3rd millennium BC - meaning and definition. What is 3rd millennium BC
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What (who) is 3rd millennium BC - definition


3rd millennium BC         
  • Early [[Indo-European migrations]] from the [[Pontic steppes]] and across Central Asia
  • A model of the prehistoric town of [[Los Millares]], with its walls.
  • Harp Player from the island of [[Keros]], made by the [[Cycladic culture]] sometime in the 28th century BC.
  • The Medicine Wheel in [[Bighorn National Forest]], Wyoming, United States.
  • Akkadian]] king [[Rimush]]
  • Minoan Snake Goddess.
  • Stonehenge.
  • [[Great Pyramid of Giza]], Kheops.
  • Chariot depicted on the [[Standard of Ur]], from the [[Sumer]]ian city-state of [[Ur]], c. 2600 BC
MILLENNIUM BETWEEN 3000 BC TO 2001 BC
3rd millenium BC; 3000 B.C.; Third millennium BC; 3rd millennium BCE; Third millennium BCE; 3rd Millenium BC; 3rd Millennium BC; Third millenium BCE; 3rd millennium B.C; 5,000 years ago; Third millenium BC; 2852 BCE; 2205 BCE; 2563 BCE; 3rd millenium B.C.; 3rd Millennium BCE; Third millennium B.C.E
The 3rd millennium BC spanned the years 3000 through 2001 BC. This period of time corresponds to the Early to Middle Bronze Age, characterized by the early empires in the Ancient Near East.
4th millennium BC         
  • The [[Ġgantija]] temples are the earliest of the [[Megalithic Temples of Malta]]
  • Pharaoh [[Scorpion II]] on the [[Scorpion Macehead]], c. 3200 BC
  • [[Sumer]]ian priest-king from [[Uruk]], Mesopotamia, circa 3300–3000 BC
  • Fertility figurine from [[Mehrgarh]], [[Indus Valley]], c. 3000 BC
  • Tustrup-dysserne, the largest [[passage grave]] in Eastern [[Jutland]], is an example of [[Funnelbeaker culture]] circa 3200 BC
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MILLENNIUM BETWEEN 4000 BC AND 3001 BC
4th millennium BCE; Fourth millennium BC; Fourth millennium BCE; 4000 BCE; 6,000 years ago; 3000's B.C.; 3100's BC; 4000 B.C.; Fourth millenium BC; 4th Millennium BC; 4th millennium B.C.; 4,000 bc
The 4th millennium BC spanned the years 4000 BC to 3001 BC. Some of the major changes in human culture during this time included the beginning of the Bronze Age and the invention of writing, which played a major role in starting recorded history.
1st millennium BC         
  • ''The [[Victorious Youth]]'' (c. 310 BC), a preserved bronze statue of a Greek athlete in [[Contrapposto]] pose
  • [[Lamassu]] facing forward. Bas-relief from the king [[Sargon II]]'s palace at Dur Sharrukin in [[Assyria]] (now Khorsabad in Iraq), c. 713–716 BC. From Paul-Émile Botta's excavations in 1843–1844.
  • Assyria]] hunting a [[Mesopotamian lion]], from the Northern Palace in [[Nineveh]], c. 645-635 BC
  • Scythian]] gold plaque with panther (late 7th century BC)
  • Augustus Caesar]], the first emperor of the [[Roman Empire]]
  • Athens]] (5th century BC)
  • The Wrestler]]", an [[Olmec]] era statuette, dated roughly 1400–400&nbsp;BC
  • Map of the world in 1 AD, just after the end of the 1st millennium BC.
  • Map of the world in 323 BC
MILLENNIUM BETWEEN 1000 BC AND 1 BC
1st millenium BC; First millennium BC; 1st millennium BCE; First millennium BCE; 1st millenium BCE; 3,000 years ago; First millennium B.C.; 1st Millenium BCE
The 1st millennium BC, also known as the last millennium BC, was the period of time lasting from the years 1000 BC to 1 BC (10th to 1st centuries BC; in astronomy: JD – Julian Day Number from Date Calculator (casio.com)).
Examples of use of 3rd millennium BC
1. Dr Yasin said the new studies have revealed that a more sedentary way of life, compared to the previous Neolithic period, developed, at least for part of the population during the 3rd millennium BC.