History of political thought/Timelines: Difference between revisions

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1946 [http://www.icj-cij.org/court/index.php?p1=1 '''The Court of International Justice''']
1946 [http://www.icj-cij.org/court/index.php?p1=1 '''The Court of International Justice''']
2000 United Nations resolution[http://www.un.org/millennium/declaration/ares552e.htm]  to seek to achieve specific '''Millenium Development Goals'''  by 2015


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[[History of political thought/Timelines#The ancient world|'''return to top''']]
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A timeline (or several) relating to History of political thought.

The ancient world

495 BCE Pericles (495-429) - Athenian statesman and advcate of democracy

469 Socrates (469-384) - Athenian philosopher who is credited with laying the foundations of western philosophy; sentenced to death in Athens for heresy.

450 The Twelve Tables[1] - the first recorded statement of Roman Law

431 The Pelopponesian War[2] (431-404) between Athens and Sparta

428 Plato (428-347) Athenian philosopher, recorder of Socratic dialogue and critic of democracy

427 The Mytilene Debate[3] - that led to the Athenian decision to execute all the men on the rebellious island of Mytilene

384 Aristotle (384-322) pupil of Plato, author of The Politics

341 Epicurus (341-271) founder of Hedonism[4]

331 Zeno of Citium (331-261) founder of Stoicism

106 BCE Cicero (106-43 BCE) statesman of the Roman republic, Stoic and opponent of dictatorship

49 BCE Julius Caesar crosses the Rubicon[5] prompting the Roman Civil War[6] of 49-46 BCE, which led to a transition from republic to empire.

204 CE Plotinus[7] (204-270 CE) - founder of Neoplatonism[8] and originator of the Great Chain of Being[9]

313 Edict of Milan[10] - established religious freedom in the Roman Empire.

325 First Council of Nicea[11] - the first of the ecumenical councils[12]

354 CE Augustine of Hippo (354-430) Neoplatonist African Bishop and leading philosopher of the Roman Catholic Church; advocate of papal supremacy.

381 Council of Constantinople - that approved the Nicene Creed[13] - the official statement of Christian belief

410 Sack of Rome[14] the first invasion of imperial Rome - which survived further attacks until 610 CE in the form of its Eastern Empire[15]

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The middle ages

533 Corpus Jurus Civilis[16]: a compendium of Roman Law promulgated by the emperor Justinian[17]

570 Muhammad (570-632) Arab prophet and founder of Islam

800 Charlemagne (742-814) is crowned Holy Roman Emperor[18] by Pope Leo III

800s Written collections of Hadith[19] (sayings of the Prophet Muhammad) are compiled.

1126 Averroës (Abu'l-Walid Ibn Rushd)[20] (1126-1198) interpretor of Aristotle, leading Islamic philospher

1215 Magna Carta[21][22] - statement of civil rights and fundamental document of the English constitution.

1225 Thomas Aquinas (1224-74) Catholic theologian and philosopher, author of Summa Theologica, defender of the doctrine of papal supremacy[23].

1453 The fall of Constantinople

1469 Machiavelli (1469-1527) Pragmatic Florentine political advisor, famous for his amoral approach to the exercise of authority.

1588 Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) English philospher, conditional defender of monarchy as the source of civic order.

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The Enlightenment

1632 John Locke (1632-1704) English political philospher of The Enlightenment. Proponent of the concept of universal human rights and of the concept of a social contract.

1642 Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Central figure of The Enlightenment. Founder of differential calculus and classical mechanics.

1641 The Grand Remonstrance[24] A list of grievances presented to Charles I of England by the Long Parliament[25].

1643 English Civil War [26] (1643-6) Armed conflict between supporters of the parliament and the monarchy, ending in the execution of King Charles I.

1645 The Levellers [27]. English popular movement that agitated for religious toleration, reform of the law, free trade, an extended franchise, rights guaranteed under a written constitution and a government answerable to the people rather than to King or Parliament.

1648 Treaty of Westphalia[28]. The peace treaty that ended the Thirty Years War and included an agreement to respect the sovereignty of nation states.

1660 The Restoration [29]. The ending of the desptism of Oliver Cromwell and the restoration of the English Monarchy'.

1688 Glorious Revolution The largely bloodless events in England which led to the deposition of King James II.

1689 The Bill of Rights English legislation that restricted the powers of the monarchy and established the rights of a free Parliament.

1689 Montesquieu (1689-1755)[30] French Enlightenment philosopher. Advocate of the separation of powers of legislature, executive and judiciary[31]

1694 Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet) (1694-1778). French writer and philosopher. One of the leading figures of The Enlightenment. Influential populariser of the works of Newton and Locke

1711 David Hume (1711-1776) Scottish philosopher, and historian. early economist. Opponent of merchantilism and of government intervention in commerce.

1712 Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) French Enlightenment thinker. Author of The Social Contract.

1723 Adam Smith (1723-1790) "Father of Economics", and early thinker about government expenditure and taxation.

1724 Immanuel Kant[32] (1724-1804) Prussian Enlightenment philosopher. Advocate of human rights and opponent of state paternalism.

1729 Edmund Burke[33] (1720-1797) English opponent of the French Revolution and founder of English conservatism.

1737 Thomas Paine[34] (1737-1809) English political pamphleteer. Advocate of American independance and participant in the French revolution.

1748 Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) founder of utilitarianism.

1750 The Risorgimento[35]] The movement for the liberation and unification of Italy that lasted until 1870.

1751 James Madison (1751-1836) American politician, political theorist and fourth President of the United States, Known as the "Father of the Bill of Rights." Advocate of "checks and balances to limit the powers of special interests.

1760 Henri de Saint-Simon[36] (1760-1825) founder of French Socialism.

1770 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel[37] (1770–1831) Philosopher who argued that the individual exists for the state.

1774 American Revolution The armed stuggle that gave the United States independence frm Britain.

1776 Declaration of Independence by the United States of America

1789 Storming of the Bastille and start of the French Revolution

1789 The Declaration of the Rights of Man is approved by the French National Assembly.

1791 The United States Bill of Rights. The first ten amendments to the constitution, the first of which guarantees freedom of religion, speech, press, and peaceable assembly.

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The 19th century

1806 John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) English philospher and politician. Advocate of utilitarianism and representative government. Proponent of the principle that society may restrict the liberty of individuals only to prevent harm to others.

1809 Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)

1818 Karl Marx (1818-1883)

1844 Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) origiator of the concept of "superman"

1848 Vilfredo Pareto[38] (1848-1923) "The Karl Marx of Fascism".

1848 The Communist Manifesto

1864 The First International[39] A meeting of European Socialists

1871 Paris Commune[40] A short-lived Socialist city administration

1875 Giovanni Gentile[41] (1875-1944) Hegelian philosopher and Mussolini's collaborator

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The 20th and 21st centuries

1917 Russian Revolution[42]

1919 League of Nations Covenant . The first attempt at collective security.

1922 The Permanent Court of International Justice (1922-1946) Provided arbitration of disputes between member countries of the League of Nations

1922 'March on Rome[43] The coup that brought Mussolini to power.

1933 Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany.

1945 San Francisco Conference'[44] adopted the United Nations Charter

1946 The Court of International Justice

2000 United Nations resolution[45] to seek to achieve specific Millenium Development Goals by 2015

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