"The world's first great empire has fallen. New kingdoms rise from its ashes, while Egypt is reborn and traditions surrounding the biblical patriarchs begin to enter history."
The great civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Indus Valley continue to dominate the ancient world.
But unlike 2500 BC...
The political map has changed dramatically.
The Akkadian Empire has disappeared.
Egypt has emerged from a period of instability.
New peoples—particularly the Amorites—are reshaping Mesopotamia.
The Akkadian Empire is gone.
In its place, the Third Dynasty of Ur (Ur III) briefly restores order before eventually collapsing around the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC.
Southern Mesopotamia once again becomes a collection of competing kingdoms.
Cities include:
Ur
Isin
Larsa
Eshnunna
Mari
Amorite tribes continue settling throughout the region.
Within only a few centuries...
One small Amorite city named Babylon will begin its rise.
No one yet suspects it will become one of history's greatest cities.
Egypt has entered the Middle Kingdom.
After decades of political division, the country has been reunited.
This era becomes known as one of Egypt's classical ages.
Characteristics include:
Strong centralized government
Prosperous agriculture
Large irrigation projects
Expansion into Nubia
Increased literature
Greater military organization
Egypt once again becomes one of Earth's great superpowers.
The Indus Civilization reaches its height.
Cities contain:
Straight streets
Brick homes
Public baths
Sophisticated drainage
Standardized weights
Long-distance trade
Trade continues with:
Mesopotamia
Persia
Oman
Gulf ports
Despite their sophistication...
Their script remains undeciphered over 4,000 years later.
The Elamite kingdoms remain influential.
Trade between Iran and Mesopotamia flourishes.
Mountain peoples continue challenging lowland kingdoms.
The legendary Xia Dynasty is traditionally placed around this period in later Chinese historical texts, though archaeological evidence and exact dating remain subjects of ongoing debate.
Bronze technology continues spreading.
Communities become increasingly stratified.
Cities slowly begin emerging.
Villages continue expanding.
Agriculture improves.
Maize becomes increasingly central to daily life.
Large ceremonial cities have not yet appeared.
The Olmec civilization remains several centuries in the future.
Civilizations along Peru's coast continue constructing ceremonial centers.
Fishing and agriculture support growing populations.
Large irrigation works expand food production.
This is one of the most intriguing periods for biblical history.
According to traditional biblical chronology...
This is roughly the era associated with:
Leaving Ur
Journeying into Canaan
Covenant traditions
Isaac
Jacob
The early patriarchal narratives
Modern historians debate the historical dating and details of these traditions, but this general period is commonly associated with the patriarchal age in many biblical chronologies.
Because written records remain limited, relatively few individual names are preserved compared with later periods.
Egypt (Middle Kingdom)
Ur III (early)
Isin
Larsa
Mari
Elam
Indus Valley Civilization
Bronze metallurgy advances.
Astronomy becomes increasingly systematic.
Writing expands into administration, religion, and literature.
Mathematics improves.
Trade routes stretch thousands of miles.
Donkeys become indispensable pack animals for overland commerce.
The Great Pyramid is already approximately 560 years old.
The Great Sphinx has watched centuries pass.
The cities of Harappa and Mohenjo-daro continue flourishing.
Large Mesopotamian ziggurats dominate city skylines.
Massive irrigation canals feed millions.
Merchants may transport goods from the Indus Valley to Mesopotamia by sea.
Copper from Oman reaches Mesopotamian workshops.
Lapis lazuli from Afghanistan adorns Egyptian elites.
Cedar from Lebanon is prized for construction.
For perhaps the first time in history, civilizations separated by thousands of miles are connected through extensive trade networks.
You awaken in a world rebuilding itself. Egypt has regained its strength under the Middle Kingdom, while the mighty Akkadian Empire exists only in memory. Merchants travel astonishing distances, carrying lapis lazuli from Afghanistan, cedar from Lebanon, copper from Oman, and luxury goods between the great civilizations. In the Indus Valley, cities are laid out with remarkable precision and sanitation. In Mesopotamia, Babylon is still a modest city, its future greatness unimaginable. According to traditional biblical chronology, this is the world in which Abraham begins his journey—a time when the pyramids are already ancient monuments, standing for more than five centuries.
2500 BC — The great river civilizations flourish independently.
2250 BC — The Akkadian Empire becomes the world's first great territorial empire.
2000 BC — Egypt is reborn under the Middle Kingdom, Akkad has fallen, Babylon waits in obscurity, and the traditional age of Abraham approaches.