200 B.C.E. * The Rosetta Stone records coronation of Ptolemy V in Egypt (196) * Hecatompylos captured by Seleucids who return it in exchange for the inclusion of Parthian cavalry in their army * Parthia secedes again (after utter defeat of Antiochus by Scipios: 189) * Parthians expand south into eastern Persia that is given autonomy with representation in Parthia's Royal 'Synhedrion'--the world's first system of a federal form of government where the emperor is "first among equals"; under them is a Hellenistic system of court titles: e.g. 'syngeneis' (nobles), 'sophoi' (wise men), 'magoi' (magi); as lingua franca, Greek replaces Aramaic--which devolves into the empire's vernacular tongue-- and is used on coins, often with the legend "philhellene" (185) * Antiochus IV invades Ptolemaic Judaea, violates Temple, prohibits worship there, changes the Law (by installing the brother of Onias III as a false high priest who "destroyed lawful ways of living and introduced new customs contary to the Law") and the times (by imposing the Metonic lunar calendar); High Priest Onias III flees to Egypt, founds a Temple-in-exile, and continues to use a non-lunar calendar as the religious calendar. [Daniel 8; I Macc 1; II Macc 4; Philo; Josephus, Jewish Wars.] * Hasmonaean priest Maccabaeus of Modin leads revolt against Seleucids (167) * Confucianism established as official doctrine of Han governance (165) * Crossing of Bactrian & Arabian camels--vital for plying entire Silk Road * Stirrup appears in India and Central Asia. * At his capital, Sakala, Indo-Greek King Milinda issues coins having Greek on the obverse & Kharoshthi on the reverse; converts to Buddhism [Milinda-panha.] * Hipparchos (over)calculates tropical year's length by ~7 minutes (150) * Rome wins Third & last Punic War, destroys Carthage & its Library-- knowledge of trans-Atlantic trade routes secreted away among an elite who later plant European oaks on Nova Scotia's Oak Island (146) * Mithradates assumes the Achaemenid title "King of kings" after invading Greco-Bactria and replacing its king, Eucratides, by a Bactrian princess amenable to semiautonomy under a Parthian "Steward king" * Parthians take the Seleucid capital and Babylonia, Media & Persis (~141) * Greco-Bactria partitioned between Mithradates & Milinda * Establishment of a cult of Confucius, canonisation of his Analects, and the incorporation of Confucian teachings into the state-sponsored education curriculum (their role in Chinese culture to be taken over by Buddhism & Taoism after the fall of the Han dynasty, until which the Huainanzi & Huang-lao schools merge them with principles of Taoism) * The Xiongnu, later called Huns, rise to power in Central Asia, invade China's western frontier & detain Chang Ch'ien from 139-129 * Simon Maccabee allies Judaea to Rome and wins its autonomy (139); succeeded by son John Hyrcanus * Seleucids retake Babylonia & their capital, Antioch, from Parthia.(~138) * First record of a nova made by Hipparchos (134), who later accurately calculates the precession of the equinoxes (130) * Chang Ch'ien tours Central Asia as Han empire's ambassador (129-6) * Parthians retake Babylonia (128) * Seleucids occupy Babylonia (127) * Parthia puts an end to Seleucids' inland empire by expelling them once & for all from Babylonia, thus confining them to the Levantine coast (126) * On second tour, Chang Ch'ien sends envoys to Parthia & India (119-5); afterwards honored for centuries as the trailblazer of the Silk Road * John Hyrcanus forcibly converts Edomites to Judaism, then destroys Samaritan Temple on Mt Gerizim * Han empire establishes an embassy in the Parthian capital of Hecatompylos where it was particularly intrigued by the Syrian jugglers and acrobats; first trading caravans bring silk to Parthia, and horses to China (106) * Aristobulus first Hasmonaean high priest to be King of the Jews (104) * Alexander Jannaeus first Hasmonaean king to be Jewish High Priest (103) * Han empire reaches Tarim Basin. As Kokand repeatedly refuses to part with its "heavenly" horses, Emperor Wu-ti launches a 60,000-man army against the city, capturing it after a bitter siege. At a single stroke, China gains dominion over the entire Tarim Basin: the nexus of the Silk Road now under China's control to open or close it to the West (102) * Chinese ships guided by rudders & rudimentary compasses reach India (101) 100 B.C.E.