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This timeline contains both mythical dates, and factual dates. In some instances, I have stated when the date/event is mythical, The discovery of the Guodian mansucripts, and to a lesser extent the Mawangdui manuscripts, have radically tilted parts of the manuscript dating arguements, towards those who favor the traditional history of the Yi Jing. Trigram and bigram interpretation is obviously a relic of the Han dynasty, and not King Wen, or FuXi. The numbers used when casting hexagrams is a relic of the Shang Dynasty, and may predate them.
Year | Dynasty | Event | |
---|---|---|---|
600 000 BCE | Stone Age « 600 000 - 2 000 BCE » | ||
600 000 BCE | Palaeolithic Period « 600 000 - 7 000 BCE » | ||
10000 BCE | Major Geological Upheaval in Central Asia. | ||
7000 BCE | Neolithic Period « 7000 - 2000 » | ||
2852 ? BCE | Cultural Hero | Fu Xi: Invented Writing « mythical. also dated at 3000 » « legendary » | |
2737 BCE | Cultural Hero | Shen Nung: Invented Agriculture « legendary » | |
2697 BCE | Cultural Hero | The Yellow Emperor « legendary » | |
2357 BCE | Sage Kings | Emperor Yao « legendary » | |
2255 BCE | Sages Kings | Emperor Shun « legendary » | |
2205 BCE | Emperor Yu: « 2205 - 2197 » Virtuous finder of dynasty | ||
2197 BCE | end of reign of Emperor Yu | ||
2183 BCE | Hsi Dynasty founded? « 2183 - 1752 » | ||
2183 BCE | Reign of King Yi « 2183 - 2175 » | ||
2175 BCE | end of reign of King Yi | ||
1818 BCE | Hsia Dynasty | Chieh: | |
1766 BCE | King T'ang | ||
1751 BCE | Start of Shang Dynasty « 1751 - 1112 BCE : alt 1765 - 1123 BCE » | ||
1751 BCE | Reign of King T'ang « 1751 - 1739 » | ||
1739 BCE | end of reign of Kint T'ang | ||
1300 BCE | Shang Yin | Begining of archeological evidence | |
C1300BCE | Period of Shell and Bone Script Earliest writing on bones, shells, bronze, pottery , stone and jade Brush, lampblack, cinnabar & turquoise used in writing vocabulary was 2 500 characters Documents written on tablets | ||
1154 BCE | Chou Dynasty | reign of King Wen « 1171 - 1122 » | |
1122 BCE | Chou Dynasty | King Wu | |
1115 BCE | Western Dynasty | King Ch'eng | |
1111 BCE | Start of Chou Dynasty. « 1111 - 249: alt 1027 - 249 » | ||
1094 BCE | Duke of Chou: Yi Jing Commentator « ? - 1094 » | ||
C1000BCE | Grea | t seal writing records were written on bronze | |
878 BCE | King Li | ||
781 BCE | King Yu | ||
771 BCE | Eastern Dynasty | ||
722 BCE | Spring & Autumn Period « 722 - 481 » | ||
C700 BCE | Great Seal Writing Inscriptions left on stone drums | ||
674 BCE | First Record of Yi Jing being consulted. « Tso Commentary » | ||
604 BCE | Traditional Birth of Lao Tzu | ||
602 BCE | Yi Jing first Used as a philsophical Tool | ||
C600 BCE | Brush from Ch'ang-sha silk and bamboo documents first made inscriptions on jade tablets inscriptions on coins | ||
563 BCE | Wen-yen Chuan incorporated into the Tso-chuan | ||
551 BCE | Period of the "hundred philosophers" « 551 - 233 » | ||
550 BCE | First law code of China | ||
535 BCE | Zuo Zhuan recounts a divination performed by Duke Xiang of Wei. | ||
479 BCE | Confucius: Statesman/Philosopher « 551 - 479 » | ||
438 BCE | Mo Tzu: Founder of Moism. « 479 - 438 » « has been called the first communist » | ||
403 BCE | Period of the Warring States « 403 - 221 » | ||
400 BCE | Dao De Jing written? | ||
400 BCE | Birth of Lao Tzu according to somescholars. | ||
352 BCE | Copy of Dao De Jing, Yi Jing and other Daoist texts placed in tomb in Guodian, Hubei Province. | ||
Fifth Month 317 BCE | Divination using turtle shells and the Yi Jing. Zuoyin Tuo | ||
Fourth Month 316 BCE | Divination using milfoil and the Yi Jing. Zuoyin Tao --- both divinations were searching for a cure for his illness. | ||
300 BCE | Extensive wall building. « 300 - 200 » | ||
296 BCE | King Xiang of Wei died, His tomb contained a copy of the Yi Jing. His grave was found/robbed in 279 CE. | ||
295 BCE | Chung Tzu: Daoist Philosopher « 399 - 295 » | ||
289 BCE | Mencius: Confucianist Philosopher « 371 - 289? » | ||
286 BCE | Chung Tzu « 369 - 286 » popularizer of Daoism | ||
286 BCE | End of the Three Dynasties « 1818 - 249 » | ||
255 BCE | Start of Chin Dynasty « 255 - 206: alt 221 - 206 » | ||
249 BCE | Lu Pu-Wei: prime minster of Ch'in | ||
240 BCE | Tsou Yen: Yin Yang Philosopher. « 305 - 240 » | ||
238 BCE | Hsin Tzu: Philosopher « 298 - 238 » | ||
233 BCE | Han Fei Tzu: Legalist Philosopher « ? - 233 » First commentator on the Dao De Jing | ||
221 BCE | Ch'in Dynasty | The First Emperor | |
221 BCE | Ch'in Dynasty | Li Su: prime minister | |
220 BCE | Small Seal Writing. Stone monuments | ||
214 BCE | The Great Wall Completed « 221 - 207 » | ||
207 BCE | End of the Ch'in Dynasty | ||
206 BCE | Han Dynasty | Start of Han Dynasty « 206 BCE - 220 CE » These are
| |
206 BCE | Start of Western Han Dynasty « 206 BCE - 8 CE » | ||
202 BCE | Former Han Dynasty | Reign of Kao-tsu | |
C200 BCE | Clerical writing system developed. 5 340 characters | ||
195 BCE | Former Han Dynasty | end of reign | |
188 BCE | Reign of Empress Lu | ||
180 BCE | end of reign of Empress Lu | ||
179 BCE | Reign of Emperor Wen | ||
168 BCE | Ma-wang-dui manuscripts placed in burial tomb of the marquis of of Tai. Oldest extant texts of the Yi Jing and two copies of the Dao De Jing were found here. | ||
159 BCE | Ho-Shang Kung: Taoist Commentator « 179 - 159 » | ||
157 BCE | End of Reign of Emperor Wen | ||
140 BCE | Reign of Emperor Wu | ||
136 BCE | Doctors for the Five classics appointed | ||
122 BCE | Huai-Nan Tzu: Neo-Taoist Philosopher « ? - 122 » | ||
124 BCE | Use of written exams | ||
115 BCE | Campaigns into the western regions | ||
110 BCE | Ssu-ma T'an: Court Historian: « ? - 110 » | ||
108 BCE | Chinese administration in north korea | ||
104? BCE | Tung Chung-Shu: « 179 - 104 » Confucian Philosopher | ||
101 BCE | Conquest of the states of Tarim Basin | ||
86 BCE | Ssu-ma Ch'ien: « 145 - 89 » Historian First Biographer of Chuang Tzu | ||
87 BCE | End of Reign | ||
1 CE | Wang Man Regent | ||
9 CE | End of Former Han Dynasty | ||
9 CE | Hsien Dynasty | Start of Hsin Dynasty « 9 - 23 » | |
9 CE | established by Wang Mang | ||
23 CE | Hsien Dynasty | end of Hsien Dynasty | |
25 CE | Eastern Han Dynasty | Start of Eastern Han Dynasty « 25 - 220 » 25 | |
27 CE | Eastern Han Dynasty | Wang Ch'un: Naturlist Philosopher « 27 - ? » | |
65 CE | First reference to Buddhism in China | ||
79 CE | Collation of the Five Classics | ||
92 CE | Pan Ku « 32 - 92 » Confucian Rationalist | ||
C100 CE | chang ts'ao running script : 9 353 characters | ||
105 CE | Invention of paper : Book knife and Ink slab set invented | ||
110 CE | Founding of Tao-Chia: Chang Tao-Ling | ||
150 CE | An Shih-kao: Buddhist Missionary | ||
175 CE | The Five Classics & Analects engraved in stone at Xiping | ||
213 CE | Emperor Ch'in Shih Huang Ti | The Great Book Burning. All books except those on medicine, agriculture or divination. This was the third major book burning of China. | |
C200 CE | 18 150 characters | ||
220 CE | Han emperor deposed | ||
220 CE | Period of the Three Kingdoms: « 220 - 280 » These are:
| ||
220 CE | Start of Wei Kingdom « 220 - 265 » | ||
221 CE | Start of Shu Kingdom « 221 - 263 » | ||
222 CE | Start of Wu Kingdom « 222 - 280 » | ||
249 CE | Wang Bi: « 226 - 249 » Neo-Taoist/Confuciast Scholar: Chou I lueh-li The Commentator on Dao De Jing. Edited Standard Version of Dao De Jing | ||
265 CE | Start of Chin Dynasty « 265 - 420 » | ||
265 CE | Start of Western Chin Dynasty « 265 - 317 » | ||
279 CE | Discovery of a manuscript of the Yi Jing that dates to 296 BCE, in the tomb of King Xiang of Wei. Recorded in Jinshu. It notes that the text and hexagram sequence is the same as was then current. This manuscript has apparantly been lost. | ||
280 CE | End of the Three Kingdoms | ||
280 CE | Chin Dynasty | ||
300 CE | Chin Dynasty | start of Seven Schools of Buddhism: « 4th century » | |
300 CE | start of Three Treatise School « 4th century to 7th century » Model Rapid writing system | ||
312 CE | Kuo Hsian: Neo-Taoist Scholar: The Commentator of Chung Tzu « ? - 312 » | ||
317 CE | North China abandoned | ||
317 CE | Start of Eastern Chin Dynasty « 317 - 420 » | ||
384 CE | Seng-chao: Buddhist Philosopher « 384 - 414 » | ||
386 CE | Start of Northern Wei « 386 - 535 » | ||
399 CE | Pilgrimage of Fa-Hsien to Central Asia | ||
400 CE | Start of Zen School: « 5th century » | ||
C400 CE | Ink invented by Wei Tan Stone ink invented Quasi-paper Wooden Calendars Inscriptions on pottery, bricks, tiles and sealing clay. | ||
403 CE | Hui-yuan: Buddhist monks do not bow to the court | ||
405 CE | Kumarajiva « 344 - 413 » appointed National Perceptor | ||
414 CE | Fa-Hsien returns | ||
420 CE | End of Chin Dynasty | ||
420 CE | start of South and North Dynasties « 420 - 589 » | ||
420 CE | South Dynasties are:
| ||
420 CE | North Dynasties are:
| ||
420 CE | start of Liu Sang Dynasty « 420 -479 » | ||
440 CE | Start of State Patronage of Taoism | ||
479 CE | start of Southern Ch'i Dynasty « 479 - 502 » | ||
500 CE | Start of Consciousness Only School « 6th century to 9th century » | ||
500 CE | Start of T'ien-t'ai School « 6th century » | ||
C500 CE | 22 726 characters in Chinese Writing System Inked squeezes on paper rolls Buddhist canon inscribed on cliffs | ||
502 CE | Start of Liang Dynasty « 502 - 557 » | ||
534 CE | Start of Eastern Wei Dynasty « 534 - 550 » | ||
535 CE | Start of Western Wei Dynasty « 535 - 556 » | ||
542 CE | T'an-luan « 476 - 542 » Patriarch of the Pure land School | ||
550 CE | Start of Northern Ch'i « « 550 - 577 » | ||
557 CE | Start of Ch'en Dynasty « 557 - 589 » | ||
557 CE | Start of Northern Chou Dynasty « 557 - 581 » | ||
575 CE | T'ien-T'ai School of Buddhism founded | ||
581 CE | Start of Sui Dynasty « 581 - 618 » | ||
589 CE | Sui | Start of Sui Dynasty | |
597 CE | Chih-k'ai « 531-597 » Founder: T'ien-T'ai School | ||
600 CE | Start of Hua-yen School « « 7th century » | ||
C600 CE | Discovery of block printing | ||
606 CE | Chin-Shih degree established | ||
618 CE | Second Sui emperor murdered | ||
618 CE | Dynasty | End of Sui Dynasty | |
618 CE | T'ang | Start of T'ang Dynasty « 618 - 907 » | |
623 CE | Dynasty | Chi-tsang « 549 - 623 » Madhyamkika School | |
627 CE | Reign of Emperor T'ai-tsung | ||
629 CE | Hsuan-tsang pilgrimige to India | ||
641 CE | Chinese Buddhist Princes married to The First King of Tibet | ||
645 CE | Hsuan-tsang returns from pilgrimage | ||
645 CE | Tao-ch'o « ? - 645 » Patriarch of the Pure Land | ||
649 CE | end of reign | ||
664 CE | Hsuan-tsang « 596 - 664 » | ||
666 CE | Lao Tzu cannonized as Most High Emperor of Mystic Origin | ||
684 CE | Empress Wu | ||
693 CE | Empress adopts Buddhist Title Divine Empress Who Rules The Universe | ||
699 CE | Golden Lion sermon by Fa-Tsang | ||
705 CE | end of reign of Empress Wu | ||
712 CE | Fa-Tsang « 643 - 712 » | ||
713 CE | Hui-neng « 638 - 713 » Sixth Ch'an Patriarch | ||
760 CE | Shen-hui « ? - 760 » Ch'an master | ||
798 CE | Li Ao: Confucian Revival Philosopher « ? - 798 » | ||
800 CE | 30 000 characters is the Chinese Writing System | ||
800 CE | Daoist cannon chiselled on stone | ||
824 CE | Han Yu: Confucian Revival Philosopher « 764 - 824 » | ||
845 CE | Official repression of Buddhism | ||
867 CE | I-Hsuan « ? - 867 » Founder: Lin School of Ch'an Buddhism | ||
868 CE | Printing of the Diamond Sutra. On 11 May 2001, Garrison Keller claimed that it was first printed on the Eleventh of May in 863. This is the first book ever to be printed. | ||
869 CE | Liang Chieh « 807 - 869 « Founder: Ts'ao-tung School of Ch'an | ||
906 CE | End of the T'ang Dynasty | ||
907 CE | Period of the Five Dynasties » 907 - 960 » These are:
| ||
907 CE | Start of Liao Dynasty « 907 - 1125 » | ||
907 CE | Start of Later Liang Dynasty « 907 - 923 » | ||
923 CE | Start of Later T'ang Dynasty « 923 - 936 » | ||
936 CE | Start of Later Chin Dynasty « 936 - 947 » | ||
947 CE | Start of Later Han Dynasty « 947 - 950 » | ||
947 CE | Probable start of Liao « 947 - 1125 » | ||
951 CE | Start of Later Chou Dynasty « 951 - 960 » | ||
960 CE | Start of Sung Dynasty | ||
960 CE | Northern Sung and Southern Sung « 960 - 1279 » | ||
960 CE | Start of Northern Sung Dynasty « 960 - 1126 » | ||
960 CE | Sung | ||
972 CE | Dynasty | Printing of Buddhist Canon Begun | |
990 CE | Start of Hsi-hsia Dynasty « 990 - 1227 » | ||
1019 CE | Tao Tsang Compiled: Sung Edition: 4565 Volumes | ||
1055 CE | Conferring of title of Holy Duke upon descendents. | ||
1079 CE | Shao Yung « 1011 - 1079 » Founder of Plum Blossom Numerology | ||
1115 CE | Start of Chin Dynasty « 1115 - 1234 » | ||
1133 CE | Founding of the White Lotus Sect of Buddhism | ||
1127 CE | Start of Southern Sung Dynasty « 1127 - 1279 » | ||
1200 CE | Chu-Hsi « 1130 - 1200 » Neo-Confucian Scholar: Formed the Four Books that were used for Civil Service Examinations. | ||
1206 CE | Start of Mongolian Dynasty: « Mongol Dynasty is the Yuan Dynasty » « 1206 - 1368 » | ||
1227 CE | Death of Chingas Khan | ||
1260 CE | Start of Yun Dynasty | ||
1271 CE | Generally accepted start of Yuan Dynasty » 1271 - 1369 « | ||
1279 CE | End of Sung Dynasty | ||
1289 CE | Burning of the Daoist Sacred Texts « This is one of several great book burnings of China. » | ||
1313 CE | Yuan | Mongol Government adopts Civil Service exams based on Confucian Classics | |
1368 CE | End of Yuan Dynasty | ||
1368 CE | Ming | start of Ming Dynasty » 1368 - 1644 « | |
1416 CE | Chu Hsi's commentaries published under authority of the Yung-lo emperor. | ||
1433 CE | End of Naval expeditions to the South Sea | ||
1436 CE | Tao Tsang Printed: Ming Edition 1057 volumes: « 1436 - 1450 » | ||
1520 CE | Portuguese embassy to Beijing | ||
1604 CE | Tung-Lin Academy established | ||
1607 CE | Tao Tsang: Ming Edition 67 omitted volumes published | ||
1612 CE | Ku Hsien-ch'eng « 1550 - 1612 » Founder: Tung-Lin Academy | ||
1631 CE | Founding of the Hung Society | ||
1644 CE | End of Ming Dynasty | ||
1644 CE | Ch'ing | Start of Ch'ing Dynasty | |
1644 CE | Dynasty | « aka The Manchurian Dynasty » « 1644 - 1912 » | |
1662 CE | K'ang-Sei reign | ||
1678 CE | Chang Erh-ch'i: Chou I Shou Leh summary discussions on the Yi Jing « 1612 - 1678 » | ||
1682 CE | Ku Yen-Wu: Founder Han-hseh Shool of Ch'in « 1613 - 1682 » | ||
1686 CE | Huang Tsung-ye: Chou I Hsiang-Tz'u [ Image Terms in the Book of Changes ] « 1616 - 1686 » | ||
1692 CE | Wang Fu-Chih: Chou I Ne-chuan Fa-Li [ Prolegomena to an Esoteric Commentary ] Chou I Pai-Shu [ A Critical Explication of the I Chou ] Chou I Ta-Hsiang Chieh [ Explication of the Great Image Commentary ] Chou I nei-chuan [ An Esoteric Commentary ] « 1619 - 1692 » | ||
1695 CE | Huang Tsung-hsi: I Hseh Hsiang-Shu Lun [ Essay on Yi Jing Numerology ] « 1610 - 1695 » | ||
1700 CE | The Vatican orders its priests to not study the Yi Jing | ||
1715 CE | Publication of the Imperial Edition of the Yi Jing. | ||
1722 CE | end of reign of K'ang-sei | ||
1736 CE | Ch'ien-lung reign | ||
1757 CE | Antoine Gaubil « 1689 - 1757 » The first person to translate the Yi Jing into a western language. | ||
1758 CE | Hui Tung I Ta-i [ Essence of the Book of Changes ] « 1694 - 1758 » | ||
? CE | Imperial Manuscript Library established | ||
1795 CE | End of reign | ||
1802 CE | Chang Hui-yen: Han-Hsueh Scholar Chou I Y-shih i [ Interpretation of the Studies of Y Fan ] « 1761 - 1802 » | ||
1820 CE | Chiao Hsn: Huang Ch'ing ching-chieh [ A Reading Commentary on The I Ching ] « 1763 - 1820 » | ||
1822 CE | Matsui Rashu: Japanese I Ching Scholar « 1751- 1822 » | ||
1834 CE | First translation of the Yi Jing into Latin by The Society of Jesus. | ||
1839 CE | Start of the Opium War | ||
1842 CE | End of the Opium War | ||
1850 CE | Taiping Rebellion Started | ||
1864 CE | End of the Taiping Rebellion | ||
1876 CE | A Translation of the Confucian Yi-King The Rev Cannon McClatchie. First Translation of the Yi Jing into English. | ||
1882 CE | The Yi King James Legge: « 1815 -1897 » First Scholarly translation of the Yi Jing into English. | ||
1892 CE | A Terrien de Lacouperie published his translation of the Yi Jing | ||
1894 CE | Sino-Japanese War | ||
1900 CE | The Boxer Rebellion | ||
1906 CE | Traditional civil service exams abolished | ||
1911 CE | The Chinese Republic Proclaimed | ||
1912 CE | Ch'ing Dynasty | End of Ch'ing Dynasty | |
1912 CE | Republic of China | Start of the Republic of China | |
1917 CE | Wang Hsien-Ch'ien: Leading Commentator of Chuang Tau « 1842 - 1917 » | ||
1921 CE | Founding of the Communist Party of China | ||
1921 CE | Lao Nai-hsuan: Yi Jing Translator « Assisted Richard Wilhelm » « 1843 - 1921 » | ||
1924 CE | Wilhelm translation of the Yi Jing. First published in German. | ||
1924 CE | Tao Tsang: Ming Edition Republished Commercial Press of Shanghai « 1200 Volumes: 1924 - 1926 » | ||
1930 CE | Richard Wilhelm: Translator/Missionary « ? - 1930 » | ||
1934 CE | Start of the Long March of the Communists | ||
1938 CE | Chungking made Wartime Capital | ||
1945 CE | End of the Pacific War | ||
1949 CE | Withdrawal of the Nationalist Government to Taiwan | ||
1949 CE | People's Republic of China | Start of The People's Republic of China | |
1950 CE | First Edition of the Wilhelm/Baynes of The Yi Jing published in English. | ||
1962 CE | Tsa Tang: Ming Edition I-wen Publishing: Tapei, Taiwan « 1200 volumes: 1962 » | ||
1963 CE | I Ching: Book of Change John Blofeld Translation First Published. Third popular translation of the Yi Jing into English | ||
1964 CE | The Cultural Revolution. The communist's turn at destroying the history of China. | ||
1965 CE | Liu Pai-min Chou I shih-li t'ung-i [ A Comprehenseive Interpretation ] | ||
1965 CE | John Blofeld publishes his translation of the <>Yi Jing | ||
1968 CE | Dr R G H Siu publishes his translation of the Yi Jing. This translation consists of quotes from the west. | ||
1973 CE | Discovery of the Ma-wang-tui manuscripts. One copy of the Yi Jing and two copies of the Dao De Jing were found here.Tomb dated at 168 BCE. | ||
1990 CE | I Ching conference opened on PODS « 1st electronic conference devoted to the Yi Jing? » | ||
1993 CE | Taoist_Studies conference opened on PODS. » first electronic conference devoted to Daoism ? « | ||
1993 CE | Taoism-L@coombs.anu.edu.au. First Internet mailing list on Daoism. closed up in april 1994. | ||
1993 CE | Discovery of the Guodian manuscripts. These date from 350 BCE or earlier. Included are the earliest known version of the Yi Jing and Dao De Jing | ||
1994 CE | Taoism-Studies-L@coombs.anu.edu.au Internet Mailing List on Daoism | ||
1995 CE | The world wide web exploded and I quit documenting "firsts". | ||
2001 CE | The year of the snake. | ||
2001 CE | Between clubs.yahoo.com and groups.yahoo.com there are 30 groups about the Yi Jing or Daoism. |
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