All the information about the History of Israel
The descendants of Abraham crystallized into a nation at about 1300 BCE after their Exodus from Egypt under the leadership of Moses (Moshe in Hebrew). Soon after the Exodus, Moses transmitted to the people of this new emerging nation, the Torah, and the Ten Commandments (Exodus Chapter 20). After 40 years in the Sinai desert, Moses led them to the Land of Israel, that is cited in The Bible as the land promised by G-d to the descendants of the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (Genesis 17:8).
The people of modern day Israel share the same language and culture shaped by the Jewish heritage and religion passed through generations starting with the founding father Abraham (ca. 1800 BCE). Thus, Jews have had continuous presence in the land of Israel for the past 3,300 years.
The rule of Israelites in the land of Israel starts with the conquests of Joshua (ca. 1250 BCE). The period from 1000-587 BCE is known as the "Period of the Kings". The most noteworthy kings were King David (1010-970 BCE), who made Jerusalem the Capital of Israel, and his son Solomon (Shlomo, 970-931 BCE), who built the first Temple in Jerusalem as prescribed in the Tanach (Old Testament).
In 587 BCE, Babylonian Nebuchadnezzar's army captured Jerusalem, destroyed the Temple, and exiled the Jews to Babylon (modern day Iraq).
The year 587 BCE marks a turning point in the history of the region. From this year onwards, the region was ruled or controlled by a succession of superpower empires of the time in the following order: Babylonian, Persian, Greek Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Empires, Islamic and Christian crusaders, Ottoman Empire, and the British Empire.
After the exile by the Romans at 70 CE, the Jewish people migrated to Europe and North Africa. In the Diaspora (scattered outside of the Land of Israel), they established rich cultural and economic lives, and contributed greatly to the societies where they lived. Yet, they continued their national culture and prayed to return to Israel through centuries. In the first half of the 20th century there were major waves of immigration of Jews back to Israel from Arab countries and from Europe. During the British rule in Palestine, the Jewish people were subject to great violence and massacres directed by Arab civilians or forces of the neighboring Arab states. During World War II, the Nazi regime in Germany decimated about 6 million Jews creating the great tragedy of The Holocaust.
Source: science.co.ilThe creation of the State of Israel in 1948 was preceded by more than 50 years of efforts to establish a sovereign state as a homeland for Jews. These efforts were initiated by Theodore Herzl, founder of the Zionist movement, and were given added impetus by the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which asserted the British Government's support for the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
In the years following World War I, Palestine became a British Mandate and Jewish immigration steadily increased, as did violence between Palestine's Jewish and Arab communities. Mounting British efforts to restrict this immigration were countered by international support for Jewish national aspirations following the near-extermination of European Jewry by the Nazis during World War II. This support led to the 1947 UN partition plan, which would have divided Palestine into separate Jewish and Arab states, with Jerusalem under UN administration.
On May 14, 1948, soon after the British quit Palestine, the State of Israel was proclaimed and was immediately invaded by armies from neighboring Arab states, which rejected the UN partition plan. This conflict, Israel's War of Independence, was concluded by armistice agreements between Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria in 1949 and resulted in a 50% increase in Israeli territory.
Source: state.govBIBLICAL TIMES (17th-6th C. BCE - Before the Common Era) |
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17th century BCE | 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. |
13th century BCE | 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 BCE | Israelites settle in the Land of Israel |
1020 BCE | Jewish monarchy established; Saul, first king. |
1000 BCE | Jerusalem made capital of David's kingdom. |
960 BCE | First Temple, the national and spiritual center of the Jewish people, built in Jerusalem by King Solomon. |
930 BCE | Divided kingdom: Judah and Israel |
Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian periods (732 ??? 539 BCE) | |
722 - 720 BCE | Israel crushed by Assyrians; 10 tribes exiled (Ten Lost Tribes). |
586 BCE | Judah conquered by Babylonia; Jerusalem and First Temple destroyed; most Jews exiled. |
THE SECOND TEMPLE PERIOD (538 BCE - 136 CE) | |
538 - 515 BCE | Many Jews return from Babylonia; Temple rebuilt. |
332 BCE | Land conquered by Alexander the Great; Hellenistic rule. |
The Hellenistic period (332 ??? 37 BCE) | |
166 - 160 BCE | Maccabean (Hasmonean) revolt against restrictions on practice of Judaism and desecration of the Temple |
142 - 129 BCE | Jewish autonomy under Hasmoneans. |
129 - 63 BCE | Jewish independence under Hasmonean monarchy. |
63 BCE | Jerusalem captured by Roman general, Pompey. |
63 BCE - 313 CE | Roman rule |
The Roman period (37 BCE ??? 324 CE) | |
37 BCE | Herod, Roman vassal king, rules the Land of Israel; Temple in Jerusalem refurbished |
4 BCE | King Herod dies. Herodian Kingdom divided to Tetrarchies under Roman protection. |
0 (CE - The Common Era) | |
20 - 33 CE | Ministry of Jesus of Nazareth |
66 CE | Jewish revolt against the Romans |
70 CE | Destruction of Jerusalem and Second Temple. |
73 CE | Last stand of Jews at Masada. |
132 - 135 CE | Bar Kokhba uprising against Rome. |
210 CE | Codification of Jewish oral law (Mishna) completed. |
Byzantine Period (324 CE - 638 CE) | |
326-335 CE | Church of the Nativity is built in Bethlehem and Eleona Basilica and Church of the Holy Sepulchre are built in Jerusalem |
390 CE | Commentary on the Mishna (Jerusalem Talmud) completed. |
614 CE | Persian invasion |
628 CE | The area restores to Byzantine rule. |
629 CE | Nearly 150,000 Jews are massacred and expelled by Byzantines from Jerusalem and the Galilee. |
The Arab Caliphate Period (636 CE - 1099 CE) | |
638 CE | The conquest of Jerusalem by the armies of the Rashidun Caliphate (Islamic Empire) under Caliph Umar. |
691 CE | On site of First and Second Temples in Jerusalem, Dome of the Rock built by Caliph Abd el-Malik. | The Crusader period (Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1099 ??? 1291) |
1099 | First Crusade and the establishment of the Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem. |
1147 - 1149 | Second Crusade |
1191 | Third Crusade led by the armies of Richard the Lionhearted. |
1260 | Battle of Ain Jalut between the Egyptian Mamluks and the Mongols which took place in the Jezreel Valley. |
The Mamluk period (1260 - 1517) | |
1291 | Fall of Acre which resulted in the Crusaders loss of their last major stronghold of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. | The Ottoman period (1517 - 1917) |
1517 | conquest of Palestine by the armies of the Turkish Sultan Selim I. |
1538 ??? 1535 | Suleiman the Magnificent restores the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem and the Jerusalem city walls (which are the current walls of the Old City of Jerusalem). |
1564 | Code of Jewish law (Shulhan Arukh) published. |
1860 | First neighborhood (Yemin Moshe) built outside walls of Jerusalem's Old City. |
1882 - 1903 | First Aliya (large-scale immigration), mainly from Russia. |
1897 | First Zionist Congress convened by Theodor Herzl in Basel, Switzerland; Zionist Organization founded. |
1904 - 1914 | Second Aliya , mainly from Russia and Poland. |
1909 | First kibbutz , Degania, and first modern all-Jewish city, Tel Aviv, founded. | The British Mandate period (1917 - 1948) |
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" |
1919 - 1923 | Third Aliya , mainly from Russia |
1920 | Histadrut (General Federation of Labor) 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. |
1924 | Technion, first institute of technology, founded in Haifa. |
1924 - 1932 | Fourth Aliya, mainly from Poland. |
1925 | Hebrew University of Jerusalem opened on Mount Scopus. |
1929 | Hebron Jews massacred by Arab terrorists. |
1931 | Etzel, Jewish underground organization, founded. |
1933-39 | Fifth Aliya, mainly from Germany. |
1936-39 | Anti-Jewish riots instigated by Arab terrorists. |
1939 | Jewish immigration severely limited by British White Paper. |
1939 - 1945 | 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. |
STATE OF ISRAEL 1948 | |
1948 |
End of British Mandate (14 May) State of Israel proclaimed (14 May). Israel invaded by five Arab states (15 May). Israel Defense Forces (IDF) established. War of Independence (May 1948-July 1949). |
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 - 1952 | 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 - 1970 | 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 Peninsula completed. Operation Peace for Galilee removes Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) 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 wins elections. |
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 (Oslo Accords). |
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. Binyamin Netanyahu elected prime minister. Omani trade representation office opened in Tel Aviv. |
1997 | Hebron Protocol signed by Israel and the PA. |
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. Renewed violence (Second Intifada). Prime Minister Barak resigns. |
2001 | Ariel Sharon (Likud) elected Prime Minister; forms broad-based unity government. The Sharm-el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee report (Mitchell Report) issued. Palestinian-Israeli Security Implementation Work Plan (Tenet ceasefire plan) proposed. Rechavam Ze'evy, Minister of Tourism, assassinated by Palestinian terrorists. |
2002 | Israel launches Operation Defensive Shield in response to massive Palestinian terrorist attacks. Israel begins building the anti-terrorist fence to stop West Bank terrorists from killing Israeli citizens. Prime Minister Sharon disperses the Knesset, calling for new elections to be held on 28 January 2003. |
2003 | Right-of-center coalition government formed by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Israel accepts the Roadmap. |
2005 | Israel carries out the Disengagement Plan, ending Israel's presence in the Gaza Strip. |
2006 |
After Prime Minister Sharon suffers a stroke, Ehud Olmert becomes acting prime minister. Following elections on 28 March, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert forms new government led by the Kadima Party. Israel carried out military operations against Palestinian terrorists in Gaza after kidnapping of Israeli soldier. The Second War in Lebanon, during which Israel carried out military operations against Hizbullah terrorism from southern Lebanon, following missile attacks and kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers. |
2007 |
Shimon Peres elected President by the Knesset. Israel declares Gaza "hostile territory" following Hamas violent takeover of Gaza Strip. |
2008 |
Israel celebrates its 60th anniversary. Israel launches its Gaza Operation (Operation Cast Lead) in response to the barrage of over 10,000 rockets and mortars fired from the Gaza Strip. |
2009 |
Benjamin Netanyahu is elected Prime Minister in national elections held in February 2009, and forms a broad-based coalition government The city of Tel Aviv celebrates its 100th anniversary. |
2010 | Israel joins the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). |