jewish
people, built in Jerusalem by King
Solomon. |
| c. 930 |
Divided
kingdom: Judah and Israel |
| 722-720 |
Israel crushed by
Assyrians; 10 tribes exiled (Ten Lost
Tribes). |
| 586 |
Judah conquered by
Babylonia; Jerusalem and First Temple destroyed;
most Jews exiled to Babylonia. |
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| 536-142 |
PERSIAN AND HELLENISTIC
PERIODS | |
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| 538-515 |
Many
Jews return from Babylonia; Temple
rebuilt. |
| 332 |
Land conquered by
Alexander the Great; Hellenistic
rule. |
| 166-160 |
Maccabean
(Hasmonean) revolt against restrictions on
practice of Judaism and desecration of the
Temple |
| 142-129 |
Jewish autonomy
under Hasmoneans. |
| 129-63 |
Jewish independence
under Hasmonean monarchy. |
| 63 |
Jerusalem captured
by Roman general, Pompey. |
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63 BCE-313 CE |
ROMAN
RULE |
| (CE -
The Common Era) |
| 63 BCE - 4
CE |
Herod, Roman vassal
king, rules the Land of Israel; Temple in
Jerusalem refurbished |
| c.
20-33 |
Ministry of Jesus
of Nazareth |
| 66 |
Jewish revolt
against the Romans |
| 70 |
Destruction of
Jerusalem and Second Temple. |
| 73 |
Last stand of Jews
at Masada. |
| 132-135 |
Bar Kokhba uprising
against Rome. |
| c. 210 |
Codification of
Jewish oral law (Mishnah)
completed. |
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| 313-636 |
BYZANTINE
RULE |
| c.
390 |
Commentary on the
Mishnah (Jerusalem Talmud)
completed. |
| 614 |
Persian
invasion |
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| 636-1099 |
ARAB
RULE |
| 691
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On site
of First and Second Temples in Jerusalem, Dome
of the Rock built by Caliph Abd
el-Malik. |
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| 1099-1291 |
CRUSADER
DOMINATION (Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem) |
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| 1291-1516 |
MAMLUK
RULE |
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| 1517-1917 |
OTTOMAN
RULE |
| 1564 |
Code of Jewish law
(Shulhan Arukh)
published. |
| 1860 |
First neighborhood,
Mishkenot Sha'ananim, built outside Jerusalem's
walls. |
| 1882-1903 |
First Aliyah
(large-scale immigration), mainly from
Russia. |
| 1897 |
First Zionist Congress
convened by Theodor Herzl in Basel, Switzerland;
Zionist Organization
founded. | |
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| 1904-14 |
Second Aliyah, mainly
from Russia and Poland. |
| 1909 |
First kibbutz,
Degania, and first modern all-Jewish city, Tel
Aviv, founded. |
| 1917 |
400 years of
Ottoman rule ended by British
conquest; British Foreign Minister Balfour
pledges support for establishment of a "Jewish
national home in Palestine". |
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| 1918-48 |
BRITISH
RULE |
| 1919-23 |
Third Aliyah, mainly
from Russia |
| 1920 |
Histadrut
(Jewish labor federation) and Haganah
(Jewish defense organization)
founded. Vaad Leumi (National
Council) set up by Jewish community
(yishuv)to conduct its
affairs. |
| 1921 |
First moshav
(cooperative village), Nahalal,
founded. |
| 1922 |
Britain granted Mandate
for Palestine (Land of Israel) by League of
Nations; Transjordan set up on three-fourths of
the area, leaving one-fourth for the Jewish
national home Jewish Agency representing
Jewish community vis-a-vis Mandate authorities
set
up. | |
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| 1924 |
Technion, first
institute of technology, founded in
Haifa. |
| 1924-32 |
Fourth
Aliyah, mainly from
Poland. |
| 1925 |
Hebrew University
of Jerusalem opened on Mt.
Scopus. |
| 1929 |
Hebron Jews
massacred by Arab militants. |
| 1931 |
Etzel,
Jewish underground organization,
founded. |
| 1933-39 |
Fifth
Aliyah, mainly from
Germany. |
| 1936-39 |
Anti-Jewish riots
instigated by Arab militants. |
| 1939 |
Jewish immigration
severely limited by British White
Paper. |
| 1939-45 |
World War II;
Holocaust in Europe. |
| 1941 |
Lehi
underground movement formed; Palmach,
strike force of Haganah, set
up. |
| 1944 |
Jewish Brigade
formed as part of British
forces. |
| 1947 |
UN proposes the establishment
of Arab and Jewish states in the
Land. |
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| 1948 |
STATE
OF ISRAEL |
| 1948 |
End of British
Mandate (14 May) State
of Israel proclaimed (14 May). Israel
invaded by five Arab states (15 May) War of
Independence (May 1948-July 1949) Israel
Defense Forces (IDF)
established |
| 1949 |
Armistice
agreements signed with Egypt,
Jordan,
Syria,
Lebanon. Jerusalem
divided under Israeli and Jordanian rule. First
Knesset (parliament) elected. Israel
admitted to United Nations as 59th
member. |
| 1948-52 |
Mass immigration
from Europe and Arab countries. |
| 1956 |
Sinai
Campaign |
| 1962 |
Adolf
Eichmann tried and executed in Israel for
his part in the Holocaust. |
| 1964 |
National Water
Carrier completed, bringing water from Lake
Kinneret in the north to the semi-arid
south. |
| 1967 |
Six-Day
War, Jerusalem reunited. |
| 1968-70 |
Egypt's War of
Attrition against Israel |
| 1973 |
Yom
Kippur War |
| 1975 |
Israel becomes an
associate member of the European Common
Market. |
| 1977 |
Likud forms
government after Knesset elections, end of 30
years of Labor rule. Visit of Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat to
Jerusalem. |
| 1978 |
Camp
David Accords include framework for
comprehensive peace in the Middle East and
proposal for Palestinian
self-government. |
| 1979 |
Israel-Egypt
Peace Treaty signed. Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and President Anwar Sadat awarded
Nobel Peace Prize. |
| 1981 |
Israel Air Force
destroys Iraqi nuclear reactor just before it is
to become operative. |
| 1982 |
Israel's
three-stage withdrawal from Sinai
completed. Operation Peace for Galilee
removes PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization)
terrorists from Lebanon. |
| 1984 |
National unity
government (Likud and Labor) formed after
elections. Operation Moses, immigration of
Jews from Ethiopia. |
| 1985 |
Free
Trade Agreement signed with United
States. |
| 1987 |
Widespread violence
(intifada) starts in
Israeli-administered areas. |
| 1988 |
Likud government in
power following
elections. | |
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| 1989 |
Four-point peace
initiative proposed by Israel. Start of
mass immigration of Jews from former Soviet
Union. |
| 1991 |
Israel attacked by
Iraqi Scud missiles during Gulf war. Middle
East peace conference convened in
Madrid; Operation Solomon, airlift of Jews
from Ethiopia. |
| 1992 |
Diplomatic
relations established with China and
India. New government headed by Yitzhak Rabin
of Labor party. |
| 1993 |
Declaration
of Principles on Interim Self-Government
Arrangements for the Palestinians signed by
Israel and PLO, as representative of the
Palestinian
people. | |
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| 1994 |
Implementation of
Palestinian self-government in Gaza
Strip and Jericho area. Full diplomatic
relations with the Holy
See. Morocco and Tunisia interest offices
set up. Israel-Jordan
Peace Treaty signed. Rabin, Peres, Arafat
awarded Nobel
Peace Prize. |
| 1995 |
Broadened Palestinian
self-government implemented in West Bank and
Gaza Strip; Palestinian Council elected. Prime
Minister Rabin assassinated at peace
rally. Shimon Peres becomes prime
minister. |
| 1996 |
Fundamentalist Arab
terrorism against Israel escalates. Operation
Grapes of Wrath, retaliation for Hizbullah
terrorists' attacks on northern Israel. Trade
representation offices set up in Oman
and Qatar. Likud forms government after Knesset
elections. Benjamin Netanyahu becomes
prime minister. Omani trade representation
office opened in Tel Aviv. |
| 1997 |
Hebron
Protocol signed by Israel and the
PA. | |
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Drawings by Noam Nadav |
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| 1998 |
Israel celebrates
its 50th
anniversary. Israel and the PLO sign the
Wye
River Memorandum to facilitate
implementation of the Interim
Agreement. |
| 1999 |
Ehud
Barak (left-wing One Israel party) elected
Prime Minister; forms coalition
government. Israel and the PLO sign the
Sharm-el-Sheikh
Memorandum. |
| 2000 |
Visit
of Pope Paul II. Israel
withdraws from the Security Zone in southern
Lebanon. Israel admitted to UN Western
European and Others Group. Al-Aqsa
intifada (renewed violence) breaks
out. Prime Minister Barak resigns.
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| 2001 |
Ariel
Sharon (Likud) elected
Prime Minister and forms broad-based unity
government. The Sharm-el-Sheikh Fact-Finding
Committee issues a report (the Mitchell
Report). Palestinian-Israeli Security
Implementation Work Plan (Tenet
ceasefire plan). Rechavam
Ze'evy, Minister of Tourism, assassinated by
Palestinian terrorists.
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| 2002 |
Israel launches Operation
Defensive Shield in response to massive
Palestinian terrorist attacks. Prime Minister
Sharon disperses the Knesset, calling for new
elections on Jan 28,
2003.
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See also |
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External links
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Also available in
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