12th century bceの例文
- Scholars have argued the 14th, 13th, and 12th centuries BCE.
- Archeologists found that the Huns of the 12th century BCE created a Hunnish empire.
- Hoolbook was a center of the Huttal Region in 9th-12th centuries BCE.
- These two cultures were followed by the Srubna culture ( 18th-12th century BCE ).
- The oldest intact pylons belong to mortuary temples from the 13th and 12th century BCE Ramessside period.
- The Mushroom is surrounded by copper ore smelting sites from between the 14th and 12th centuries BCE.
- The large-scale Dorian invasion of Greece around the 12th century BCE appears to have depopulated the island.
- Cremation appeared around the 12th century BCE, constituting a new practice of burial, probably influenced by Anatolia.
- The Hebrews adopted the Phoenician alphabet around the 12th century BCE, which developed into the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet.
- The power of the Egyptians in the region began to decline in the 12th century BCE, during the Bronze Age collapse.
- The Phoenician script had dropped five characters by the 12th century BCE, reflecting the language's twenty-two consonantal phonemes.
- The dig revealed a fortified place dating to the Late Bronze Age and early Iron Age ( 13th-12th centuries BCE ).
- By the beginning of the 12th century BCE, the Philistines, generally thought to have been one of the Sea Peoples, ruled the city.
- During the extensive Greek migrations which occurred beginning perhaps as early as the 12th century BCE, Sifnos was mostly populated by Ionian Greeks from Athens.
- Indian merchants, through land and sea routes, have traded with the east African, Arab and middle-east people from 12th century BCE onwards.
- Gaza remained under Egyptian control for 350 years until it was conquered by the Philistines in the 12th century BCE, becoming a part of their " pentapolis ".
- "' Aram-Damascus "'( or ) was an Aramaean state around Damascus in Syria, from the late 12th century BCE to 732 BCE.
- There is evidence of a relatively large-scale disruption of cultural practices around the 12th century BCE that some scholars think may indicate an invasion or migration into southern Britain.
- The Israelite tribes who settled in the land of Israel adopted the Phoenician script around the 12th century BCE, as found in the Gezer calendar ( circa 10th century BCE ).
- The Israelite tribes who settled in the land of Israel adopted the Phoenician script around the 12th century BCE, as found in the Gezer calendar ( c . 10th century BCE ).