What year was it in the 6th century. History of mankind. From ancient times to the VI century BC. Death "black" and "red"

Chronology of the most important events in world history

–From ancient times to the 6th century BC–

VIII - III millennium BC Neolithic, the period of transition from an appropriating economy (gathering, hunting) to a producing economy (agriculture, cattle breeding). In the Neolithic era, stone tools were polished and drilled; appeared clay dishes, spinning, weaving.

V - the first half of the IV millennium BC The first agricultural communities, the decomposition of primitive communal relations in Ancient Egypt.

IV - III millennium BC Copper Age. Stone tools predominate, but copper ones appear. The main occupations of the population are hoe farming, cattle breeding, and hunting.

End of IV millennium BC The unification of the nomes of Ancient Egypt into two large kingdoms - Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt.

the end of IV - rocked I millennium BC. Bronze Age. Distribution of bronze metallurgy, bronze tools and weapons. The emergence of nomadic pastoralism and irrigated agriculture, writing, slave-owning civilizations. It was replaced by the Iron Age, which came with the spread of iron metallurgy and the manufacture of iron tools and weapons.

OK. 3200 - approx. 2800 BC Early kingdom in Ancient Egypt; reign of the I and II dynasties. The unification of Egypt into a single strong centralized state.

OK. 2850 - c. 2450 BC Rule of the First Dynasty of Ur in Sumer. The economic rise of Sumer,

OK. 2800 - ca. 2250 BC Ancient kingdom in Egypt; reign III - VI dynasties. Expansion of the territory and political influence of Egypt. Three pyramids were built at Giza.

OK. 2800 - 1100 BC Aegean (Crete-Mycenaean) culture - culture Ancient Greece the Bronze Age. Geographic variants of the Aegean culture are distinguished: in Crete - Minoan, in mainland Greece - Helladic, on the islands of the Aegean Sea - Cycladic culture,

Oh. 2500 BC The Sumerian king Eannatum conquers Ur and Kish. 2316 - 2261 BC The reign of Sargon, king of Akkad. The conquest of Babylonia, Elam, Assyria and part of Syria by Sargon and thereby uniting all Mesopotamia under the rule of one ruler and creating the largest Mesopotamian power in Asia Minor with its center in Akkad,

OK. 2300 - oh. 1700 Indian Civilization in the Indus Valley.

OK. 2250 - ca. 2050 BC Board VII - X dynasties in Egypt. The period of internal fragmentation and decline of Egypt,

OK. 2140 - ca. 2030 BC The rule of the Ur dynasty brings the Sumero-Akkadian kingdom to the highest height of its power. In the next 100 - 150 years, the Sumero-Akkadian kingdom falls into decay and the Sumerians as a nation disappear,

OK. 2050 - ca. 1750 BC The Middle Kingdom in Egypt, the reign of the XI - XVII dynasties. The unification of Egypt and its transformation again into a large and strong state,

OK. 2000 BC The Hellenes (Greeks) - an Indo-European-speaking people - begin to migrate from the north to the territory of modern Greece. Indo-Europeans related to the Greeks are trading from the north to the Apennine peninsula,

OK. 2000 - ca. 1000 BC Aryan tribes from the northwest seep into India. 1894 - 1595 BC Board I Babylonian, or Amorite,

dynasties. Rise of Babylon. 1813 - 1781 BC The reign of the Assyrian king Shamshi-Adad I. Assyria conquers all of Upper Mesopotamia and turns into a large Western Asian state.

OK. 1800 - c. 1300 The highest flowering of the Trojan kingdom. Ended with the earthquake experienced by Troy (1300).

1792 - 1750 BC The reign of the sixth king of the I Babylonian dynasty, Hammurabi, who united Babylon under rule; throughout Mesopotamia, carried out large-scale civil reform and construction programs, and instituted the first systematic legal code. Rise of Babylon

OK. 1742 BC e. Kassite invasion of Babylonia

OK. 1710 - c. 1560 BC Egypt under the Hyksos. The Hyksos introduced the Egyptians to light-wheeled (spoked) chariots drawn by horses, previously little known in Egypt.

OK. 1680 - c. 1650 BC The reign of the Hittite king Labarna. Completion of the unification of the Hittite kingdom.

1620 - 1590 BC The reign of the Hittite king Mursili I. Strengthening of centralization in the Hittite kingdom. The conquest of Babylon by the Hittites (1595), which contributed to the final approval of the Kassite kings on the Babylonian throne.

XVI - XV centuries. BC. The heyday of the state of Mitanni and the creation of a strong power in the territory of Mesopotamia. Mitannian influence extended to a significant part of Assyria and began to penetrate into Asia Minor, Syria, Phoenicia and even Palestine.

~ 1595 - c. 1155 BC. Kassite rule in Babylon. Regular use in military affairs and transport of horses and mules, use in agriculture combined plow-seeder, creation of a road network, activation of foreign trade,

OK. 1580 - 1085 BC The period of the New Kingdom in Egypt. The reign of the three most powerful dynasties - XVIII, XIX and XX. Rise of Ancient Egyptian Civilization, c. 15th century BC. Branching off of the Proto-Slavic tribes from the Indo-European massif.

1490 - 1436 BC Pharaoh's reign Thutmose III from the XVIII dynasty, one of the most successful Egyptian conquerors. In history, he is known as the first commander who carried out an offensive according to a predetermined plan. As a result of the victorious campaigns of Thutmose III, Palestine and Syria, the lands of Mitanni west of the Euphrates, in the south - vast areas up to the fourth threshold of the Nile were conquered. A grandiose Egyptian power was formed, stretching from north to south for 3200 km. Libya, Assyria, Babylonia, the Hittite kingdom and the island of Crete became dependent on Egypt, paying tribute to it.

OK. 1405 - 1367 BC The reign of Pharaoh Amenhotep 111 from the XVIII dynasty. Under him, the power of Egypt reached its climax, the temple of Amon-Ra in Luxor and the mortuary temple with huge statues of Amenhotep III - the "colossi of Memnon" were built.

OK. 1400 - ca. 1200 BC The heyday of Mycenae, a major center of Achaean culture, the capital of one of the Achaean states.

OK. 1400 - 1027 BC Ancient Chinese State of Yin.

1380 - 1340 BC The reign of the great Hittite king Suppiluliuma I, a sophisticated diplomat, capable commander and far-sighted politician. He expelled the Egyptians from Syria, conquered Mitanni, turned the Hittite kingdom into a powerful military power, stretching from the Chorokh and Araks basins to southern Palestine and from the shores of Galis to the borders of Assyria and Babylonia.

1368 - 1351 BC The reign of Pharaoh Amenhotep IV from the XVIII dynasty. Trying to break the power of the Theban priesthood and the old nobility, Amenhotep IV acted as a religious reformer, introducing a new state monotheistic cult of the god Aton, who personified the solar disk. He himself took the name Akhenaten, which meant "pleasing to the Aten."

1351 - 1342 BC The reign of Pharaoh Tutankhamun from the XVIII dynasty. Under him, the religious reforms of Amenhotep IV - Akhenaten were canceled. (The tomb of Tutankhamen, excavated in 1922, revealed to the world valuable monuments of ancient Egyptian culture.)

OK. 1340 - 1305 BC The reign of the Hittite king Mursili II. The apogee of the military power of the great Hittite state.

1307 - 1208 BC The period of the reign of the Assyrian kings Adad-Nerari I, Shalmaneser I and Tukulti-Ninurta I, during which the Assyrian state achieves a great upsurge and major foreign policy successes.

1290 - 1224 BC The reign of Pharaoh Ramesses II from the 19th dynasty. As a result of victorious wars with the Hittites, Egyptian power was restored in Palestine and southern Syria. A large temple and economic construction is underway.

OK. 1260 BC In the tenth year of the siege, Troy, a city in the northwest of Asia Minor, was taken and destroyed by cunning. The ten-year Trojan War, which was led against Troy by a coalition of Achaean kings led by Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae. The events of this war have come down to us thanks to Homer's Iliad.

1225 - 1215 BC The reign of pharaoh Mernept from the 19th dynasty. It was under him that Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt.

OK. 1200 BC Israelites and Philistines invade Canaan (Palestine).

OK. 1200 BC Dorians, one of the main ancient Greek tribes, begin to move from Northern and Central Greece to the southwestern regions of the Peloponnese, and then inhabit the islands of Rhodes, Crete and others.

1198 - 1166 BC The reign of Pharaoh Ramesses III from the XX dynasty. The last pharaoh, under which Egypt is still able to repel the invasion of the Libyan tribes and the "peoples of the sea."

OK. 1190 BC Under the pressure of the “peoples of the sea”, the Hittite state collapsed and ceased to exist forever.

1155 BC The Elamite king Kutir-Nakhkhunte II captured Babylonia. The heyday of the power of Elam, its power extends from the Persian Gulf in the south to the region of the modern city of Hamadan in the north.

1126 - 1105 BC The reign of the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar I. A crushing victory over Elam (1115) leads to the overthrow of the rule of the Elamites over Babylon. Short-term heyday of Babylonia.

1085 - 945 BC Rule of the XXI dynasty in Egypt. More and more Libyans, mostly former mercenaries, are settling in Egypt. Some notable Libyans hold high priestly and military positions.

OK. 1030 BC Saul becomes king of Israel.

1027 - 771 BC Western Zhou era in China.

OK. 1013 - 974 BC The reign of David, king of Judah, and later - the entire Israel-Jewish kingdom. He pursued a policy of creating a centralized monarchy. Having conquered Jerusalem, David made it his capital. X - VIII centuries. BC. The period of the highest prosperity of the Phrygian kingdom.

969 - 936 BC The reign of the Phoenician king Ahiram (Hiram). Rise of the Tyro-Sidon kingdom.

950 - 730 BC The reign of the XXII (Libyan) dynasty of pharaohs in Egypt. The founder - Sheshenq I - one of the Libyan leaders who seized the royal throne. Unstable internal situation, separatism of the nomarchs, weakening of the central government. The looming threat of the Assyrian invasion.

OK. 900 - approx. 800 BC The Etruscans arrived on the Apennine Peninsula by sea, probably from Asia Minor.

883 - 824 BC The reign of the Assyrian kings Ashurnatsirapal II (before 859) and Shalmaneser III (after 859), during which the aggressive foreign policy Assyria.

864 - 845 BC The reign of King Aramu, the first ruler of the united Urartu.

825 BC Phoenician colonists from the city of Tire founded Carthage.

825 - 810 BC The reign of the Urartian king Ishluini. It was marked by vigorous activity to strengthen the unified state.

817 - 730 BC The reign of the XXIII dynasty of pharaohs in Egypt. The founder - Petubastis - one of the nomarchs who are not subject to the pharaohs of the XXII dynasty, declared himself the pharaoh of all Egypt. The XXIII dynasty ruled simultaneously with the XXII dynasty, but none of them had real power during this period.

786 - 764 BC The reign of the Urartian king Argishti I. The zenith of the power of the Urartian state. The beginning of the decisive battle between Urartu and Assyria for dominance in Asia Minor.

776 BC First Olympic Games. (They were held in honor of the god Zeus in Olympia 1 time in 4 years. Lasted 5 days. Canceled in 394 AD)

770 - 256 BC Eastern Zhou era in China. The rise of Chinese culture (the emergence of philosophical schools - Confucianism, Fajia, Taoism, etc.).

753 - 715 BC The reign of Romulus, the first (according to legend) king of Rome. Together with his twin brother Remus, he founded Rome (753 BC).

745 - 727 BC The reign of the Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III. In 734 he conquers Israel, in 732 Damascus, and in 729 he takes the crown of Babylon, which remains under the Assyrian yoke almost continuously until 627 BC. Under the rule of Tiglath-Pileser III, Assyria reaches the zenith of its power.

743 - 724 BC First Messenian War. The Spartans capture Messenia. The vanquished must give Sparta half of the harvest.

735 - 713 BC The reign of the Urartian king Rusa I was marked by the growth of the power of Urartu, but ended with the final and irrevocable defeat of Urartu from Assyria (714) in the struggle for political hegemony in Western Asia.

730 - 715 BC The reign of the XXIV dynasty of pharaohs in Egypt (Sais prince Tefnakht). Unification of the Delta and Upper Egypt regions.

722 - 705 BC The reign of the Assyrian king Sargon II. Assyria defeated the Kingdom of Israel (722) and defeated Urartu (714), lost and again restored power over Babylonia.

715 - 664 BC The reign of the XXV (Ethiopian) dynasty of pharaohs in Egypt. Complete unification of the country.

705 - 681 BC The reign of the Assyrian king Sinnacherib. Suppression of the resistance of the states conquered by Assyria. Babylon is taken by storm and destroyed (689).

692 - 654 BC The reign of the Lydian king Gyges. The beginning of the heyday of the Lydian kingdom.

685 - 668 BC The Second Messenian War is an uprising of the Messenians led by Aristomenes against the rule of Sparta. The rebels, in alliance with some cities of Arcadia, inflict a series of defeats on the Spartans. However, Sparta manages to defeat the Messenians, who turn into disenfranchised members of the Spartan community - helots.

681 - 669 BC The reign of the Assyrian king Esarhadtzon. Restoration of the previously destroyed Babylon (679 - 678); wars against the Phoenician city-states of Tyre (676) and Sidon (671); the transformation of Egypt into an Assyrian province (671). Assyrian power stretches from the first rapids of the Nile to Transcaucasia, from the Iranian plateau to Anatolia, from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. 672 BC. Having expelled the Assyrians from the western part of their territory, the Medes created an independent state.

669 - c. 633 BC. The reign of the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal. Wars with Egypt, Elam, Babylonia in an attempt to keep them under the rule of Assyria. The final fall of Egypt (about 655).

664 - 525 BC The reign of the XXVI (Sais) dynasty of pharaohs in Egypt. The liberation of Egypt from the yoke of the Assyrians. The last flowering of statehood and culture of Ancient Egypt.

657-627 BC The tyranny of Cypselos in Corinth. Economic, political and cultural flourishing of Corinth.

650 BC Huan Gong, the ruler of Qi, is officially proclaimed hegemon in the Central China Plain. After his death (643), the kingdom of Qi lost its hegemon position.

636 - 628 BC Reign of Weyag-gun, king of Jin. The period of the highest power of the Jin kingdom, hegemon in the Central China Plain.

632 BC The Athenian aristocrat Cylon, the winner in the Olympic competitions, tried to establish tyranny in Athens, but to no avail (Kilonian turmoil).

627 - 585 BC Tyranny of Periander in Corinth. He continued the policy of his father - Kipsel, eliminated many tribal remnants, organized extensive construction.

OK. 625 - 584 BC The reign of the Indian king Cyaxares. In alliance with Babylonia, he destroyed the Assyrian state (605), annexed the territories of Mana, Urartu and the eastern part of Asia Minor to Media.

626 - 605 BC Division of the Assyrian empire between Babylonia and Media. The Assyrian nobility was exterminated, the cities were wiped off the face of the earth, the ordinary population scattered, mixed with other peoples.

626 - 539 BC Chaldean (New Babylonian) power in Babylonia.

621 BC The appearance of the first written laws in ancient Greece. The compiler is the Athenian archon Drakon. The laws were distinguished by cruelty (hence the "draconian laws", "draconian measures").

616 - 510 BC Rule in Rome of the Etruscan kings Tarquinius613 - 591 BC The reign of Zhuang-wang, king of Chu, the first hegemon on the Central China Plain, who did not recognize the supreme supremacy of Zhou.

612 BC The Assyrian capital of Nineveh was destroyed, and its inhabitants were slaughtered by the troops of the Babylonian (Chaldean) king Nabopolassar and the Median king Cyaxares.

610 - 595 BC Reign of Pharaoh Necho II. Major work on the construction of a canal between the Nile and the Red Sea. By order of Necho, Phoenician sailors made an unparalleled voyage around Africa.

605 - 562 BC The reign of the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II. Captured the territory of Syria and Palestine (605), made a trip to Northern Arabia (598). Twice destroyed the rebellious Jerusalem (597 and 587), liquidated the Kingdom of Judah and took him into captivity big number inhabitants of Judea. Under him, the so-called Tower of Babel and hanging gardens were built.

594 BC Solon was elected archon of Athens - a poet, military leader and statesman. Solon is carrying out reforms to accelerate the elimination of remnants of the tribal system. All debts of peasants and debt slavery are cancelled.

OK. 590 BC. The first "holy war" in Greece (for control of the Delphic sanctuary).

590 - 585 BC The war between Lydia and Media, which ended in peace, the conclusion of which was influenced by a total solar eclipse on May 28, 585, recognized as a bad omen (during the battle, both sides threw down their weapons in horror).

578 - 534 BC The reign of the sixth Roman king Servius Tullius. He is credited with carrying out the centuriate reform, according to which the plebeians were introduced into the Roman community and the entire population of Rome was divided into 5 categories according to the property qualification.

562 - 546 BC The reign of the Lydian king Croesus. The period of the foreign policy heyday of Lydia; ended in a military disaster (546). Lydia became part of the Persian state as one of its satrapies.

560 - 527 BC The reign (with interruptions) of the Athenian tyrant Peisistratus. He carried out reforms in the interests of farmers and trade and craft strata (distribution of land to the rural poor, the minting of state coins, etc.), created a mercenary army, organized public construction (market, water supply, Piraeus harbor, temples, etc.).

558 - 530 BC The reign of the Persian king Cyrus II the Great. He conquered Media, Lydia, Greek cities in Asia Minor, a significant part of Central Asia. He conquered Mesopotamia, including Babylon, reducing it to the position of an ordinary satrapy. Founded the Persian Empire.

OK. 551 - 479 BC Life of Confucius, ancient Chinese thinker, founder of Confucianism.

OK. 540 - ca. 522 The tyranny of Polycrates on the island of Samos. He pursued a policy in the interests of the trade and craft strata: state minting of coins, construction works, the creation of a military and merchant fleet and army, the struggle with the cities of Asia Minor and the islands of the Aegean Sea for trade routes.

530 - 522 BC. The reign of the Persian king Cambyses II. Conquered Egypt (525) and was officially proclaimed pharaoh, founding the XXVII dynasty.

525 - 332 BC Egypt under the rule of the Persians (after 404 BC - intermittently).

OK. 524 BC The defeat of the Etruscans sea ​​battle with the Greeks off the coast of Campania.

522 - 486 BC The reign of the Persian king Darius I. Suppressed uprisings in Babylonia, Media, Margiana, Elam, Egypt and Parthia. Conquered the northwestern part of India (c. 518). He made an unsuccessful campaign against the Scythians (512). Failed in the Greco-Persian Wars. He carried out a number of administrative, tax and other reforms, carried out significant construction. The heyday of the Persian Empire, its borders stretch from the Indus in the east to the Aegean in the west, from Armenia in the north to the first Nile threshold in the south.

510 BC The Athenian demos was led by Cleisthenes. Having overthrown the tyranny of the Peisistratids, Cleisthenes carried out a series of democratic reforms that consolidated the victory of the demos over the tribal aristocracy.

509 BC The overthrow of the Etruscan rule in Rome and the establishment of the Republic. The military-political power of the king passed to the consuls.

508 BC The treaty between Rome and Carthage recognizes the exclusive interests of Rome in the Apennine Peninsula and Carthage in Africa. approx. 505 BC Unification in the Peloponnesian Union of the ancient Greek policies of the Peloponnese (except for Argos and some policies of Achaia) under the hegemony of Sparta.

500 BC An uprising against Persian rule in Miletus, which was joined by Greek cities in the south and north of Asia Minor. The Athenians send twenty ships to help the rebels (498), which became the pretext for the Greco-Persian wars. The Persians defeat the Greeks (498), capture and raze Miletus to the ground (494), and then crush the rebellion everywhere (493).

500 - 449 BC. Greco-Persian wars between Persia and the ancient Greek city-states that defended their independence. ended with the victory of the Greeks. Persia lost possessions in the Aegean Sea, on the coasts of the Hellespont and the Bosporus, recognized the political independence of the policies of Asia Minor.

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Scientists have found in the Byzantine chronicles for 536-540 years of our era references to the closing of the Sun by a "black cloud". This "blackout", according to the chronicler Procopius of Caesarea and other chroniclers, lasted several months. It was with this celestial phenomenon that other cataclysms of that time were associated, such as crop failures, famine, political unrest and the epidemic of the Justinian plague.

Death "black" and "red"

The so-called Plague of Justinian was the world's first recorded plague pandemic. It got its name because it began during the reign of Byzantine emperor Justinian I and covered almost the entire civilized world. However, separate plague epidemics broke out after that for centuries - from 541 to 750.

Researchers believe that the source of the plague appeared in Ethiopia or Egypt, from where, through trade channels, along with a cargo of grain, infected rats and fleas “arrived” in Constantinople. From there, the epidemic spread throughout Byzantium, and then spread to neighboring countries ... By the end of 654, it reached North Africa, covered all of Europe, Central and South Asia and Arabia.

In Byzantium, the pandemic reached its peak by 544. If you believe the chronicles, only in Constantinople, up to 5 thousand people died from the plague every day, and sometimes the death rate reached 10 thousand people a day ... 40 percent of the city's population was destroyed.

In the East, about 100 million people died from the plague, in Europe - about 25 million. Irish sources speak of the crom conaill ("Red Death"), which in 549-550 caused the death of many saints and monarchs. So, it was from her that the Welsh king Gwynedd Maelgun and Saint Finnian of Clonard died ...

If desired, the prophecy of these events can be found in the Bible. Here is what is said in the ninth chapter of the Revelation of John the Theologian:


“She opened the well of the abyss, and the smoke from the well came out like smoke from a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened because of the smoke from the well…

Thus I saw in a vision horses and on them riders, who had armor of fire, hyacinth and brimstone on them; the heads of the horses are like the heads of lions, and fire, smoke and brimstone came out of their mouths ... From these three ulcers, from the fire, smoke and sulfur coming out of their mouths, a third of the people died ... "

Volcanic Horror

What happened? Scientists believe that the cause of the solar dimming was volcanic eruptions, traces of which were found in the ice of Greenland and Antarctica.


“Each of these eruptions, which occurred in 536 and 540, must have had a profound effect on the life of civilizations at that time, and their effect was enhanced by the fact that they occurred with a gap of only four years,” Kruger comments. “Until we we know which volcanoes were responsible for this, but we have several candidates for this role in Central and North America, as well as Indonesia."

Presumably, the volcanoes threw a large amount of ash into the atmosphere, which caused the so-called "volcanic winter". Something similar, only on a local scale, happened in 1815 after the explosion of the Indonesian Mount Tambora.

Ice and sulfur

Krueger and her colleagues found support for the "volcanic" hypothesis by analyzing records from the sixth century and examining samples of Greenland and Antarctic ice that formed during that era.

It turned out that these ice fragments contain sulfur and other compounds that are present in large quantities in volcanic gases and ash. Thus, scientists managed to build a climate model that made it possible to reconstruct the events of the late 530s.

It turned out that the consequences of the climate cataclysm were much more serious than expected. The combined force of the eruptions of the two volcanoes was the highest in the last 1200 years.

As a result average temperature on Earth dropped by two degrees Celsius for several years, but the northern hemisphere has been affected the most by climate change. Were "affected" Scandinavia, the coast mediterranean sea, Middle East and North Africa.

Both the events described in the chronicles and the data of excavations in the north of Europe and Africa fit quite well into this theory. According to researchers from the Kruger group, the "apocalypse" of the sixth century was "provoked" by volcanoes. And there is no guarantee that it won't happen again...

A (y), suggestion. about the century, for the century; pl. century, ov; m. 1. A period of time in a hundred years; century. The twentieth century. In the last century. A quarter of a century has passed. In the mists of time; from time immemorial (about what originates in the distant past). Many folk... encyclopedic Dictionary

Husband. the lifespan of a person or the shelf life of an item; continuation of earthly existence. A century of everyday life; century oak millennium. | Life, the being of the universe in its current order. The end of the age is near. | Century. Now the nineteenth century according to Rozhd. Chr. |… … Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

Exist., m., use. very often Morphology: (no) what? century, why? century, (see) what? century what? century, about what? about the century and for the century; pl. What? century, (no) what? centuries, why? centuries, (see) what? century, what? for centuries, about what? about centuries 1. A century is a time period ... ... Dictionary of Dmitriev

CENTURY, century (century), about a century, for a century, pl. century (very obsolete), husband. 1. Life (colloquial). "Live and learn." (last) Add a century (lengthen life). He experienced many adventures in his lifetime. I have enough work for my age. "Evil, in girls for a century." ... ... Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

See time, long, life for ever, forever and ever, live out a century, ruin a century, forever, forever, forever, forever, forever, forever, never forever, from century to century, outlive your age, wash your age, wash your age, calm down ... ... Synonym dictionary

CENTURY, a, about a century, for a century, pl. oh, oh, husband. 1. A period of one hundred years, conventionally calculated from the birth of Jesus Christ (the Nativity of Christ). Third century BC. 20th c. (period from January 1, 1901 to December 31, 2000). Beginning of the century (tenths ... ... Explanatory dictionary of Ozhegov

Age of the Restless Sun ... Wikipedia

Century to age

Century to shine- CENTURY TO CENTURY. CENTURY GREEN. Obsolete Express. 1. Live long; live life. And so Alena remained for one century to age (Bazhov. Ermakov's swans). Well, brother, said Kustolomov, your apartment, of course, is unenviable, but you don’t have to spend a century here ... ... Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

century- to age the pastime of the eyelids, the action ends, the subject, the end of the century, the action began, the subject, the beginning of the century, to live the end, the pastime of the centuries, the action has passed, the subject, the end, to live out the age, the end, ... ... Verbal compatibility of non-objective names

The Age of Stupid Genre ... Wikipedia

Books

  • The Age of Joyce, I. I. Garin. If history is written as the history of the culture of the human spirit, then the 20th century should be named after Joyce - Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, Dostoevsky of our time. Eliot compared his `Ulysses` with ...
  • A century of hopes and collapses, Oleg Volkov. 1990 edition. The safety is good. The main work in the collection "The Age of Hopes and Crashes" by one of the elders of Russian literature, Oleg Vasilyevich Volkov, published to his ...
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