1750 BCE
The Rise of Great Kingdoms
The Rise of Great Kingdoms
The ancient world has become more interconnected than ever before.
Great kingdoms compete for power across the Near East while merchants travel established trade routes linking Egypt, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Canaan, and the Indus Valley.
Babylon has emerged from obscurity to become one of Mesopotamia's dominant powers, while Egypt faces new political challenges that will eventually transform the region.
Babylon has become one of the great powers of the ancient world.
Around 1792 BC, Hammurabi ascends the Babylonian throne.
Over the next several decades he conquers rival kingdoms including:
Larsa
Eshnunna
Mari
By approximately 1754 BC, Hammurabi issues one of history's most famous collections of laws—the Code of Hammurabi.
Rather than inventing law, the code records and standardizes legal principles covering:
Property
Trade
Marriage
Contracts
Crime
Agriculture
Babylon now dominates much of southern Mesopotamia.
Egypt's Middle Kingdom is drawing toward its final centuries.
Although still prosperous, central authority is beginning to weaken.
Provincial rulers gain influence while immigration from western Asia steadily increases in the eastern Nile Delta.
Within the next century, these movements will contribute to the rise of the Hyksos, who will eventually rule parts of northern Egypt.
The Indus Civilization is entering a period of gradual transformation.
Some cities begin showing signs of decline.
Possible contributing factors include:
Changing river systems
Climate shifts
Reduced long-distance trade
Population movements
Great urban centers such as Harappa and Mohenjo-daro remain inhabited, but the civilization's peak has likely passed.
The kingdom of Elam remains a significant regional power.
Elamite rulers continue to compete and cooperate with Babylonian kings through diplomacy, trade, and warfare.
Trade routes across the Iranian Plateau remain essential for moving metals, stone, and luxury goods between Mesopotamia and Central Asia.
Central Anatolia is becoming increasingly organized.
Several Indo-European-speaking kingdoms are growing in strength.
Among them are the people who will become known as the Hittites.
Around the mid-17th century BC, rulers such as Labarna and later Hattusili I begin laying the foundations of what will become one of the Near East's greatest empires.
Canaan remains a patchwork of prosperous city-states.
Cities such as:
Hazor
Megiddo
Byblos
Jericho
serve as trading hubs between Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Canaanite merchants transport:
Cedar wood
Olive oil
Wine
Copper
Luxury goods
throughout the eastern Mediterranean.
Traditional Chinese chronology places the later Xia Dynasty during this era.
Archaeologically, complex Bronze Age societies continue developing in the Yellow River basin.
Bronze casting, urbanization, and political organization steadily increase, setting the stage for the Shang Dynasty, which will soon emerge.
Agricultural communities continue expanding.
Villages become larger and more organized.
Farmers increasingly rely upon:
Maize
Beans
Squash
Chili peppers
Large ceremonial centers have not yet appeared, but the foundations of later civilizations are being established.
Communities along Peru's coast continue constructing ceremonial centers while irrigation agriculture expands.
Cotton, fishing, and trade support increasingly complex societies.
According to traditional biblical chronology, this period is commonly associated with the later patriarchal narratives.
Depending on the chronology followed, this era may include:
Jacob
Joseph
Joseph's rise in Egypt
The settlement of Jacob's family in Egypt
The exact historical dating of these events remains debated among historians and archaeologists.
Hammurabi
Egyptian Middle Kingdom pharaohs
Early Hittite rulers
Joseph (traditional chronology)
Jacob (traditional chronology)
Babylon
Middle Kingdom Egypt
Elam
Mari
Assur
Emerging Hittite Kingdom
Harappan Civilization
Humanity continues advancing in:
Written legal systems
Bronze weaponry
Horse-drawn vehicles (increasingly important)
Diplomacy between kingdoms
Long-distance commerce
Monumental architecture
Astronomy and mathematics
Written treaties and royal correspondence become increasingly sophisticated.
The Great Pyramid is now approximately 810 years old.
The Great Sphinx continues overlooking the Giza Plateau.
The great cities of Harappa and Mohenjo-daro remain occupied, though some are beginning to change.
Babylon's temples and defensive walls expand under Hammurabi's rule.
You awaken in an age of kings and law. Hammurabi rules from Babylon, transforming a once-modest city into the dominant power of Mesopotamia and issuing one of history's most famous legal codes. Egypt remains wealthy but shows the first signs of political strain. The great cities of the Indus Valley still stand, though changes in climate and trade are beginning to reshape their future. Across Anatolia, the Hittites are emerging as a new force, while Canaanite merchants connect the great kingdoms through thriving trade routes. According to traditional biblical chronology, this is the world of Jacob and Joseph—a world in which the Great Pyramid has already stood for more than eight centuries.
2500 BC — Monument builders and the first great civilizations.
2250 BC — Akkad creates the world's first territorial empire.
2000 BC — Egypt is reunited, Babylon waits in the wings, and the patriarchal age begins.
1750 BC — Babylon rises under Hammurabi, law is codified, and the Bronze Age kingdoms compete for supremacy.