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Chronology

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Chronology
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Chronology (from Latin chronologia, from Ancient Greek χρόνος, chrónos, 'time'; and -λογία, -logia) is the science of arranging events in their order of occurrence in time. Consider, for example, the use of a timeline or sequence of events. It is also "the determination of the actual temporal sequence of past events".

image
Joseph Scaliger's De emendatione temporum (1583) began the modern science of chronology

Chronology is a part of periodization. It is also a part of the discipline of history including earth history, the earth sciences, and study of the geologic time scale.

Related fields

Chronology is the science of locating historical events in time. It relies mostly upon chronometry, which is also known as timekeeping, and historiography, which examines the writing of history and the use of historical methods. Radiocarbon dating estimates the age of formerly living things by measuring the proportion of carbon-14 isotope in their carbon content. Dendrochronology estimates the age of trees by correlation of the various growth rings in their wood to known year-by-year reference sequences in the region to reflect year-to-year climatic variation. Dendrochronology is used in turn as a calibration reference for radiocarbon dating curves.

Calendar and era

The familiar terms calendar and era (within the meaning of a coherent system of numbered calendar years) concern two complementary fundamental concepts of chronology. For example, during eight centuries the calendar belonging to the Christian era, which era was taken in use in the 8th century by Bede, was the Julian calendar, but after the year 1582 it was the Gregorian calendar. Dionysius Exiguus (about the year 500) was the founder of that era, which is nowadays the most widespread dating system on earth. An epoch is the date (year usually) when an era begins.

Ab Urbe condita era

Ab Urbe condita is Latin for "from the founding of the City (Rome)", traditionally set in 753 BC. It was used to identify the Roman year by a few Roman historians. Modern historians use it much more frequently than the Romans themselves did; the dominant method of identifying Roman years was to name the two consuls who held office that year. Before the advent of the modern critical edition of historical Roman works, AUC was indiscriminately added to them by earlier editors, making it appear more widely used than it actually was.

It was used systematically for the first time only about the year 400, by the Iberian historian Orosius. Pope Boniface IV, in about the year 600, seems to have been the first who made a connection between this era and Anno Domini. (AD 1 = AUC 754.)

Astronomical era

Dionysius Exiguus' Anno Domini era (which contains only calendar years AD) was extended by Bede to the complete Christian era (which contains, in addition all calendar years BC, but no year zero). Ten centuries after Bede, the French astronomers Philippe de la Hire (in the year 1702) and Jacques Cassini (in the year 1740), purely to simplify certain calculations, put the Julian Dating System (proposed in the year 1583 by Joseph Scaliger) and with it an astronomical era into use, which contains a leap year zero, which precedes the year 1 (AD).

Prehistory

While of critical importance to the historian, methods of determining chronology are used in most disciplines of science, especially astronomy, geology, paleontology and archaeology.

In the absence of written history, with its chronicles and king lists, late 19th century archaeologists found that they could develop relative chronologies based on pottery techniques and styles. In the field of Egyptology, William Flinders Petrie pioneered sequence dating to penetrate pre-dynastic Neolithic times, using groups of contemporary artefacts deposited together at a single time in graves and working backwards methodically from the earliest historical phases of Egypt. This method of dating is known as seriation.

Known wares discovered at strata in sometimes quite distant sites, the product of trade, helped extend the network of chronologies. Some cultures have retained the name applied to them in reference to characteristic forms, for lack of an idea of what they called themselves: "The Beaker People" in northern Europe during the 3rd millennium BCE, for example. The study of the means of placing pottery and other cultural artifacts into some kind of order proceeds in two phases, classification and typology: Classification creates categories for the purposes of description, and typology seeks to identify and analyse changes that allow artifacts to be placed into sequences.

Laboratory techniques developed particularly after mid-20th century helped constantly revise and refine the chronologies developed for specific cultural areas. Unrelated dating methods help reinforce a chronology, an axiom of corroborative evidence. Ideally, archaeological materials used for dating a site should complement each other and provide a means of cross-checking. Conclusions drawn from just one unsupported technique are usually regarded as unreliable.

Synchronism

The fundamental problem of chronology is to synchronize events. By synchronizing an event it becomes possible to relate it to the current time and to compare the event to other events. Among historians, a typical need is to synchronize the reigns of kings and leaders in order to relate the history of one country or region to that of another. For example, the Chronicon of Eusebius (325 A.D.) is one of the major works of historical synchronism. This work has two sections. The first contains narrative chronicles of nine different kingdoms: Chaldean, Assyrian, Median, Lydian, Persian, Hebrew, Greek, Peloponnesian, Asian, and Roman. The second part is a long table synchronizing the events from each of the nine kingdoms in parallel columns.

By comparing the parallel columns, the reader can determine which events were contemporaneous, or how many years separated two different events. To place all the events on the same time scale, Eusebius used an Anno Mundi (A.M.) era, meaning that events were dated from the supposed beginning of the world as computed from the Book of Genesis in the Hebrew Pentateuch. According to the computation Eusebius used, this occurred in 5199 B.C. The Chronicon of Eusebius was widely used in the medieval world to establish the dates and times of historical events. Subsequent chronographers, such as George Syncellus (died circa 811), analyzed and elaborated on the Chronicon by comparing with other chronologies. The last great chronographer was Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540-1609) who reconstructed the lost Chronicon and synchronized all of ancient history in his two major works, De emendatione temporum (1583) and Thesaurus temporum (1606). Much of modern historical datings and chronology of the ancient world ultimately derives from these two works. Scaliger invented the concept of the Julian Day which is still used as the standard unified scale of time for both historians and astronomers.[citation needed]

In addition to the literary methods of synchronism used by traditional chronographers such as Eusebius, Syncellus and Scaliger, it is possible to synchronize events by archaeological or astronomical means. For example, the Eclipse of Thales, described in the first book of Herodotus can potentially be used to date the Lydian War because the eclipse took place during the middle of an important battle in that war. Likewise, various eclipses and other astronomical events described in ancient records can be used to astronomically synchronize historical events. Another method to synchronize events is the use of archaeological findings, such as pottery, to do sequence dating.

See also

Examples

  • Parian Chronicle
  • List of timelines – specific chronologies
  • Timelines of world history – overall historical chronology

Christian chronology

  • Dionysius Exiguus' Easter table
  • Easter
  • Lunar cycle
  • Millennium question
  • Paschal full moon
  • Solar cycle

General

  • Annals
  • French revolutionary era
  • Historiography
  • Traditional Jewish chronology

Fiction writing

Aspects and examples of non-chronological story-telling:

  • Flashback
  • Flashforward
  • Linearity (writing)
  • Reverse chronology

Notes

  1. Richards, E. G. (1998). Mapping Time: The Calendar and History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 12–13. ISBN 0-19-286205-7.
  2. Cates, William Leist Readwin (1911). "Chronology" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). pp. 305–318.
  3. Memidex/WordNet, "chronology," memidex.com Archived 2019-12-15 at the Wayback Machine (accessed September 25, 2010).
  4. Literally translated as "From the city having been founded".
  5. Richards 2013, pp. 591-592. (Incomplete reference).
  6. Greene, Kevin (November 2007). Archaeology : An Introduction. University of Newcastle Upon Tyne. Chapter 4. Archived from the original on 2005-03-29. Retrieved 2008-01-04.
  7. Grafton, Anthony (1994). Joseph Scaliger: A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  8. Kelley, David H. (2011). Exploring Ancient Skies: A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy. Springer. pp. 614. ISBN 978-1441976239.

References

  • Hegewisch, D. H., & Marsh, J. (1837). Introduction to historical chronology. Burlington [Vt.]: C. Goodrich.
  • B. E. Tumanian, "Measurement of Time in Ancient and Medieval Armenia," Journal for the History of Astronomy 5, 1974, pp. 91–98.
  • Kazarian, K. A., "History of Chronology by B. E. Tumanian," Journal for the History of Astronomy, 4, 1973, p. 137
  • Porter, T. M., "The Dynamics of Progress: Time, Method, and Measure". The American Historical Review, 1991.

Further reading

Published in the 18th–19th centuries

  • Weeks, J. E. (1701). The gentleman's hour glass; or, An introduction to chronology; being a plain and compendious analysis of time. Dublin: James Hoey.
  • Hodgson, J., Hinton, J., & Wallis, J. (1747). An introduction to chronology:: containing an account of time; also of the most remarkable cycles, epoch's, era's, periods, and moveable feasts. To which is added, a brief account of the several methods proposed for the alteration of the style, the reforming the calendar, and fixing the true time of the celebration of Easter. London: Printed for J. Hinton, at the King's Arms in St Paul's Church-yard.
  • Smith, T. (1818). An introduction to chronology. New York: Samuel Wood.

Published in the 20th century

  • Keller, H. R. (1934). The dictionary of dates. New York: The Macmillan company.
  • Poole, R. L., & Poole, A. L. (1934). Studies in chronology and history. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Langer, W. L., & Gatzke, H. W. (1963). An encyclopedia of world history, ancient, medieval and modern, chronologically arranged. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Momigliano, A. "Pagan and Christian historiography in the Fourth Century A.D." in A. Momigliano, ed., The conflict between paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century, The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1963, pp. 79–99
  • Williams, N., & Storey, R. L. (1966). Chronology of the modern world: 1763 to the present time. London: Barrie & Rockliffe.
  • Steinberg, S. H. (1967). Historical tables: 58 B.C.-A.D. 1965. London: Macmillan.
  • Freeman-Grenville, G. S. P. (1975). Chronology of world history: a calendar of principal events from 3000 BC to AD 1973. London: Collings.
  • Neugebauer, O. (1975). A history of ancient mathematical astronomy Springer-Verlag.
  • Bickerman, E. J. (1980). The chronology of the ancient world. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Whitrow, G. J. (1990). Time in history: views of time from prehistory to the present day. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Aitken, M. (1990). Science-based dating in archaeology. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Richards, E. G. (1998). Mapping time: the calendar and history. Oxford University Press.

Published in the 21st century

  • Koselleck, R. "Time and history." The practice of conceptual history: timing history, spacing concepts. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2002.
  • Ronald H. Fritze; et al. (2004). "Chronologies, calendars, and lists of rulers". Reference sources in history: an introductory guide (2nd ed.). ABC-CLIO. pp. 4+. ISBN 978-0-87436-883-3.
  • Olena V. Smyntyna (2009). "Chronology". In H. James Birx (ed.). Encyclopedia of time: science, philosophy, theology, & culture. Sage. ISBN 978-1-4129-4164-8.
  • Daniel Rosenberg; Anthony Grafton (2009). Cartographies of time: a history of the timeline. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 9781568987637.

External links

image
Look up chronology in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Dating the Past (archived 29 May 2005)
  • Pragmatic Bayesians: a decade of integrating radiocarbon dates in chronological models (archived 5 April 2005) from the University of Sheffield at the Internet Archive. Accessed 2008-01-04.
  • Open Library. Works related to chronology
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "General Chronology" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Chattopadhyay, Subhasis. Chronicity and Temporality: A Revisionary Hermeneutics of Time in Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India 120 (10):606–609 (2015). ISSN 0032-6178.

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Publication date: May 25, 2025 / 08:32

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chronology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message Chronology from Latin chronologia from Ancient Greek xronos chronos time and logia logia is the science of arranging events in their order of occurrence in time Consider for example the use of a timeline or sequence of events It is also the determination of the actual temporal sequence of past events Joseph Scaliger s De emendatione temporum 1583 began the modern science of chronology Chronology is a part of periodization It is also a part of the discipline of history including earth history the earth sciences and study of the geologic time scale Related fieldsChronology is the science of locating historical events in time It relies mostly upon chronometry which is also known as timekeeping and historiography which examines the writing of history and the use of historical methods Radiocarbon dating estimates the age of formerly living things by measuring the proportion of carbon 14 isotope in their carbon content Dendrochronology estimates the age of trees by correlation of the various growth rings in their wood to known year by year reference sequences in the region to reflect year to year climatic variation Dendrochronology is used in turn as a calibration reference for radiocarbon dating curves Calendar and eraThe familiar terms calendar and era within the meaning of a coherent system of numbered calendar years concern two complementary fundamental concepts of chronology For example during eight centuries the calendar belonging to the Christian era which era was taken in use in the 8th century by Bede was the Julian calendar but after the year 1582 it was the Gregorian calendar Dionysius Exiguus about the year 500 was the founder of that era which is nowadays the most widespread dating system on earth An epoch is the date year usually when an era begins Ab Urbe condita era Ab Urbe condita is Latin for from the founding of the City Rome traditionally set in 753 BC It was used to identify the Roman year by a few Roman historians Modern historians use it much more frequently than the Romans themselves did the dominant method of identifying Roman years was to name the two consuls who held office that year Before the advent of the modern critical edition of historical Roman works AUC was indiscriminately added to them by earlier editors making it appear more widely used than it actually was It was used systematically for the first time only about the year 400 by the Iberian historian Orosius Pope Boniface IV in about the year 600 seems to have been the first who made a connection between this era and Anno Domini AD 1 AUC 754 Astronomical era Dionysius Exiguus Anno Domini era which contains only calendar years AD was extended by Bede to the complete Christian era which contains in addition all calendar years BC but no year zero Ten centuries after Bede the French astronomers Philippe de la Hire in the year 1702 and Jacques Cassini in the year 1740 purely to simplify certain calculations put the Julian Dating System proposed in the year 1583 by Joseph Scaliger and with it an astronomical era into use which contains a leap year zero which precedes the year 1 AD PrehistoryWhile of critical importance to the historian methods of determining chronology are used in most disciplines of science especially astronomy geology paleontology and archaeology In the absence of written history with its chronicles and king lists late 19th century archaeologists found that they could develop relative chronologies based on pottery techniques and styles In the field of Egyptology William Flinders Petrie pioneered sequence dating to penetrate pre dynastic Neolithic times using groups of contemporary artefacts deposited together at a single time in graves and working backwards methodically from the earliest historical phases of Egypt This method of dating is known as seriation Known wares discovered at strata in sometimes quite distant sites the product of trade helped extend the network of chronologies Some cultures have retained the name applied to them in reference to characteristic forms for lack of an idea of what they called themselves The Beaker People in northern Europe during the 3rd millennium BCE for example The study of the means of placing pottery and other cultural artifacts into some kind of order proceeds in two phases classification and typology Classification creates categories for the purposes of description and typology seeks to identify and analyse changes that allow artifacts to be placed into sequences Laboratory techniques developed particularly after mid 20th century helped constantly revise and refine the chronologies developed for specific cultural areas Unrelated dating methods help reinforce a chronology an axiom of corroborative evidence Ideally archaeological materials used for dating a site should complement each other and provide a means of cross checking Conclusions drawn from just one unsupported technique are usually regarded as unreliable SynchronismThe fundamental problem of chronology is to synchronize events By synchronizing an event it becomes possible to relate it to the current time and to compare the event to other events Among historians a typical need is to synchronize the reigns of kings and leaders in order to relate the history of one country or region to that of another For example the Chronicon of Eusebius 325 A D is one of the major works of historical synchronism This work has two sections The first contains narrative chronicles of nine different kingdoms Chaldean Assyrian Median Lydian Persian Hebrew Greek Peloponnesian Asian and Roman The second part is a long table synchronizing the events from each of the nine kingdoms in parallel columns By comparing the parallel columns the reader can determine which events were contemporaneous or how many years separated two different events To place all the events on the same time scale Eusebius used an Anno Mundi A M era meaning that events were dated from the supposed beginning of the world as computed from the Book of Genesis in the Hebrew Pentateuch According to the computation Eusebius used this occurred in 5199 B C The Chronicon of Eusebius was widely used in the medieval world to establish the dates and times of historical events Subsequent chronographers such as George Syncellus died circa 811 analyzed and elaborated on the Chronicon by comparing with other chronologies The last great chronographer was Joseph Justus Scaliger 1540 1609 who reconstructed the lost Chronicon and synchronized all of ancient history in his two major works De emendatione temporum 1583 and Thesaurus temporum 1606 Much of modern historical datings and chronology of the ancient world ultimately derives from these two works Scaliger invented the concept of the Julian Day which is still used as the standard unified scale of time for both historians and astronomers citation needed In addition to the literary methods of synchronism used by traditional chronographers such as Eusebius Syncellus and Scaliger it is possible to synchronize events by archaeological or astronomical means For example the Eclipse of Thales described in the first book of Herodotus can potentially be used to date the Lydian War because the eclipse took place during the middle of an important battle in that war Likewise various eclipses and other astronomical events described in ancient records can be used to astronomically synchronize historical events Another method to synchronize events is the use of archaeological findings such as pottery to do sequence dating See alsoExamples Parian Chronicle List of timelines specific chronologies Timelines of world history overall historical chronologyChristian chronology Dionysius Exiguus Easter table Easter Lunar cycle Millennium question Paschal full moon Solar cycle General Annals French revolutionary era Historiography Traditional Jewish chronologyFiction writing Aspects and examples of non chronological story telling Flashback Flashforward Linearity writing Reverse chronologyNotesRichards E G 1998 Mapping Time The Calendar and History Oxford Oxford University Press pp 12 13 ISBN 0 19 286205 7 Cates William Leist Readwin 1911 Chronology Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed pp 305 318 Memidex WordNet chronology memidex com Archived 2019 12 15 at the Wayback Machine accessed September 25 2010 Literally translated as From the city having been founded Richards 2013 pp 591 592 Incomplete reference Greene Kevin November 2007 Archaeology An Introduction University of Newcastle Upon Tyne Chapter 4 Archived from the original on 2005 03 29 Retrieved 2008 01 04 Grafton Anthony 1994 Joseph Scaliger A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship Oxford Oxford University Press Kelley David H 2011 Exploring Ancient Skies A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy Springer pp 614 ISBN 978 1441976239 ReferencesHegewisch D H amp Marsh J 1837 Introduction to historical chronology Burlington Vt C Goodrich B E Tumanian Measurement of Time in Ancient and Medieval Armenia Journal for the History of Astronomy 5 1974 pp 91 98 Kazarian K A History of Chronology by B E Tumanian Journal for the History of Astronomy 4 1973 p 137 Porter T M The Dynamics of Progress Time Method and Measure The American Historical Review 1991 Further readingPublished in the 18th 19th centuries Weeks J E 1701 The gentleman s hour glass or An introduction to chronology being a plain and compendious analysis of time Dublin James Hoey Hodgson J Hinton J amp Wallis J 1747 An introduction to chronology containing an account of time also of the most remarkable cycles epoch s era s periods and moveable feasts To which is added a brief account of the several methods proposed for the alteration of the style the reforming the calendar and fixing the true time of the celebration of Easter London Printed for J Hinton at the King s Arms in St Paul s Church yard Smith T 1818 An introduction to chronology New York Samuel Wood Published in the 20th century Keller H R 1934 The dictionary of dates New York The Macmillan company Poole R L amp Poole A L 1934 Studies in chronology and history Oxford Clarendon Press Langer W L amp Gatzke H W 1963 An encyclopedia of world history ancient medieval and modern chronologically arranged Boston Houghton Mifflin Momigliano A Pagan and Christian historiography in the Fourth Century A D in A Momigliano ed The conflict between paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century The Clarendon Press Oxford 1963 pp 79 99 Williams N amp Storey R L 1966 Chronology of the modern world 1763 to the present time London Barrie amp Rockliffe Steinberg S H 1967 Historical tables 58 B C A D 1965 London Macmillan Freeman Grenville G S P 1975 Chronology of world history a calendar of principal events from 3000 BC to AD 1973 London Collings Neugebauer O 1975 A history of ancient mathematical astronomy Springer Verlag Bickerman E J 1980 The chronology of the ancient world London Thames and Hudson Whitrow G J 1990 Time in history views of time from prehistory to the present day Oxford Oxford Univ Press Aitken M 1990 Science based dating in archaeology London Thames and Hudson Richards E G 1998 Mapping time the calendar and history Oxford University Press Published in the 21st century Koselleck R Time and history The practice of conceptual history timing history spacing concepts Palo Alto Stanford University Press 2002 Ronald H Fritze et al 2004 Chronologies calendars and lists of rulers Reference sources in history an introductory guide 2nd ed ABC CLIO pp 4 ISBN 978 0 87436 883 3 Olena V Smyntyna 2009 Chronology In H James Birx ed Encyclopedia of time science philosophy theology amp culture Sage ISBN 978 1 4129 4164 8 Daniel Rosenberg Anthony Grafton 2009 Cartographies of time a history of the timeline New York Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 9781568987637 External linksLook up chronology in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dating the Past archived 29 May 2005 Pragmatic Bayesians a decade of integrating radiocarbon dates in chronological models archived 5 April 2005 from the University of Sheffield at the Internet Archive Accessed 2008 01 04 Open Library Works related to chronology Herbermann Charles ed 1913 General Chronology Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Chattopadhyay Subhasis Chronicity and Temporality A Revisionary Hermeneutics of Time in Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India 120 10 606 609 2015 ISSN 0032 6178

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