Illuminating the Path through Time
“Remember the days of old, reflect on the years of previous generations. Ask your father, and he’ll tell you; your elders will inform you. ” Deuteronomy 32:7 (ISV)
History is not just a record of the past — it is the unfolding of Yehovah’s dealings with humanity across generations. From the call of Abraham to the fall of empires, from the giving of Torah to the distortion of truth, from the humble obedience of prophets to the rise of counterfeit traditions, the timeline of Abrahamic faith is marked by both divine revelation and human rebellion.
This chronology was created to help seekers, believers, and truth-lovers alike watch the needle move through time — to see how doctrines were shaped, when traditions arose, and where the original path began to twist. It is a tool of restoration, not condemnation: a way to make visible the subtle (and not-so-subtle) shifts that brought us to where we are today.
Many claim to walk in the faith of Abraham, yet few understand how the message changed, splintered, and was reinterpreted by religious systems and empires over the centuries. This timeline is meant to stir your discernment, awaken your curiosity, and help you test all things — so that you may return to the good way and walk in it.
As you explore this chronology, ask yourself:
- When did the simplicity of the original faith begin to shift?
- Who preserved the truth — and who rewrote it?
- What role have power, politics, and empire played in the formation of doctrine?
- And what does Yehovah require of us now?
Let this be a map, a mirror, and a warning.
Let it make a path straight for Yehovah’s people once again.
| Est. Date | Type | Event Description | Notes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| -200 | High Priest / End of Miracles | Death of Simeon the Righteous | Last righteous priest; miracles at the temple ceased thereafter | Mishnah, Avot 1:2; Yoma 39b |
| -180 | Religious Leadership | Jose ben Joezer & Jose ben Johanan (First Zugot) | Earliest named zugot pair in Mishnah - The first Proto-supreme court, pre-Sanhedrin authorities | Avot 1:4 |
| -180 | High Priest | Onias III as last Zadokite priest | Replaced via Seleucid corruption | Josephus, Antiquities 12.5.1 |
| -175 | High Priest - Hellenization / Corruption | Jason bribes to become High Priest | Began Hellenistic temple transformation | 2 Maccabees 4 |
| -171 | High Priest - Hellenization / Violence | Menelaus installed as High Priest | Led to riots and persecution | 2 Maccabees 4 |
| -167 | Zealotry / Revolt | Mattathias kills royal official | Start of Hasmonean Revolt | 1 Maccabees 2 |
| -167 | Religious Oppression | Desecration of Temple by Antiochus IV | Outlawed Torah & circumcision | 1 Maccabees 1 |
| -164 | Temple Restoration | Rededication of Temple (Hanukkah) | Commemorated yearly thereafter - Really a one time catchup for a missed tabernacles festival due to war. | 1 Maccabees 4 |
| -140 | Political-Religious Authority | Simon Thassi made High Priest and leader | Established Hasmonean priest-kingship | 1 Maccabees 14:41 |
| -139 | Expulsion | Expulsion of Jews & Chaldeans from Rome | Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds and Sayings 1.3.3 | |
| -135 | Assassination | Murder of Simon Thassi | By son-in-law Ptolemy | Josephus, Antiquities 13.10 |
| -130 | Religious Leadership | Joshua ben Perachiah & Nittai the Arbelite (Zugot) | Led during Hasmonean rule | Avot 1:5 |
| -110 | Religious Leadership | Judah ben Tabbai & Simeon ben Shetach (Zugot) | Under Queen Salome Alexandra | Avot 1:6 |
| -88 | Persecution | Alexander Jannaeus crucifies 800 Pharisees | Sectarian conflict | Josephus, Antiquities 13.13.5 |
| -63 | Military Desecration | Pompey's Desecration of the Temple | Roman general Pompey captures Jerusalem and enters the Temple sanctuary, marking the first Roman desecration of the Temple and the beginning of direct Roman dominance over Judea | Josephus, Jewish War 1.7.6; Antiquities 14.4.4 |
| -40 | Imperial Installation | Herod Appointed King of Judea by Rome | The Roman Senate appoints Herod as king, establishing a client-king model and severing Davidic legitimacy from political rule | Josephus, Antiquities 14.14.4–5 |
| -37 | Political Consolidation | Herod Captures Jerusalem | Herod takes Jerusalem with Roman support, securing his reign and reshaping Temple politics | Josephus, Antiquities 14.16.4 |
| -30 | Religious Leadership | Hillel & Shammai (Last Zugot) | Hillel was Nasi; Shammai Av Beit Din | Avot 1:10 |
| -23 | High Priest | Simon ben Boethus | Appointed by Herod the Great; linked by marriage to Herod | Josephus, Antiquities 15-20 |
| -20-10 | Temple Construction | Herod expands Second Temple | Rebuilt Temple on grand scale | Josephus, Antiquities 15.11.1 |
| -5 | High Priest | Matthias ben Theophilus | Briefly held office before Herod's death | Josephus, Antiquities 15-20 |
| -4 | Political Transition | Death of Herod the Great | Leads to division of his kingdom among sons and eventual Roman procuratorship | Josephus, Antiquities 17.8.1 |
| 4 | High Priest | Joazar ben Boethus | Removed by Archelaus for being too favorable to Romans | Josephus, Antiquities 17.6.4 |
| 6 | Political Shift | Judea Becomes a Roman Province | Archelaus is deposed and Judea placed under direct Roman administration | Josephus, Antiquities 17.13.2; 18.1.1 |
| 6 | Governance Shift | Roman procurators replace Herodian kings in Judea | Judea placed under direct Roman control; Coponius first procurator | Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.1 |
| 6 | Imperial Taxation | Census of Quirinius | Roman census for taxation sparks widespread unrest and resistance to Roman rule | Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.1 |
| 6 | High Priest | Ananus ben Seth (Annas) | Appointed by Quirinius; served until 15 CE, retained great influence | Josephus, Antiquities 18.2.1 |
| 10 | Leadership Shift | Death of Hillel the Elder; Shammai's influence increases | Marks the rise of stricter Shammaite halakhah | Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 15a |
| 11 | Leadership Shift | Hillel succeeded | Gamaliel I The Elder takes on the Nasi role within the Sanhedrin | Acts 5:34, already established authority implies much earlier. Could be anywhere between 8-20ce |
| 15 | High Priest | Ishmael ben Phabi II | Appointed by Valerius Gratus, Roman governor | Josephus, Antiquities 18.2.2 |
| 16 | High Priest | Eleazar ben Ananus | Son of Annas, appointed by Gratus | Josephus, Antiquities 18.2.2 |
| 17 | High Priest | Simon ben Camithus | Briefly replaced Eleazar | Josephus, Antiquities 18.2.2 |
| 18 | High Priest | Joseph Caiaphas | Appointed by Gratus, served until 36 CE; presided during Yeshua's trial | Josephus, Antiquities 18.2.2 |
| 19 | Persecution | Tiberius Expells Jews from Rome | Tiberius expels Jews from Rome, recorded as 4000 sent to Sardinia | Tacitus, Annals 2.85; Suetonius, Tiberius 36; Josephus, Antiquities 18.81–84 |
| 20 | Halakhic Division / Sectarianism | Shammai institutes 18 gezerot (decrees) | Legal rulings that increase Jewish-Gentile separation | Talmud Bavli, Beitzah 20a; Shabbat 17a |
| 20 | Philosophical Theology | Development of Logos doctrine | Influenced early Christian thinking | Philo of Alexandria |
| 26 | Political Appointment | Pilate appointed as prefect of Judea | Oversaw trial of Yeshua | Roman Record |
| 28 | Martyrdom | Murder of John the Baptist | Beheaded for condemning Herod Antipas' marriage | Matthew 14:10; Mark 6:27 |
| 30 | Martyrdom | Crucifixion of Yeshua under Pilate | Turning point for internal messianic identity and Roman suspicion | Gospel Narratives |
| 30 | Leadership Transition | Death of Shammai the Elder | Ends Shammai's strict halakhic dominance | Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 15a |
| 30-40 | Hellenistic Expansions | Philo's logos | Philo authors key logos innovations as God's agent, image, word | Philo De Opificio Mundi |
| 30-40 | Doctrinal Schism | Pharisaic sectarian believers cleave to James and reject Paul | Torah-observant Jewish believers in Yeshua, best described as Proto-Ebionites | Epiphanius, Panarion 29.7.1-8 |
| 31 | Political Crisis | Death of Sejanus, Pilate's patron | Pilate becomes more cautious | Roman Record |
| 31 | Martyrdom | Stoning of Stephen | First post-Yeshua martyr, sparks diaspora | Acts 7:54-60 |
| 33 | Internal Division | Hellenist vs. Hebrew widows | Earliest recorded community tension | Acts 6 |
| 33 | Cultural/Administrative | Dispute between Hellenists and Hebrews | Over food distribution, leads to appointment of deacons | Acts 6:1 |
| 34 | Apostolic Transition | Conversion of Paul | Key turning point in mission to Gentiles | Acts 9 |
| 36 | High Priest | Jonathan ben Ananus | Appointed by Vitellius after removing Caiaphas | Josephus, Antiquities 18.4.3 |
| 37 | High Priest | Theophilus ben Ananus | Appointed by Vitellius, son of Annas | Josephus, Antiquities 18.5.3 |
| 38 | Persecution | Flaccus persecutes Alexandrian Jews | Mob violence, public crucifixions, forced emperor worship of Caligula, enforced statues of Caligula in synagogues | Philo, In Flaccum 41-43, 72-75 |
| 40 | Imperial Crisis | Caligula Orders His Statue Placed in the Temple | Emperor Caligula orders a statue of himself erected in the Temple, nearly triggering full-scale revolt | Philo, Embassy to Gaius; Josephus, Antiquities 18.8.2–9 |
| 40-44 | Jewish-Gentile inclusion | Peter criticized for eating with Gentiles at Cornelius's home | Shows early resistance to Gentile fellowship | Acts 11:2-3 |
| 41 | Imperial Warning | Claudius warns Greeks and Jews in Alexandria | Claudius writes to warn and quell uprisings and unrest between Greeks & Jews in Alexandria | Claudius’ Letter to Alexandrians, P. Lond. 1912 |
| 41 | Emperor Assassinated | Caligula killed by the Praetorian guard | Conspired against and brutally murdered by his own military | Suetonius The Twelve Caesars: Caligula 56-59 Cassius Dio Roman History 59.29-30 |
| 43 | High Priest | Matthias ben Ananus | Another son of Annas | Josephus, Antiquities 19.6.2 |
| 44 | Persecution | James (son of Zebedee) killed by Herod Agrippa I | Early apostolic martyrdom in Jerusalem | Acts 12:1-2 |
| 44 | Client Kingship Collapse | Death of Herod Agrippa I | Agrippa I’s death returns Judea to Roman procuratorship, increasing instability | Josephus, Antiquities 19.8.2 |
| 48 | Apostolic Conflict | Paul rebukes Peter at Antioch | Over table fellowship with Gentiles (Result of Shammai's Gezerot) | Galatians 2 |
| 48 | Doctrinal/Theological | Jerusalem Council on circumcision | Paul and Barnabas oppose Pharisaic sectarians (a result of Shammai's Gezerot) include proselytes as Gerim | Acts 15:1-29 |
| 48 | Personal/Ministerial | Split between Paul and Barnabas | Over John Mark; shows fragility of early leadership & divisions with Paul and faith | Acts 15:36-41 |
| 49 | Imperial Expulsion | Jews Expelled from Rome | Emperor Claudius expels Jews from Rome, reshaping Jewish-Gentile relations in Roman assemblies. Historical reasons to consider Chrestus as "Christus" rising debates over Messiah. | Acts 18:2, Suetonius, Claudius 25.4 |
| 52 | Procuratorial Violence | Felix Uses Armed Force Against Jewish Dissent | Procurator Felix suppresses unrest through assassinations and informants | Josephus, Antiquities 20.8.5–6 |
| 52 | Apostolic Rejection | Corinthians demand proof from Paul | Authority and authenticity challenged - Other authorities of believers speak against Paul | 2 Corinthians 13:3 |
| 54 | Imperial Succession | Nero Becomes Emperor | Nero’s reign introduces increased instability and sets conditions for the Jewish–Roman War | Tacitus, Annals 13.1 |
| 55 | Apostolic legitimacy / Doctrinal corruption | Paul attacked by false apostles | Labels them 'super-apostles' and deceivers - Factions among the believers | 2 Corinthians 11:4-5,13-15 |
| 56 | Internal Apostolic Rejection | Corinthians demand proof Paul speaks for Christ | Deep division in his own assembly - other factions visit or mix in | 2 Corinthians 13 |
| 57 | Sectarian Identity / Labeling | Paul called ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes | Earliest use of 'Nazarenes' as a legal-religious classification - Represents Jamesian association factionalism | Acts 24:5 |
| 57 | Apostolic Mediation / Tension with Law | Paul takes Nazarite vow in Jerusalem | To dispel rumors of lawbreaking | Acts 21:18-26 |
| 59 | Political/Legal Interface | Herod Agrippa II hears Paul's defense alongside Festus | Paul's trial in Caesarea reflects continued Herodian involvement | Josephus, Wars 2.9.6 |
| 60 | Doctrinal syncretism | Influence of mysticism, asceticism, and 'worship of angels' | Warning against false humility and human tradition - gnostic factions on the rise and adopting proto-christian ideas and syncretism | Colossians 2:18-23 |
| 60 | Jealousy/Rivalry | Some preach Christ out of envy and rivalry, seeking to afflict Paul | Paul writes from prison, aware of competitive motives | Philippians 1:15-17 |
| 60 | Personal/Internal Dispute | Conflict between Euodia and Syntyche | Paul pleads for unity between two women | Philippians 4:2-3 |
| 62 | Doctrinal Error | Men teaching false doctrines and engaging in vain speculations | Paul urges Timothy to charge them not to teach differently | 1 Timothy 1:3-7 |
| 62 | Governance Gap | Death of Festus | Power vacuum exploited by Ananus to kill James | Josephus, Antiquities 20.9.1 |
| 62 | Religious-Political Execution | Murder of James the Just & others | Executed by high priest Ananus in a leadership vacuum before Albinus arrives | Josephus, Antiquities 20.9.1 |
| 62 | Governance Restoration | Arrival of Albinus | Ends unlawful high priest executions of James and others. Ananus ben Ananus removed from authority | Josephus, Antiquities 20.9.1 |
| 64 | Persecution | Nero Blames Jewish Sect for Fire of Rome | After the Great Fire, a Jewish-derived sect is targeted, establishing precedent for selective imperial blame | Tacitus, Annals 15.44 |
| 64 | Doctrinal Heresy | Hymenaeus and Philetus teach resurrection already occurred | Said to overthrow the faith of some - possible outcome of gnostic or philosophical adoptions or syncretisms. | 2 Timothy 2:17-18 |
| 64 | Widespread Apostolic Abandonment | All in Asia have turned away from Paul | Late letter, just before Paul's martyrdom | 2 Timothy 1:15 |
| 64 | Mixed: Moral, doctrinal, leadership | Seven churches rebuked for various sins | Lukewarmness, false teachers, idolatry | Revelation 2-3 |
| 66-70 | Sectarian Split | Nazarene flight to Pella | Messianic believers flee before Roman war | Eusebius, Church History 3.5 |
| 66 | Jewish-Roman War | Jewish rebellion breaks out | Cestius Gallus fails to suppress revolt | Josephus Jewish War 2.17.2-9 Tacitus Histories 5.8-10 |
| 67 | High Priest | Phannias ben Samuel | Appointed during the Zealot control in the revolt; last high priest before the Temple's destruction | Josephus, Wars 4.3.6 |
| 67 | Jewish-Roman War | Josephus surrenders to Vespasian | Josephus defects to Rome in Galilee | Josephus Jewish War 3.8.9 Tacitus Histories 5.1 |
| 68 | Emperor Death | Nero Dies | June Nero dies and civil war erupts | Suetonius Life of Nero 49-57 Tacitus Histories 1.4 |
| 69 | Emperor Inaugurated | Vespasian Rises | Vespasian becomes Emperor in July in the year of the four emperors | Tacitus Histories 2.74-86 Suetonius Life of Vespasian 6-7 Cassius Dio Roman History 66.9 |
| 70 | Temple Destroyed | Destruction of the Temple | 9th of Av (August 30, 70CE) Temple is destroyed. | Josephus Jewish War 5-6 Tacitus Histories 5.11-13 Suetonius Life of Titus 5 |
| 70 | Roman Tax on anything remotely Jewish | Fiscus Judaicus replaces Temple Tax | Introduced by Vespasian, enforced by procurators across the entire empire, estimates of 2+ days pay per year paid specifically to Jupiter's temple, particularly humiliating to Jews. | Suetonius Life of Vespasian 23.4 Cassius Dio Roman History 66.7.2 |
| 70 | Leadership Change | Gamaliel II as Nasi in Yavneh | Gamaliel II is Nasi in Yavneh after the destruction of the Temple | TBD |
| 73 | Masada Conquered | Mass suicide and end of war | Roughly 960 Jews commit suicide under Lucius Flavius Silva | Josephus Jewish War 7.9.1 |
| 81 | Fiscus Judaicus Expansions | Fiscus Judaicus tax becomes deadly for Romans | Domitian intensified the tax and expanded it to anyone that lived like jews or concealed jewish heritage and could lose home, go to jail or killed. | Suetonius Life of Domitian 12.2 Cassius Dio Roman History 67.14.1-2 |
| 81-96 | Circumcision hunt by Rome | Circumcision Policing and Social Betrayal by Roman informants | Invasive bodily examinations to prove circumcision and Jewish heritage to pay taxes. | Suetonius, Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Domitian 12.2. |
| 81 | Church control / Apostolic Rebellion | Diotrephes rejects apostolic authority of Apostle John and his disciples | Gentile leader expels Johns disciples from the assembly - Solidifying gentile leadership separation from the 12 Apostles faith | 3 John 9-10 |
| 82 | Doctrinal Schism | Virgin Birth Innovation in response to persecution | Ebionite Torah-observant Jewish believers make an early split from developing Gentile orthodoxy | Epiphanius, Panarion 29.7.1-8 |
| 82 | Worship Day Shift | Shift from Sabbath to Sunday | Shows early Gentile separation from the Sabbath | Didache 14; Ignatius, Magnesians 9:1 |
| 95 | Murder of Circumcised | Flavius Clemens death and many executions | For hiding jewish heritage and avoiding paying the Fiscus Judaicus tax | Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 67.14. |
| 96 | Imperial Assassination | Assassination of Domitian | Ends aggressive enforcement of Jewish identity policing | Suetonius, Domitian 17 |
| 96 | Revised Roman Law | Nerva reverts Tax to Jews only | The extended abuses of the Fiscus Judaicus are reverted to Jews only. | Roman Aureus Coin Cassius Dio 68.1-2 |
| 109 | Leadership Change | Death of Gamaliel II | His term as Nasi since the destruction of the temple comes to an end. | TBD |
| 110 | Scriptural Translation | Targum Onkelos completed | Literal Aramaic Translation of the Torah. Traditionally Onkelos the Proselyte; finalized under the tutelage of Rabbi Eliezer and Yehoshua | Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash |
| 112 | Persecution | Roman inquiry into Christian practices & Executions | Notes that Christians have a fixed day of worship, and make oaths to Christ vs Oaths to the Roman Emperor. Pliny executes obstinate Christians after interrogation. | Pliny the Younger to Trajan (Letter 10.96) |
| 115-117 | Jewish-Roman War | Kitos War in Cyrene, Alexandria, Cyprus & Mesopotamia | Jewish hostilities and war against Rome. Massive massacre, enslavement of Jews, banning of Jews from entry to Rome. Generals Lusius Quietus & Marcius Turbo lead the response to Jewish instigation. | Cassius Dio 68.32; Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. 4.2 |
| 132 | Messianic Schism | Final Jewish revolt; Rabbi Akiva declares Simon bar Kokhba 'Messiah' | Yeshua followers refuse to fight, are excluded from mainstream Judaism | Bar Kokhba Revolt (Dio Cassius, Eusebius) |
| 135 | Expulsion | Jerusalem Refounded as Aelia Capitolina | Jerusalem is rebuilt as a Roman city and Jews are barred from entry | Cassius Dio 69.12.1 |
| 150 | Doctrinal Development | Baptism as spiritual rebirth | Baptism and Logos theology emphasized | Justin Martyr, 1 Apology 61 |
| 150 | Scriptural Translation | Targum Jonathan Completed | Official Aramaic Translation of the Prophets of the Tanakh | |
| 150 | Doctrinal Development | Large group gather consistently on Sunday | Sunday assembly joined to celebrate resurrection and to remember the first day of creation | Justin Martyr, 1 Apology 67 |
| 155 | Imperial Execution | Execution of Polycarp of Smyrna | Roman execution of a prominent Christian leader illustrates increasing differentiation and visibility of Gentile Christianity under Roman scrutiny | Martyrdom of Polycarp; Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 4.15 |
| 161-180 | Persecutions | Marcus Aurelius & Local Governors Persuction | Regional, intermittent, socially driven increased resistance and persecution of Christians. Sometimes small, othertimes scandalous murder or extended torture of individuals and communities. | Justin Martyr, Second Apology Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 4–5 “Letter of the Churches of Lyons and Vienne" |
| 165 | Martyrdom | Execusion of Justin Martyr | He refused to sacrifice to Roman Gods and was killed for it. "Refusing Civic Duties" | |
| 170 | Scripture Formation | First Christian canon list | Lists accepted Christian texts | Muratorian Fragment |
| 177 | Persecution | Lyons & Vienne Torture & Executions in Gaul | Christians excluded from baths, marketplaces, accused of crimes, insults and enemies, finally accused of atheism, cannibalism, incest and hatred of mankind. Civic persecution spectacles. | Letter of Lyons and Vienne in Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. 5.1 |
| 177 | Martyrdom | Torture & Murder of Blandina & Pothinus | Blandina endured repeated torture without recanting her faith. Pothinus was the Bishop of Lyons said to be over 90yrs old. Scourging, imprisonment, exposure to wild beasts, burning, public executions in the amphitheatre. | Letter of Lyons and Vienne in Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. 5.1 |
| 180 | Theological Polemic | Irenaeus denounces Ebionites as heretics | Attacks Jewish believers who rejected the virgin birth and retained Torah observance; instrumental in defining proto-orthodox doctrine. | Irenaeus, Against Heresies 1.26.2 |
| 180 | Martyrdom | Scillitan Martyrs in North Africa | 12 Christians executed by beheading under Roman proconsul Saturninus. Would not recant | Acts of the Scillitan Martyrs |
| 188 | Ecumenical Council | Council of Hippo | Introduced non-Hebrew writings into the Christian canon shaping later Catholic theology | Council of Hippo Canon 36 |
| 193-211 | Legal Restriction | Severan Restrictions on Jewish and Christian Conversion | Septimius Severus prohibits conversion to Judaism and Christianity, formalizing state control over religious identity | Historia Augusta, Severus 17; Eusebius, EH 6.1 |
| 200 | Doctrinal Innovation | Use of term 'Trinity' (Trinitas) to describe Godhead | First formal use of the word 'Trinity' in Christian writing | Tertullian, Against Praxeas 3-5 |
| 200 | Rabbinic Literature | Earliest codified part of the Oral Torah, consisting of six orders of legal rulings. | Final redaction of Oral Torah traditions into canonical form, forming the basis of Rabbinic Judaism. Redacted by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi in Judea | Mishnah |
| 230 | Rabbinic Law Revisions & Expansion | Supplementary legal material paralleling the Mishnah, often expanding or explaining disputed points. | Tosefta Compilation. Early Tannaitic material - adds clarification and details to many Mishnaic tractates. Attributed to students of Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi, especially Rabbi Hiyya and Rabbi Oshaya | Tosefta Compilation |
| 249-251 | Imperial Religious Test | Decian Sacrifice Edict | Empire-wide requirement to perform sacrifice; Jews exempt, Christians not, crystallizing legal separation. Emperor Decius focussed on Christian leadership | Cyprian, De Lapsis; Eusebius, EH 6.41 |
| 257-260 | Persecution | Valerian Executions & Exile | Clearly empire directed intentional legally structured anti-Christian persecution. 1st Edict banned assemblies, targeted leaders, imposed exile before execution. 2nd Edict escalates dramatically to executions even of Roman citizens resulting in Cyprian being executed in 258. Denying the Roman Gods and their sacrifices. | Cyprian; Eusebius |
| 300 | Scriptural Translation | Targum Neofiti | Anonymous Aramaic Translation of the Torah. Discovered in Vatican archives | |
| 303 | Persecution | Diocletian initiates Great Persecution of Christians | Last and most severe persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire, aimed at uprooting the faith. | Eusebius, Martyrs of Palestine; Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum |
| 306 | Jewish-Christian Division | Formalizing Gentile separation from Jews, forbidding intermingling | First recorded Christian synod to legislate anti-Jewish boundary | Council of Elvira (Canon 21) |
| 312 | Political / Religious Shift | Conversion of Constantine and rise of imperial Christianity | Vision of the cross precedes military victory; pivotal for Christendom | Constantine's Vision & Battle of Milvian Bridge |
| 313 | Imperial Policy | Legalization of Christianity across the Roman Empire | Co-issued by Constantine and Licinius; Imperial Endorsement of Religious Tolerance ends persecution | Edict of Milan |
| 315 | Legal Suppression | First imperial laws restricting Jewish privileges under Constantine. | Jews forbidden to convert others; Christians banned from converting to Judaism. | Codex Theodosianus 16.8.1 |
| 325 | Christological Doctrine | Arianism condemned, Trinity formalized | Defines Christ as coequal with the Father | Council of Nicaea |
| 337 | Political Succession | Baptism & Death of Constantine the Great | Baptized on deathbed by Eusebius of Nicomedia | Eusebius, Church History |
| 351 | Rebellion & Repression | Jewish revolt under Gallus crushed by imperial forces. | Brutal repression followed uprising against Roman/Byzantine Christian control. | Sozomen, Ecclesiastical History 4.7 Ammianus Marcellinus 14.8 |
| 362 | Political-Religious Move | Tries to overthrow Christianity and attempts to rebuild the Temple | Balls of fire burst forth near the foundations and the project was abandoned. Christian view as a divine sign that stopped the effort | Julian the Apostate |
| 362 | Roman Tax abolished | Julian removes Jew-tax | Removes Fiscus Judaicus | Julian's letter to the Jewish People, Cyril of Alexandria book 6 |
| 363 | Anti-Judaic Decree | Ban on Sabbath observance and biblical festivals | Christians must not Judaize, Christians disallowed to rest on the sabbath day and instead encouraged TO work, and not eat unleavened bread or observe biblical (Jewish) holidays | Council of Laodicea |
| 367 | Scripture Formation | Athanasius Final NT Canon | List of 27 NT books | Athanasius Festal Letter 39 |
| 380 | Imperial Policy | Christianity becomes official religion of the Roman Empire | Edict of Thessalonica established Nicene Christianity as the only legitimate faith of the empire; heresies and Jewish practices were increasingly suppressed. | Codex Theodosianus 16.1.2 |
| 388 | Mob Violence & Immunity | Christian mob burns synagogue with bishop's approval. | Emperor Theodosius I initially defends Jews but is rebuked by Ambrose of Milan, who demands impunity for Christians. | Ambrose, Epistles 40 & 41; Codex Theodosianus 16.8.9 |
| 391 | State Religious Suppression | Pagan Worship Prohibited | Non-Christian worship outlawed; religious plurality formally ended | Codex Theodosianus 16.10 |
| 395 | Rabbinic Literature | Compilation of Gemara commentary on the Mishnah from the Land of Israel. | Amoraim of Tiberias and Caesarea academies; likely finalized under Rabbi Yossi of Sepphoris or later redactors. | Talmud Yerushalmi Jerusalem Talmud |
| 398 | Scriptural Translation | Jerome completes the Latin Vulgate | First authoritative Latin translation of the Bible; deeply influential in shaping Western Christian theology. | Jerome, Preface to the Vulgate |
| 400 | Scriptural Translation | Targum Yerushalmi fragments | Aramaic translation and interpretation of the Torah, later additions redactions and glosses, not to be confused with Pseudo-Jonathan | |
| 415 | Forced Expulsion | Expulsion of Jews from Alexandria under Cyril of Alexandria. | Thousands of Jews expelled following interreligious violence. | Socrates Scholasticus, Ecclesiastical History 7.13 |
| 425 | Governance Shift | Abolition of the Sanhedrin | Office of the Nasi officially abolished by Imperial edict by Theodosius II | Jerusalem Talmud, Berakhot 3:1 |
| 429 | Christological Doctrine | Council of Ephesus affirms Mary as Theotokos | Officially declares Mary the 'Mother of God'; catalyzes the rise of Marian doctrine. | Council of Ephesus, Session I |
| 438 | Legal Codification | Codex Theodosianus Published | Systematic legal restrictions on Jews formalized in imperial law | Codex Theodosianus, Book 16 |
| 451 | Christological Doctrin | Council of Chalcedon defines two-nature Christology | Establishes Christ as fully divine and fully human; deepens division between imperial and non-imperial churches. | Council of Chalcedon, Definition of Faith |
| 500 | Rabbinic Text | Completion in Sasanian Babylon | Foundational Jewish legal work | Babylonian Talmud Finalization |
| 518 | Massacre | Jewish King Dhu Nuwas persecutes Christians; massacres in Najran. | Thousands of Christians killed in response to Byzantine-Christian persecution of Jews elsewhere. | Procopius, Persian Wars 1.20 Qur'an 85:4–8 |
| 520 | Rabbinic Literature | Comprehensive Gemara commentary developed in Babylonian academies, superseded the Yerushalmi in authority. | Finalized by late Amoraim and early Savoraim, especially in Pumbedita and Sura academies. | The Formation of the Babylonian Talmud The Culture of the Babylonian Talmud |
| 531 | Legal Suppression | Justinian Code imposes new restrictions on Jewish worship and synagogue use. | Jews forbidden to read Torah in Hebrew publicly; synagogues repurposed. | Justinian Code, Novella 37 & 146 |
| 533 | Imperial Religious Codification | Justinian’s Corpus Juris Civilis | Christian supremacy and Jewish legal inferiority codified in Roman law | Codex Justinianus 1.9–1.12 |
| 553 | Theological Enforcement | Second Council of Constantinople reaffirms Trinitarianism | Condemns various 'heresies' including Origenism; reinforces imperial orthodoxy and anti-Jewish theology. | Second Council of Constantinople |
| 613 | Forced Conversion | King Sisebut enforces forced baptism of Jews. | Part of wider Visigothic anti-Jewish legislation culminating in forced conversions. | Isidore of Seville, Historia Gothorum 59 |
| 614 | Massacre | Jewish aid to Sassanid Persians in capturing Jerusalem; massacre of Christians. | Persians allowed Jews to govern Jerusalem briefly; Christian sources claim Jewish forces killed or enslaved many Christians. | Sebeos, Armenian History Antiochus Strategos, 'Capture of Jerusalem' |
| 641 | Geopolitical Shift | Islamic conquest of Jerusalem | Ends Byzantine Christian rule over the city; shifts religious and political control to early Islam. | Theophanes the Confessor, Chronographia al-Tabari, History of Prophets and Kings |
| 650 | Rabbinic Literature | Clarifications and editorial insertions into the Babylonian Talmud after redaction. | Savoraim (editors after Amoraim), active primarily in Sura and Pumbedita | The Geonim of Babylonia |
| 691 | Temple Mount Succession | Dome on the Rock Completed | Islam's claim to sacred space formerly held by Jews & Christians | al-Tabari History of the Prophets and Kings al-Muqaddasi Description of Syria |
| 691 | Doctrinal Boundary Enforcement | Council in Trullo (Quinisext Council) | Eastern Roman council formalizes separation from Jewish practices and codifies Christian norms opposed to Torah observance | Canons of the Quinisext Council |
| 721 | State Religious Edict | Byzantine Ban on Jewish Proselytism | Emperor Leo III forbids Jewish conversion efforts, reinforcing religious containment | Theophanes, Chronographia |
| 987 | Rabbinic Literature | Geonic Responsa and Talmudic Commentary. Legal responses and authoritative clarifications that shaped post-Talmudic Halakhah. | Sherira Gaon (epistolary history of the Talmud) and Saadia Gaon (philosophical and halakhic writings) | The Geonim of Babylonia and the Shaping of Medieval Jewish Culture |
| 1096 | Massacre | First Crusade in Rhineland | Thousands of Jews killed by Christians in Mainz, Worms, Speyer. | Sefer HaQabbalah Solomon bar Simson Chronicle |
| 1215 | Civic Discrimination | Fourth Lateran Council imposes distinctive dress for Jews. | Jews forced to wear badges and restricted from public office. | Fourth Lateran Council, Canon 68 |
| 1290 | Forced Expulsion | Expulsion of all Jews from England under Edward I. | First full expulsion of Jews from a Christian nation. | Edict of Expulsion |
| 1492 | Forced Expulsion | Alhambra Decree expels Jews from Spain. | Culmination of Catholic anti-Jewish policy, inquisition & forced conversions of over 100k Jews | Edict of Expulsion |
| 1517 | Theological Reformation | Luthers 95 Theses | Shifts Western Christianity from Catholic dogma | Martin Luther 95 Theses |
| 1543 | Theological Incitement | Martin Luther Publishes On the Jews and Their Lies | Reformation-era polemic renews and legitimizes anti-Jewish violence under Protestant theology | Martin Luther, Von den Juden und ihren Lügen |
| 1648-1657 | Mass Sectarian Violence | Khmelnytsky Massacres | Tens of thousands of Jews killed in Cossack uprisings across Eastern Europe | Jewish Chronicles; Polish-Lithuanian Records |
| 1881-1884 | State-Tolerated Pogroms | Russian Pogrom Wave | Anti-Jewish violence erupts following assassination of Alexander II; state response is permissive | Russian Imperial Records |
| 1935 | Racialized Legal Codification | Nuremberg Laws | Jewish identity defined racially, severing religion from legal persecution | Reich Citizenship Law |
| 1939-1945 | Industrialized Extermination | The Holocaust (Shoah) | Systematic genocide of European Jews by Nazi Germany | Nuremberg Trial Records |
| 1948 | State Formation / Conflict | Establishment of the State of Israel | Jewish sovereignty restored; global Jewish identity enters geopolitical conflict framework | UN Resolution 181; Israeli Declaration of Independence |
| 1967 | Territorial Realignment | Six-Day War | Israel gains control of Jerusalem, including the Temple Mount, reshaping religious and political dynamics | Israeli & UN Records |