Timeline of Jewish history


This is a timeline of the development of Jews and Judaism. All dates are given according to the Common Era, not the Hebrew calendar.
See also Jewish history which includes links to country histories. For the history of persecution of Jews, see Antisemitism, History of antisemitism and Timeline of antisemitism.

Biblical period

;c. 1312 BCE : the Exodus from Egypt
;c. 1250 BCE–c. 1025 BCE: Biblical judges lead the people
;c. 1025 BCE–c. 1010 BCE: King Saul
;c. 1010 BCE–c. 970 BCE: King David
;c. 970 BCE–c. 931 BCE: King Solomon
;c. 960 BCE: Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem completed
's Kingdom of Judah
;c. 931 BCE: Split between Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah
;c. 931 BCE–c. 913 BCE: King Rehoboam of Judah
;c. 931 BCE–c. 910 BCE: King Jeroboam of Israel
;840 BCE: Mesha inscription describes Moabite victory over a son of King Omri of Israel.
;c. 740 BCE–c. 700 BCE: prophesy of Isaiah
;c. 740 BCE–c. 722 BCE: Kingdom of Israel falls to Neo-Assyrian Empire
;c. 715 BCE–c. 687 BCE: King Hezekiah of Judah
;c. 649 BCE–c. 609 BCE: King Josiah of Judah institutes major reforms
;c. 626 BCЕ – c. 587 BCE: prophecy of Jeremiah
;597 BCE: first deportation to Babylon
;586 BCE: Jerusalem falls to Nebuchadnezzar and Solomon's Temple destroyed
;539 BCE: Jews allowed to return to Jerusalem, by permission of Cyrus
;520 BCE: Prophecy of Zechariah
;c. 520 BCE: Zerubbabel leads the first group of Jews from captivity back to Jerusalem
;516 BCE: Second Temple consecrated
;c. 475 BCE: Often associated with Xerxes I of Persia, Queen Esther revealed her identity to the king and began to plead for her people, pointing to Haman as the evil schemer plotting to destroy them.
;c. 460 BCE: Seeing anarchy breaking out in Judea, Xerxes' successor Persian King Artaxerxes sent Ezra to restore order.
* The Exodus took place in the Jewish year 2448, and the CE begins in the Jewish year 3760. Between 2448 and 3760 are 1312 years.

Post-biblical history

BCE

;332 BCE: Alexander the Great conquers Phoenicia and Gaza, probably passing by Judea without entering the Jewish dominated hill country on his way into Egypt.
;200 BCE–100 CE: At some point during this era the Tanakh is canonized. Jewish religious works that were explicitly written after the time of Ezra were not canonized, although many became popular among many groups of Jews. Those works that made it into the Greek translation of the Bible became known as the deuterocanonical books.
;167–161 BCE: The Maccabean Revolt against the Hellenistic Seleucid Empire, led by Judas Maccabeus, resulting in victory and installation of the Hanukkah holiday.
;157–129 BCE: Hasmonean dynasty establishes its royal dominance in Judea during renewed war with the Seleucid Empire.
;63 BCE: Pompey lay siege to and entered the Temple, Judea became a client kingdom of Rome.
;40 BCE–4 BCE: Herod the Great, appointed King of the Jews by the Roman Senate.

1st century CE

;6 CE: Province of Roman Judea created by merging Judea proper, Samaria and Idumea.
;10 CE: Hillel the Elder, considered the greatest Torah sage, dies, leading to the dominance of Shammai till 30 CE, see also Hillel and Shammai.
;26–36 CE: Trial and crucifixion of Jesus by the Romans.
;30 CE: Helena of Adiabene, a vassal Parthian kingdom in Mesopotamia, converts to Judaism. Significant numbers of Adiabene population follow her, later also providing limited support for Jews during Jewish-Roman wars. In the following centuries the community mostly converts to Christianity.
;30–70 CE
;66–70
;70–200: Period of the Tannaim, rabbis who organized and elucidated the Oral Torah. The decisions of the Tannaim are contained in the Mishnah, Beraita, Tosefta, and various Midrash compilations.
;73: Final events of the First Jewish–Roman War – the fall of Masada. Christianity starts off as a Jewish sect and then develops its own texts and ideology and branches off from Judaism to become a distinct religion.

2nd century

;115–117: Kitos War – a second Jewish-Roman War initiated in large Jewish communities of Cyprus, Cyrene, Aegipta and Mesopotamia. It led to mutual killing of hundreds of thousands Jews, Greeks and Romans, ending with a total defeat of Jewish rebels and complete extermination of Jews in Cyprus and Cyrene by the newly installed Emperor Hadrian.
;131–136: The Roman emperor Hadrian, among other provocations, renames Jerusalem "Aelia Capitolina" and prohibits circumcision. Simon bar Kokhba leads a large Jewish revolt against Rome in response to Hadrian's actions. In the aftermath, most Jewish population is annihilated and Hadrian renames the province of Judea to Syria Palaestina, and attempts to root out Judaism.
;136: Rabbi Akiva is martyred.
;138: With Emperor Hadrian's death, the persecution of Jews within the Roman Empire is eased and Jews are allowed to visit Jerusalem on Tisha B'av. In the following centuries the Jewish center moves to Galilee.

3rd century

;200: The Mishnah, the standardization of the Jewish oral law as it stands today, is redacted by Judah haNasi in the land of Israel.
;259: Nehardea in Babylonia destroyed by the Palmyrenes, which destruction caused the widespread dispersion of Jews in the region.
;220–500: Period of the Amoraim, the rabbis of the Talmud.

4th century

;315–337: Roman Emperor Constantine I enacts new restrictive legislation. Conversion of Christians to Judaism is outlawed, congregations for religious services are curtailed, but Jews are also allowed to enter Jerusalem on the anniversary of the Temple's destruction.
;351–352: Jewish revolt against Constantius Gallus is put down. Sepphoris is razed to the ground.
;358: Because of the increasing danger of Roman persecution, Hillel II creates a mathematical calendar for calculating the Jewish month. After adopting the calendar, the Sanhedrin in Tiberias is dissolved.
;361–363: The last pagan Roman Emperor, Julian, allows the Jews to return to "holy Jerusalem which you have for many years longed to see rebuilt" and to rebuild the Second Temple. Shortly after, the Emperor is assassinated, and the plan is dissolved.
;363: Galilee earthquake of 363
;379: In India, the Hindu king Sira Primal, also known as Iru Brahman, issued what was engraved on a tablet of brass, his permission to Jews to live freely, build synagogue, own property without conditions attached and as long as the world and moon exist.

5th century

;438: The Empress Eudocia removes the ban on Jews' praying at the Temple site and the heads of the Community in Galilee issue a call "to the great and mighty people of the Jews": "Know that the end of the exile of our people has come"!
;450: Redaction of the Jerusalem Talmud

6th century

;500–523: Yosef Dhu Nuwas, King of Himyarite Kingdom converting to Judaism, upgrading existing Yemenese Jewish center. His kingdom falls in a war against Axum and the Christians.
;550: The main redaction of Babylonian Talmud is completed under Rabbis Ravina and Ashi. To a lesser degree, the text continues to be modified for the next 200 years.
;550–700: Period of the Savoraim, the sages in Persia who put the Talmud in its final form.
;555–572: The Fourth Samaritan Revolt against Byzantium results in great reduction of the Samaritan community, their Israelite faith is outlawed. Neighbouring Jews, who mostly reside in Galilee, are also affected by the oppressive rule of the Byzantines.

7th century

;610–628: Jews of Galilee led by Benjamin of Tiberias gain autonomy in Jerusalem after revolting against Heraclius as a joint military campaign with ally Sassanid Empire under Khosrau II and Jewish militias from Persia, but are subsequently massacred.
;612: Sisebut, king of the Visigoths, forces his Jewish subjects to convert to Christianity.
;7th century: The rise and domination of Islam among largely pagan Arabs in the Arabian peninsula results in the almost complete removal and conversion of the ancient Jewish communities there, and sack of Levant from the hands of Byzantines.

8th century

;700–1250: Period of the Gaonim. Jews in southern Europe and Asia Minor lived under the often intolerant rule of Christian kings and clerics. Most Jews lived in the Muslim Arab realm. Despite sporadic periods of persecution, Jewish communal and cultural life flowered in this period. The universally recognized centers of Jewish life were in Jerusalem and Tiberias, Sura and Pumbeditha. The heads of these law schools were the Gaonim, who were consulted on matters of law by Jews throughout the world. During this time, the Niqqud is invented in Tiberias.
;711: Muslim armies invade and occupy most of Spain. Under Christian rule, Jews had been subject to frequent and intense persecution, which was formalized under Muslim rule due to the dhimmi rules in Islam. Jews and Christians had to pay the jizya. Some sources mark this as the beginning of the Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain, though most mention 912.
;740: The Khazar King and members of the upper class adopt Judaism. The Khazarate lasts until 10th century, being overrun by Russians, and finally conquered by Russian and Byzantian forces in 1016.
;760: The Karaites reject the authority of the oral law, and split off from rabbinic Judaism.

9th century

;807: Abbassid Caliph Harun al-Rashid orders all Jews in the Caliphate to wear a yellow belt, with Christians to wear a blue one.
;846: In Sura, Iraq, Rav Amram Gaon compiles his siddur
;850: al-Mutawakkil made a decree ordering dhimmi Jews and Christians to wear garments distinguishing them from Muslims, their places of worship to be destroyed, and allowing them little involvement in government or official matters.
;871: An incomplete marriage contract dated to October 6 of this year is the earliest dated document found in the papers of the Cairo Geniza.

10th century

;912–1013: The Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain. Abd-ar-Rahman III becomes Caliph of Spain in 912, ushering in the height of tolerance. Muslims granted Jews and Christians exemptions from military service, the right to their own courts of law, and a guarantee of safety of their property. Jewish poets, scholars, scientists, statesmen and philosophers flourished in and were an integral part of the extensive Arab civilization. This period ended with the Cordoba massacre in 1013.
;940: In Iraq, Saadia Gaon compiles his siddur.
;945: In the Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia, the Senate forbids sea captains from accepting Jewish passengers.

11th century

;1008–1013: Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah issues severe restrictions against Jews in the Fatimid Empire. All Jews are forced to wear a heavy wooden "golden calf" around their necks. Christians had to wear a large wooden cross and members of both groups had to wear black hats.
;1013: During the fall of the city, Sulayman's troops looted Córdoba and massacred citizens of the city, including many Jews. Prominent Jews in Córdoba, such as Samuel ibn Naghrela were forced to flee to the city in 1013.
;1013–1073: Rabbi Yitchaki Alfassi writes the Rif, an important work of Jewish law.
;1016: The Jewish community of Kairouan, Tunisia is forced to choose between conversion and expulsion.
;1033: Following their conquest of the city from the Maghrawa tribe, the forces of Tamim, chief of the Zenata Berber Banu Ifran tribe, perpetrated a massacre of Jews in Fez.
;1040–1105: Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki writes important commentaries on almost the entire Tanakh and Talmud.
;1066 December 30: Granada massacre: Muslim mob stormed the royal palace in Granada, crucified Jewish vizier Joseph ibn Naghrela and massacred most of the Jewish population of the city. "More than 1,500 Jewish families, numbering 4,000 persons, fell in one day."
;1090: Granada was captured by Yusuf ibn Tashfin, King of the Almoravides. The Jewish community, believed to have sided with the Christians, was destroyed. Many fled, penniless, to Christian Toledo.
;1095–1291: Christian Crusades begin, sparking warfare with Islam in Palestine. Crusaders temporarily capture Jerusalem in 1099. Tens of thousands of Jews are killed by European crusaders throughout Europe and in the Middle East.

12th century

;1100–1275: Time of the tosafot, Talmudic commentators who carried on Rashi's work. They include some of his descendants.
;1107: Moroccan Almoravid ruler Yusuf ibn Tashfin expels Moroccan Jews who do not convert to Islam.
;1135–1204: Rabbi Moses ben Maimon, aka Maimonides or the Rambam is the leading rabbi of Sephardic Jewry. Among his many accomplishments, he writes one of the most influential codes of law in Jewish History as well as, in Arabic, many philosophical works including the.
;1141: Yehuda Halevi issues a call to the Jews to emigrate to Palestine. He is buried in Jerusalem.
;1148: Berbers oblige Jews to convert in Cordoba. Maimonides leaves Cordoba
;1176: Maimonides completed his Introduction to the Mishneh Torah.
;1187: Upon the capture of Jerusalem, Saladin summons the Jews and permits them to resettle in the city. In particular, the residents of Ashkelon, a large Jewish settlement, respond to his request.
;1189: Jacob of Orléans slain in antisemitic riots that swept through London during the coronation of King Richard I. The king later punished the perpetrators of the crime.
;1190: 150 Jews of York, England, killed in a pogrom, known as the York Massacre.

13th century

;1240: Jews living in England, under King Henry III, were blamed for counterfeiting the money and when the local citizens began to exact revenge on them, the king expelled his Jewish subjects in order to save them from harm.
;1250–1300: The life of Moses de Leon, of Spain. He publishes to the public the Zohar the 2nd century CE esoteric interpretations of the Torah by Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his disciples. This begins the modern form of Kabbalah.
;1250–1550: Period of the Rishonim, the medieval rabbinic sages. Most Jews at this time lived in lands bordering the Mediterranean Sea or in Western Europe under feudal systems. With the decline of Muslim and Jewish centers of power in Iraq, there was no single place in the world which was a recognized authority for deciding matters of Jewish law and practice. Consequently, the rabbis recognized the need for writing commentaries on the Torah and Talmud and for writing law codes that would allow Jews anywhere in the world to be able to continue living in the Jewish tradition.
;1267: Nahmanides settles in Jerusalem and builds the Ramban Synagogue.
;1270–1343: Rabbi Jacob ben Asher of Spain writes the Arba'ah Turim.
;1276: Massacre in Fez to kill all Jews stopped by intervention of the Emir.
;1290: Jews are expelled from England by Edward I after the banning of usury in the 1275 Statute of Jewry.

14th century

;1300: Rabbi Levi ben Gershom, aka Gersonides. A 14th-century French Jewish philosopher best known for his Sefer Milhamot Adonai as well as for his philosophical commentaries.
;1304–1394: Jews are repeatedly expelled from France and readmitted, for a price.
;1343: Jews persecuted in Western Europe are invited to Poland by Casimir the Great.
;1346–1353: Jews scapegoated as the cause of the growing Black Death. See also Medieval antisemitism
;1348: Pope Clement VI issued two papal bulls in 1348, the latter named Quamvis Perfidiam, which condemned the violence and said those who blamed the plague on the Jews had been "seduced by that liar, the Devil." He urged clergy to take action to protect Jews as he had done.
;1349: The Strasbourg massacre
;1350s: Genetic testing conducted on Ashkenazi Jews have pointed to a bottleneck that was created in the 1300s amongst the Jewish population where it dwindled down to as few as 250–420 people.
;1369–70: Civil war in Spain, between brothers Peter of Castile and Henry II of Castile, leads to the deaths of 38,000 Jews, embroiled in the conflict.

15th century

;1478:King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain institute the Spanish Inquisition.
;1486: First Jewish prayer book published in Italy.
;1488–1575: Rabbi Yosef Karo spends 20 years compiling the Beit Yosef, an enormous guide to Jewish law. He then writes a more concise guide, the Shulkhan Arukh, that becomes the standard law guide for the next 400 years. Born in Spain, Yosef Karo lives and dies in Safed.
;1488: Obadiah ben Abraham, commentator on the Mishnah, arrives in Jerusalem and marks a new epoch for the Jewish community.
;1492: The Alhambra Decree: Approximately 200,000 Jews are expelled from Spain, The expelled Jews relocate to the Netherlands, Turkey, Arab lands, and Judea; some eventually go to South and Central America. However, most emigrate to Poland. In later centuries, more than 50% of Jewish world population lived in Poland. Many Jews remain in Spain after publicly converting to Christianity, becoming Crypto-Jews.
;1492: Bayezid II of the Ottoman Empire issued a formal invitation to the Jews expelled from Spain and Portugal and sent out ships to safely bring Jews to his empire.
;1493: Jews expelled from Sicily. As many as 137,000 exiled.
;1496: Jews expelled from Portugal and from many German cities.

16th century

;1501: King Alexander of Poland readmits Jews to Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
;1511: Printing of Jewish books by mechanical press began by Daniel Bomberg.
;1516: Ghetto of Venice established, the first Jewish ghetto in Europe. Many others follow.
;1525–1572: Rabbi Moshe Isserles of Kraków writes an extensive commentary to the Shulkhan Arukh called the Mappah, extending its application to Ashkenazi Jewry.
;1534: King Sigismund I of Poland abolishes the law that required Jews to wear special clothes.
;1534: First Yiddish book published, in Poland.
;1534–1572: Isaac Luria teaches Kabbalah in Jerusalem and Safed to select disciples. Some of those, such as Ibn Tebul, Israel Sarug and mostly Chaim Vital, put his teachings into writing. While the Sarugian versions are published shortly afterwards in Italy and Holland, the Vitalian texts remain in manuscripti for as long as three centuries.
;1547: First Hebrew Jewish printing house in Lublin.
;1550: Jews expelled from Genoa, Italy.
;1550: Moses ben Jacob Cordovero founds a Kabbalah academy in Safed.
;1567: First Jewish university Jeshiva was founded in Poland.
;1577: A Hebrew printing press is established in Safed, the first press in Palestine and the first in Asia.
;1580–1764: First session of the Council of Four Lands in Lublin, Poland. 70 delegates from local Jewish kehillot meet to discuss taxation and other issues important to the Jewish community.

17th century

;1621–1630: Shelah HaKadosh writes his most famous work after emigrating to the Land of Israel.
;1623: First time separate Jewish Sejm for Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
;1626–1676: False Messiah Sabbatai Zevi.
;1627: Kingdom of Beta Israel in what is now modern day Ethiopia collapses and loses autonomy.
;1633: Jews of Poznań granted a privilege of forbidding Christians to enter into their city.
;1648: Jewish population of Poland reached 450,000, Bohemia 40,000 and Moravia 25,000. Worldwide population of Jewry is estimated at 750,000.
;1648–1655: The Ukrainian Cossack Bohdan Chmielnicki leads a massacre of Polish gentry and Jewry that leaves an estimated 65,000 Jews dead and a similar number of gentry. The total decrease in the number of Jews is estimated at 100,000.
;1655: Jews readmitted to England by Oliver Cromwell.
;1660: 1660 destruction of Safed.
;1679: Jews of Yemen expelled to Mawza

18th century

;1700–1760: Israel ben Eliezer, known as the Baal Shem Tov, founds Hasidic Judaism, a way to approach God through meditation and fervent joy. He and his disciples attract many followers, and establish numerous Hasidic sects. The European Jewish opponents of Hasidim argue that one should follow a more scholarly approach to Judaism. Some of the more well-known Hasidic sects today include Bobover, Breslover, Gerer, Lubavitch and Satmar Hasidim.
;1700: Rabbi Judah HeHasid makes aliyah to Palestine accompanied by hundreds of his followers. A few days after his arrival, Rabbi Yehuda dies suddenly.
;1700: Sir Solomon de Medina is knighted by William III, making him the first Jew in England to receive that honour.
;1720: Unpaid Arab creditors burn the synagogue unfinished by immigrants of Rabbi Yehuda and expel all Ashkenazi Jews from Jerusalem. See also Hurva Synagogue
;1720–1797: Rabbi Elijah of Vilna, the Vilna Gaon.
;1729–1786: Moses Mendelssohn and the Haskalah movement. He strove to bring an end to the isolation of the Jews so that they would be able to embrace the culture of the Western world, and in turn be embraced by gentiles as equals. The Haskalah opened the door for the development of all the modern Jewish denominations and the revival of Hebrew as a spoken language, but it also paved the way for many who, wishing to be fully accepted into Christian society, converted to Christianity or chose to assimilate to emulate it.
;1740: Parliament of Great Britain passes a general act permitting Jews to be naturalized in the American colonies. Previously, several colonies had also permitted Jews to be naturalized without taking the standard oath "upon the true faith of a Christian."
;1740: Ottoman authorities invite Rabbi Haim Abulafia, renowned Kabbalist and Rabbi of Izmir, to come to the Holy Land. Rabbi Abulafia is to rebuild the city of Tiberias, which has lain desolate for some 70 years. The city's revival is seen by many as a sign of the coming of the Messiah.
;1740–1750: Thousands immigrate to Palestine under the influence of Messianic predictions. The large immigration greatly increases the size and strength of the Jewish Settlement in Palestine.
;1747:Rabbi Abraham Gershon of Kitov is the first immigrant of the Hasidic Aliyah. He is a respected Talmudic scholar, mystic, and brother-in-law of Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov. Rabbi Abraham first settles in Hebron. Later, he relocates to Jerusalem at the behest of its residents.
;1759: Followers of Jacob Frank joined ranks of Polish szlachta of Jewish origins.
;1772–1795: Partitions of Poland between Russia, Kingdom of Prussia and Austria. Main bulk of World Jewry lives now in those 3 countries. Old privileges of Jewish communities are denounced.
;1775–1781: American Revolution; guaranteed the freedom of religion.
;1775: Mob violence against the Jews of Hebron.
;1789: The French Revolution. In 1791 France grants full right to Jews and allows them to become citizens, under certain conditions.
;1790: In the US, President George Washington sends a letter to the Jewish community in Rhode Island. He writes that he envisions a country "which gives bigotry no sanction...persecution no assistance". Despite the fact that the US was a predominantly Protestant country, theoretically Jews are given full rights. In addition, the mentality of Jewish immigrants shaped by their role as merchants in Eastern Europe meant they were well-prepared to compete in American society.
;1791: Russia creates the Pale of Settlement that includes land acquired from Poland with a huge Jewish population and in the same year Crimea. The Jewish population of the Pale was 750,000. 450,000 Jews lived in the Prussian and Austrian parts of Poland.
;1798: Rabbi Nachman of Breslov travels to Palestine.
;1799: While French troops were in Palestine besieging the city of Acre, Napoleon prepared a Proclamation requesting Asian and African Jews to help him conquer Jerusalem, but his unsuccessful attempt to capture Acre prevented it from being issued.
;1799: Mob violence on Jews in Safed.

19th century

;1800–1900: The Golden Age of Yiddish literature, the revival of Hebrew as a spoken language, and the revival of Hebrew literature.
;1808–1840:Large-scale aliyah in hope of Hastening Redemption in anticipation of the arrival of the Messiah in 1840.
;1820–1860: The development of Orthodox Judaism, a set of traditionalist movements that resisted the influences of modernization that arose in response to the European emancipation and Enlightenment movements; characterized by continued strict adherence to Halakha.
;1830: Greece grants citizenship to Jews.
;1831: Jewish militias take part in the defense of Warsaw against Russians.
;1834–1835: Muslims, Druze attack Jews in Safed, Hebron & in Jerusalem..
;1837: Moses Haim Montefiore is knighted by Queen Victoria
;1837: Galilee earthquake of 1837 devastates Jewish communities of Safed and Tiberias.
;1838–1933: Rabbi Yisroel Meir ha-Kohen opens an important yeshiva. He writes an authoritative Halakhic work, Mishnah Berurah.
;Mid-19th century: Beginning of the rise of classical Reform Judaism.
;Mid-19th century: Rabbi Israel Salanter develops the Mussar Movement. While teaching that Jewish law is binding, he dismisses current philosophical debate and advocates the ethical teachings as the essence of Judaism.
;Mid-19th century: Positive-Historical Judaism, later known as Conservative Judaism, is developed.
;1841: David Levy Yulee of Florida is elected to the United States Senate, becoming the first Jew elected to Congress.
;1851: Norway allows Jews to enter the country. They are not emancipated until 1891.
;1858: Jews emancipated in England.
;1860: Alliance Israelite Universelle, an international Jewish organization is founded in Paris with the goal to protect Jewish rights as citizens.
;1860–1875: Moshe Montefiori builds Jewish neighbourhoods outside the Old City of Jerusalem starting with Mishkenot Sha'ananim.
;1860–1864: Jews are taking part in Polish national movement, that was followed by January rising.
;1860–1943: Henrietta Szold: educator, author, social worker and founder of Hadassah.
;1861: The Zion Society is formed in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
;1862: Jews are given equal rights in Russian-controlled Congress Poland. The privileges of some towns regarding prohibition of Jewish settlement are revoked. In Leipzig, Moses Hess publishes the book Rome and Jerusalem, the first book to call for the establishment of a Jewish socialist commonwealth in Palestine. The book is also notable for giving the impetus for the Labor Zionist movement.
;1867: Jews emancipated in Hungary.
;1868: Benjamin Disraeli becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Though converted to Christianity as a child, he is the first person of Jewish descent to become a leader of government in Europe.
;1870–1890: Russian Zionist group Hovevei Zion and Bilu set up a series of Jewish settlements in the Land of Israel, financially aided by Baron Edmond James de Rothschild. In Rishon LeZion Eliezer ben Yehuda revives Hebrew as spoken modern language.
;1870: Jews emancipated in Italy.
;1871: Jews emancipated in Germany.
;1875: Reform Judaism's Hebrew Union College is founded in Cincinnati. Its founder was Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, the architect of American Reform Judaism.
;1877: New Hampshire becomes the last state to give Jews equal political rights.
;1878: Petah Tikva is founded by religious pioneers from Jerusalem, led by Yehoshua Stampfer.
;1880: World Jewish population around 7.7 million, 90% in Europe, mostly Eastern Europe; around 3.5 million in the former Polish provinces.
;1881–1884, 1903–1906, 1918–1920: Three major waves of pogroms kill tens of thousands of Jews in Russia and Ukraine. More than two million Russian Jews emigrate in the period 1881–1920.
;1881: On December 30–31, the First Congress of all Zionist Unions for the colonization of Palestine was held at Focşani, Romania.
;1882–1903: The First Aliyah, a major wave of Jewish immigrants to build a homeland in Palestine.
;1886: Rabbi Sabato Morais and Alexander Kohut begin to champion the Conservative Jewish reaction to American Reform, and establish The Jewish Theological Seminary of America as a school of 'enlightened Orthodoxy'.
;1890: The term "Zionism" is coined by an Austrian Jewish publicist Nathan Birnbaum in his journal Self Emancipation and was defined as the national movement for the return of the Jewish people to their homeland and the resumption of Jewish sovereignty in the Land of Israel.
;1895: First published book by Sigmund Freud.
;1897: In response to the Dreyfus affair, Theodore Herzl writes Der Judenstaat, advocating the creation of a free and independent Jewish state in Israel.
;1897: The Bund is formed in Russia.
;1897: First Russian Empire Census: 5,200,000 of Jews, 4,900,000 in the Pale. The lands of former Poland have 1,300,000 Jews or 14% of population.
;1897: The First Zionist Congress was held at Basel, which brought the World Zionist Organization into being.

20th century

;1902: Rabbi Dr. Solomon Schechter reorganizes the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and makes it into the flagship institution of Conservative Judaism.
;1903: St. Petersburg's Znamya newspaper publishes a literary hoax The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Kishinev Pogrom caused by accusations that Jews practice cannibalism.
;1905:1905 Russian Revolution accompanied by pogroms.
;1915: Yeshiva College and its Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Rabbinical Seminary is established in New York City for training in a Modern Orthodox milieu.
;1916: Louis Brandeis, on the first of June, is confirmed as the United States' first Jewish Supreme Court justice. Brandeis was nominated by American President Woodrow Wilson.
which supported the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine and protected the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities.
;1917: The British defeat the Turks and gain control of Palestine. The British issue the Balfour Declaration which gives official British support for "the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people... it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine". Many Jews interpret this to mean that all of Palestine was to become a Jewish state.
;1917 February: The Pale of Settlement is abolished, and Jews get equal rights. The Russian civil war leads to over 2,000 pogroms with tens of thousands murdered and hundreds of thousand made homeless.
;1918–1939: The period between the two World Wars is often referred to as the "golden age" of hazzanut. Some of the great Jewish cantors of this era include Abraham Davis, Moshe Koussevitzky, Zavel Kwartin, Jan Peerce, Josef "Yossele" Rosenblatt, Gershon Sirota, and Laibale Waldman.
;1919:
;1920: At the San Remo conference Britain receives the League of Nations' British Mandate of Palestine.
;1920s–present: A variety of Jewish authors, including Gertrude Stein, Allen Ginsberg, Saul Bellow, Adrienne Rich and Philip Roth, sometimes drawing on Jewish culture and history, flourish and become highly influential on the Anglophone literary scene.
;1921: British military administration of the Mandate is replaced by civilian rule.
;1921: Britain proclaims that all of Palestine east of the Jordan River is forever closed to Jewish settlement, but not to Arab settlement.
;1921: Polish–Soviet peace treaty in Riga. Citizens of both sides are given rights to choose the country. Hundred thousands of Jews, especially small businesses forbidden in the Soviets, move to Poland.
;1922: Reform Rabbi Stephen S. Wise established the Jewish Institute of Religion in New York.
;1923: Britain gives the Golan Heights to the French Mandate of Syria. Arab immigration is allowed; Jewish immigration is not.
;1924: 2,989,000 Jews according to religion poll in Poland. Jewish youth consisted 23% of students of high schools and 26% of students of universities.
;1926: Prior to World War I, there were few Hasidic yeshivas in Europe. On Lag BaOmer 1926, Rabbi Shlomo Chanoch Hacohen Rabinowicz, the fourth Radomsker Rebbe, declared, "The time has come to found yeshivas where the younger generation will be able to learn and toil in Torah", leading to the founding of the Keser Torah network of 36 yeshivas in pre-war Poland.
;1929: A long-running dispute between Muslims and Jews over access to the Western Wall in Jerusalem escalates into the 1929 Palestine riots. The riots took the form in the most part of attacks by Arabs on Jews resulting in the 1929 Hebron massacre, the 1929 Safed pogrom and violence against Jews in Jerusalem.
;1930: World Jewry: 15,000,000. Main countries USA, Poland, Soviet Union, Romania. Palestine 175,000 or 17% of total 1,036,000.
;1933: Hitler takes over Germany; his anti-Semitic sentiments are well-known, prompting numerous Jews to emigrate.
;1935: Regina Jonas became the first woman to be ordained as a rabbi.
;1937: Adin Steinsaltz born, author of the first comprehensive Babylonian Talmud commentary since Rashi in the 11th century.
;1939: The British government issues the 'White Paper'. The paper proposed a limit of 10,000 Jewish immigrants for each year between 1940–1944, plus 25,000 refugees for any emergency arising during that period.
;1938–1945: The Holocaust, resulting in the methodical extermination of nearly 6 million Jews across Europe.
;1940s–present: Various Jewish filmmakers, including Billy Wilder, Woody Allen, Mel Brooks and the Coen Brothers, frequently draw on Jewish philosophy and humor, and become some of the most artistically and popularly successful in the history of the medium.
;1941: The Muslim residents of Baghdad carried out a savage pogrom against their Jewish compatriots. In this pogrom, known by its Arabic name al-Farhud, about 200 Jews were murdered and thousands wounded, on June 1–2. Jewish property was plundered and many homes set ablaze.
;1945–1948: Post-Holocaust refugee crisis. British attempts to detain Jews attempting to enter Palestine illegally.
;1946–1948: The violent struggle for the creation of a Jewish state in the British mandate of Palestine is intensified by Jewish defense groups: Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi.
;November 29, 1947: The United Nations approves the creation of a Jewish State and an Arab State in the British mandate of Palestine.
proclaiming Israeli independence on May 14, 1948, below a portrait of Theodor Herzl|alt=A single man, adorned on both sides by a dozen sitting men, reads a document to a small audience assembled before him. Behind him are two elongated flags bearing the Star of David and portrait of a bearded man in his forties.
;May 14, 1948: The State of Israel declares itself as an independent Jewish state hours before the British Mandate is due to expire. Within eleven minutes, it is de facto recognized by the United States. Andrei Gromyko, the Soviet Union's UN ambassador, calls for the UN to accept Israel as a member state. The UN approves.
;May 15, 1948: 1948 Arab–Israeli War: Syria, Iraq, Transjordan, Lebanon and Egypt invade Israel hours after its creation. The attack is repulsed, and Israel conquers more territory. A Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim lands results, as up to a million Jews flee or are expelled from Arab and Muslim nations. Most settle in Israel. See also 1949 Armistice Agreements.
;1948–1949: Almost 250,000 Holocaust survivors make their way to Israel. "Operation Magic Carpet" brings thousands of Yemenite Jews to Israel.
;1956: The 1956 Suez War Egypt blockades the Gulf of Aqaba, and closes the Suez canal to Israeli shipping. Egypt's President Nasser calls for the destruction of Israel. Israel, England, and France go to war and force Egypt to end the blockade of Aqaba, and open the canal to all nations.
;1964: Jewish-Christian relations are revolutionized by the Roman Catholic Church's Vatican II.
;1966: Shmuel Yosef Agnon becomes the first Hebrew writer to win the Nobel Prize in literature.
;May 16, 1967: Egyptian President Nasser demands that the UN dismantle the UN Emergency Force I between Israel and Egypt. The UN complies and the last UN peacekeeper is out of Sinai and Gaza by May 19.
;1967 May: Egyptian PresidentGamal Abdel Nasser closes the strategic Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and states that Egypt is in a state of war with Israel. Egyptian troops begin massing in the Sinai.
;June 5–10, 1967: The Six-Day War. Israel launches a pre-emptive strike against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. Israeli aircraft destroy the bulk of the Arab air forces on the ground in a surprise attack, followed by Israeli ground offensives which see Israel decisively defeat the Arab forces and capture the Sinai Peninsula, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights.
;September 1, 1967: The Arab Leaders meet in Khartoum, Sudan. The Three No's of Khartoum: No recognition of Israel. No negotiations with Israel. No peace with Israel.
;1968: Rabbi Mordechai Kaplan formally creates a separate Reconstructionist Judaism movement by setting up the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in Philadelphia.
;1969: First group of African Hebrew Israelites begin to migrate to Israel under the leadership of Ben Ammi Ben Israel.
;Mid-1970s to present: Growing revival of Klezmer music.,
;1972: Sally Priesand became the first female rabbi ordained in America, and is believed to be only the second woman ever to be formally ordained in the history of Judaism.
;1972: Mark Spitz sets the record for most gold medals won in a single Olympic Games in the 1972 Summer Olympics. The Munich massacre occurs when Israeli athletes are taken hostage by Black September terrorists. The hostages are killed during a failed rescue attempt.
;October 6–24, 1973: The Yom Kippur War. Egypt and Syria, backed up by expeditionary forces from other Arab nations, launch a surprise attack against Israel on Yom Kippur. After absorbing the initial attacks, Israel recaptures lost ground and then pushes into Egypt and Syria. Subsequently, OPEC reduces oil production, driving up oil prices and triggering a global economic crisis.
;1975: President Gerald Ford signs legislation including the Jackson-Vanik amendment, which ties U.S. trade benefits to the Soviet Union to freedom of emigration for Jews.
;1975: United Nations adopts resolution equating Zionism with racism. Rescinded in 1991.
;1976: Israel rescues hostages taken to Entebbe, Uganda.
;September 18, 1978: At Camp David, near Washington D.C., Israel and Egypt sign a comprehensive peace treaty, The Camp David Accord, which included the withdrawal of Israel from the Sinai.
;1978: Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer receives Nobel Prize
;1979: Prime Minister Menachem Begin and President Anwar Sadat are awarded Nobel Peace Prize.
;1979–1983: Operation Elijah: Rescue of Ethiopian Jewry.
;1982 June–December: The Lebanon War. Israel invades Southern Lebanon to drive out the PLO.
;1983: American Reform Jews formally accept patrilineal descent, creating a new definition of who is a Jew.
;1984–1985: Operations Moses, Joshua: Rescue of Ethiopian Jewry by Israel.
;1986: Elie Wiesel wins the Nobel Peace Prize
;1986: Nathan Sharansky, Soviet Jewish dissident, is freed from prison.
;1987: Beginning of the First Intifada against Israel.
;1989: Fall of the Berlin Wall between East and West Germany, collapse of the communist East German government, and the beginning of Germany's reunification.
;1990: The Soviet Union opens its borders for the three million Soviet Jews who had been held as virtual prisoners within their own country. Hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jews choose to leave the Soviet Union and move to Israel.
;1990–1991: Iraq invades Kuwait, triggering a war between Iraq and Allied United Nations forces. Israel is hit by 39 Scud missiles from Iraq.
;1991: Operation Solomon: Rescue of the remainder of Ethiopian Jewry in a twenty-four-hour airlift.
;October 30, 1991: The Madrid Peace Conference opens in Spain, sponsored by the United States and the Soviet Union.
;April 22, 1993: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum dedicated.
and Yasser Arafat shake hands at the signing of the Oslo Accords, with Bill Clinton behind them, 1993|alt=A stolid balding man in a dark suit on the left shakes the hand of a smiling man in traditional Arab headdress on the right. A taller, younger man stands with open arms in the center behind them.
;September 13, 1993: Israel and PLO sign the Oslo Accords.
;1994: The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, dies.
;October 26, 1994: Israel and Jordan sign an official peace treaty. Israel cedes a small amount of contested land to Jordan, and the countries open official diplomatic relations, with open borders and free trade.
;December 10, 1994: Arafat, Rabin and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres share the Nobel Peace Prize.
;November 4, 1995: Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin is assassinated.
;1996: Peres loses election to Benyamin Netanyahu.
;1999: Ehud Barak elected Prime Minister of Israel.

21st century

;May 24, 2000: Israel unilaterally withdraws its remaining forces from its security zone in southern Lebanon to the international border, fully complying with the UN Security Council Res. 425.
;2000 July: Camp David Summit.
;2000, Summer: Senator Joseph Lieberman becomes the first Jewish-American to be nominated for a national office by a major political party.
;September 29, 2000: The al-Aqsa Intifada begins.
;2001: Election of Ariel Sharon as Israel's Prime Minister.
;2001: Jewish Museum of Turkey is founded by Turkish Jewry
;2004: Avram Hershko and Aaron Ciechanover of the Technion win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The Jewish Autonomous Oblast builds its first synagogue, Birobidzhan Synagogue, in accordance with halakha. Uriyahu Butler became the first member of the African Hebrew Israelite community to enlist in the Israel Defense Forces
;March 31, 2005: The Government of Israel officially recognizes the Bnei Menashe people of North-East India as one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, opening the door for thousands of people to immigrate to Israel.
;2005 August: The Government of Israel withdraws its military forces and settlers from the Gaza Strip.
;2005 December: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon falls into a coma; Deputy Premier Ehud Olmert takes over as Acting Prime Minister
;2006 March: Ehud Olmert leads the Kadima party to victory in Israeli elections, becomes Prime Minister of Israel.
;2006 July–August: A military conflict in Lebanon and northern Israel started on July 12, after a Hezbollah cross-border raid into Israel. The war ended with the passage of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701 after 34 days of fighting. About 2,000 Lebanese and 159 Israelis were killed, and civilian infrastructure on both sides heavily damaged.
;2008 December: The Israel Defense Forces launches Operation Cast Lead against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
;2009 March: Benjamin Netanyahu becomes Prime Minister of Israel.
;2014 January: Ariel Sharon dies, after undergoing a sudden decline in health, having suffered renal failure and other complications, after spending 8 years in a deep coma due to his January 2006 stroke, on January 11, 2014.
;2016 March: The Jewish Agency declares an end to immigration from Yemen, following the successful conclusion of a covert operation that brought 19 people to Israel over several days. The last 50 Yemenite Jews refuse to leave Yemen.
;2017 December: President Donald Trump announces formal United States recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
;2019 March : The United States became the first country to recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan heights territory which it held since 1967.

Years in the State of Israel

This is a timeline of events in the State of Israel since 1948.