Introduction
Before Christ
0-100
100-200
200-300
300-400
400-500
500-600
600-700
700-800
800-900
900-1000
1000-1100
1100-1200
1200-1300
1300-1400
1400-1500
1500-1600
1600-1700
1700-1800
1800-1900
1900-2000
2000-Present
Index
Bibliography
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200 - 300 AD
Text History |
World History |
212 AD
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Emperor Marcus Antoninus grants all free-born men of the Roman Empire full citizenship.
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235-284 AD
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The Crisis of the Third Century shakes the foundation of the Roman Empire with civil war, external invasions, and economic collapse. The crisis began with the assassination of Roman Emperor Alexander Severus.
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240 AD
Origen's Hexapla is written as a six translation text of the Old Testament canon. Eusebius would eventually use this in his efforts to develop an accepted canon. |
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250 AD
The first codification of Hebrew oral laws in the Jewish Mishna. |
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256 AD
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Arius, the eventual father of Arianism, is born in North Africa.
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258 AD
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Emperor Valerian massacres Christians.
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272 AD
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Constantine I is born in Serbia to a Roman general.
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275 AD
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Eusebius of Caesarea, the “father of church history,” is born.
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284 AD
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Diocletian becomes emperor of Rome and restores the empire from crisis by establishing an autocratic government. He quickly began work on the second phase of the Roman Empire often referred to as the Tetrarchy or Later Roman Empire.
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292 AD
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Diocletian, realizing that the empire is much too big for one man to rule, divides the empire under two powers. He alone would rule the east and Maximian would rule the west.
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293 AD
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Diocletian and Maximian set up a Caesar underneath them who would rule in their absence. In the east, under Diocletian, was Galerius. In the west, under Maximian, was Constantine.
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Arius of Alexandria introduces arianism, denying the divinity of Christ.
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296 AD
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Eusebius sees Constantine, along with Diocletian, in Palestine.
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