5th century BC
The 5th century BC started the first day of 500 BC and ended the last day of 401 BC.
This century saw the establishment of Pataliputra as a capital of the Magadha Empire. This city would later become the ruling capital of different Indian kingdoms for about a thousand years. This period saw the rise of two great philosophical schools of the east, Jainism and Buddhism.
This period saw Mahavira and Buddha spreading their respective teachings in the northern plains of India. This essentially changed the socio-cultural and political dynamics of the region of South Asia. Buddhism would later go on to become one of the major world religions.
This period also saw the work of Yaska, who created Nirukta, that would lay the foundation stone for Sanskrit grammar and is one of the oldest works on grammar known to mankind.
This century is also traditionally recognized as the classical period of the Greeks, which would continue all the way through the 4th century until the time of Alexander the Great. The life of Socrates represented a major milestone in Greek philosophy though his teachings only survive through the work of his students, most notably Plato and Xenophon. The tragedians Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, as well as the comedian Aristophanes all date from this era and many of their works are still considered classics of the western theatrical canon.
The Persian Wars, fought between a coalition of Greek cities and the vast Achaemenid Persian Empire was a pivotal moment in Greek politics. The Greeks successfully prevented the annexation of Greece by the Persians in Battle of Plataea, Battle of Mycale, and further counterattacks. Afterwards, Sparta, the dominant power in the coalition, had no intention of further offensive action and considered the war over. Meanwhile, Athens counter-attacked, liberating Greek subjects of the Persian Empire up and down the Ionian coast and mobilizing a new coalition, the Delian League. Tensions between Athens, and its growing imperialistic ambitions as leader of the Delian League, and the traditionally dominant Sparta led to a protracted stalemate in the Peloponnesian War.
The world in the 5th century BC
Events
- Demotic becomes the dominant script of ancient Egypt.
490s BC
- 499 BC: Aristagoras, acting on behalf of the Persian Empire, leads a failed attack on the rebellious island of Naxos.
- 499 BC: Aristagoras instigates the Ionian Revolt, beginning the Persian Wars between Greece and Persia.
- 499 BC: Sardis sacked by Athenian and Ionian troops.
- 498 BC: Leontini subjugated by Hippocrates of Gela.
- 498 BC: Alexander I succeeds his father Amyntas I as king of Macedon.
- 496 BC: Battle of Lake Regillus: A legendary early Roman victory, won over either the Etruscans or the Latins.
- 496 BC: Sophocles is born.
- 495 BC: Temple to Mercury on the Circus Maximus in Rome is built.
- 494 BC: The Battle of Lade, where Persians take back Ionia.
- 494 BC: Two tribunes of the plebs and two plebeian aediles are elected for the first time in Rome: the office of the tribunate is established.
- 494 BC: The year Rome changed from an Aristocratic Republic to a Liberalized Republic.
- 493 BC: Piraeus, the port town of Athens, is founded.
- 493 BC: Coriolanus captures the Volscian town of Corioli for Rome.
- 492 BC: First expedition of King Darius I of Persia against Greece, under the leadership of his son-in-law Mardonius. This marks the start of the campaign that culminated in the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC.
- 492 BC: Ajatashartu overthrows his father Bimbisara to become king of Magadha.
- 491 BC: Leotychidas succeeds his cousin Demaratus as king of Sparta.
- 491 BC: Gelo becomes Tyrant of Gela.
- 490 BC: The Battle of Marathon, where Darius I of Persia is defeated by the Athenians and Plataeans under Miltiades
- 490 BC: Phidippides runs 40 kilometers from Marathon to Athens to announce the news of the Greek victory; origin of the marathon long-distance race.
480s BC
- 489 BC: Cities of Rhodes unite and start construction of the new city of Rhodes.
- 488 BC: Leonidas I succeeds his brother Cleomenes I as king of Sparta after Cleomenes is judged insane.
- 487 BC: Egypt revolts against the Persians.
- 487 BC: Aegina and Athens go to war.
- 487 BC: Athenian Archonship becomes elective by lot, an important milestone in the move towards radical Athenian democracy.
- 487 BC: Siaspiqa becomes ruler of the Kushite kingdom of Meroe.
- 486 BC: First part of the Grand Canal of China is built.
- 486 BC: Xerxes I succeeds Darius I as Great King of Persia.
- 486 BC: Egypt revolts against Persian rule.
- 486 BC: First Buddhist Council at Rejgaha, under the patronage of King Ajatashatru. Oral tradition established for the first time.
- 484 BC: Athenian playwright Aeschylus wins a poetry prize.
- 484 BC: Xerxes I abolishes the Kingdom of Babel and removes the golden statue of Bel.
- 484 BC: Persians regain control of Egypt.
- 483 BC: Gautama Buddha dies.
- 483 BC: Xerxes I of Persia starts planning his expedition against Greece
- 481 BC: The Isthmus of Corinth ends a war between Athens and Aegina.
- 480 BC: King Xerxes I of Persia sets out to conquer Greece.
- 480 BC: Cimon and his friends burn horse-bridles as an offering to Athena and join the marines
- 480 BC: Pleistarchus succeeds his father Leonidas I as king of Sparta.
- August, 480 BC: Battle of Artemisium—The Persian fleet fights an inconclusive battle with the Greek allied fleet.
- August 11, 480 BC: The Battle of Thermopylae, a costly victory by Persians over the Greeks.
- September 23, 480 BC: Battle of Salamis between Greece and Persia, leading to a Greek victory.
- 480 BC: Battle of Himera—The Carthaginians under Hamilcar are defeated by the Greeks of Sicily, led by Gelon of Syracuse.
- 480 BC: Roman troops march against the Veientines.
470s BC
- 479 BC: The Battle of Plataea, the Greeks defeat the Persians, ending the Persian Wars.
- 479 BC: Battle of Mycale.
- 479 BC: Potidaea is struck by a tsunami.
- 479 BC: Chinese philosopher Confucius dies.
- 478 BC: Establishment of the Temple of Confucius at Qufu.
- 477 BC: The Delian League is inaugurated.
- 476 BC: Archidamus II succeeds his grandfather Leotychides, who is banished to Tegea, as king of Sparta.
- 475 BC: King Xuan of Zhou becomes King of the Zhou dynasty.
- 474 BC: Battle of Cumae—The Syracusans under Hiero I defeat the Etruscans and end Etruscan expansion in southern Italy.
- 474 BC: Greek poet Pindar moves to Thebes.
- 473 BC: The Chinese State of Wu is annexed by the State of Yue.
- 472 BC: Carystus in Euboea is forced to join the Delian League.
- 472 BC: The tragedy The Persians is produced by Aeschylus.
- 471 BC: Athenian politician Themistocles is ostracized.
460s BC
- 469 BC: Philosopher Socrates is born in Attica, Athens, Greece.
- 468 BC: Sophocles, Greek playwright, defeats Aeschylus for the Athenian Prize.
- 468 BC: Antium captured by Roman forces.
- 468 BC: King Zhending of Zhou becomes King of the Zhou dynasty of China.
- 466 BC: Delian League defeats Persia at the Battle of Eurymedon.
- 466 BC: The Greek colony of Taras, in Magna Graecia, is defeated by Iapyges, a native population of ancient Apulia; Tarentine monarchy falls, with the installation of a democracy and the expulsion of the Pythagoreans.
- 465 BC: King Xerxes I of the Persian Empire is murdered by Artabanus the Hyrcanian. He is succeeded by Artaxerxes I, possibly with Artabanus acting as Regent.
- 465 BC: Thasos revolts from the Delian League.
- 464 BC: An earthquake in ancient Sparta, Greece leads to a Helot uprising and strained relations with Athens, one of the factors that lead to the Peloponnesian War.
- 464 BC: Regent King Artabanus of Persia is killed by his charge Artaxerxes I.
- 464 BC: Third Messenian war.
- 462 BC: The revolt of Thasos against the Delian League comes to an end with their surrender.
- 461 BC: Athenian politician Cimon is ostracized.
- 460 BC: Egypt revolts against Persia, starting a six-year war. An Athenian force sent to attack Cyprus is diverted to support this revolt.
- 460 BC: Cincinnatus becomes consul of the Roman Republic.
- 460 BC: Physician Hippocrates is born in Kos, Greece.
- 460 BC: Udayin succeeds his father Ajatashartu to become king of Magadha. Third king of Haryanka dynasty.
450s BC
- 459 BC: Pleistoanax succeeds his father Pleistarchus as king of Sparta.
- 459 BC: Destruction of the Sicilian town of Morgantina by Douketios, leader of the Sikels, according to Diodoros Siculus.
- 459 BC: Ezra leads the second body of Jews from Babylon to Jerusalem.
- 458 BC: Greek playwright Aeschylus completes the Oresteia, a trilogy that tells the story of a family blood feud. The plays will have a great influence on future writers.
- 458 BC: Cincinnatus is named dictator of the Roman Republic in order to defend it against Aequi. Sixteen days later, after defeating the invaders at the Battle of Mount Algidus, he resigns and returns to his farm.
- 457 BC: Athenian statesman Pericles' greatest reform, allowing common people to serve in any state office, inaugurates Golden Age of Ancient Athens.
- 457 BC: Battle of Tanagra—The Spartans defeat the Athenians, near Thebes.
- 457 BC: Battle of Oenophyta—The Athenians defeat the Thebans and take control of Boeotia.
- 457 BC: Decree of Artaxerxes I to re-establish the city government of Jerusalem. See Ezra 7, Daniel 9 and Nehemiah 1 in Old Testament.
- 455 BC: A thirty years' truce concluded between Athens and Lacedaemon.
- 455 BC: Euripides presents his first known tragedy, Peliades, in the Athenian festival of Dionysia.
- 454 BC: Athens loses a fleet and possibly as many as 50,000 men in a failed attempt to aid an Egyptian revolt against Persia.
- 454 BC: The treasury of the Delian League is moved from Delos to Athens.
- 454 BC: Hostilities between Segesta and Selinunte, two Greek cities on Sicily.
- 453 BC: Taiyuan, a city in China, gets flooded.
- 451 BC: Athens makes peace with Sparta and wages a war against Persia.
- 451 BC: The decemviri come to power in the Roman Republic. They enact the twelve tables, the foundation of Roman Law.
- 450 BC: Wars of the Delian League: Athenians under Cimon defeat the Persian fleet.
- 450 BC: Perdiccas II succeeds Alexander I as king of Macedonia.
- 450 BC to 325 BC: Olmecs leave La Venta, and it becomes depopulated by 325 BC.