4th century BC
Encyclopedia : 4 : 4T : 4TH : 4th century BC
| Centuries: | 5th century BC - 4th century BC - 3rd century BC |
| Decades: | 390s BC 380s 370s 360s 350s 340s 330s 320s 310s 300s BC |
(2nd millennium BC - 1st millennium BC - 1st millennium)
The 4th century BC started on January 1, 400 BC and ended on December 31, 301 BC.
Contents
Overview
This century marks the height of the classical greek civilization in all of its aspects. With the conquests of alexander and the civil war of his generals that followed his death the hellenistic age started.
Events
- 383 BC Second Buddhist Councel at Vesali, 100 years after the Parimirvana.
- 323 BC Alexander the Great conquers the Persian Empire, decline and depopulation of classical greece with massive migration towards the conquered lands.
- 312 BC Seleucus I Nicator establishes himself in Babylon, founding the Seleucid Empire
- Invasion of the Celts into Ireland
- Battle of the Allia and subsequent Gaulish sack of Rome
- The Scythians are beginning to be absorbed into the Sarmatian people.
- The Romans conquer the Abruzzi region, decline of the Etruscan civilization
Significant persons
"The safest general characterisation of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato." (Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality, 1929).
- Marcus Furius Camillus, Roman dictator (c.446–365 BC).
- Plato, philosopher (c.427–347 BC).
- Tollund Man, Human sacrifice victim on the Jutland Peninsula in Denmark, possibly the earliest known evidence for worship of Odin.
- Aristotle, philosopher and scientist (384–322 BC).
- Philip II of Macedonia (born 382, reigned 359–336 BC).
- Darius III of Persia, last King of the Achaemenid dynasty (born 380, reigned 359–330 BC).
- Mencius, Chinese philosopher and sage (371–289 BC).
- Yang Zhu (also Yang Chu), Chinese philosopher for egoism and intellectual rival of Mencius.
- Ptolemy I Soter, founder of the Ptolemaic dynasty (c.367–283 BC).
- Shang Yang, Prime Minister of Qin, his reform helped Qin to become the strongest country and later unified China (term 361–338 BC).
- Seleucus I Nicator, founder of the Seleucid Empire (c.358–281 BC).
- Alexander the Great, King of Macedon, invades Asia Minor, Persia and reaches India (born 356, reigned 336–323 BC).
- Brennus, Gaulish chieftain
- Zhuangzi
- Archon of Pella, Babylonian satrap
Inventions, discoveries, introductions
- Oldest Brahmi script dates from this period (Brahmi is the ancestor of Indic scripts)
- Romans build first aqueduct
- Chinese use bellows
- The first crossbow, the gastraphetes, is invented at Syracuse
- Burnt brick first used in Greece
- Donkey-powered mills first used in Greece
Decades and years
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