Timeline of pre–United States history

This section of the timeline of United States history concerns events from before the lead up to the American Revolution (c. 1760).

Antiquity

  • c. 27,000–12,000 years ago – Humans cross the Beringia land bridge into North and then South America. Dates of earliest migration to the Americas is highly debated.
  • c. 15,500 year old arrowhead; oldest verified arrowhead in the Americas, found in Texas.[1]
  • c. 11,500 BCE – Start of Clovis Culture in North America.
  • c. 10,200 BCE – Cooper Bison skull is painted with a red zigzag in present-day Oklahoma, becoming the oldest known painted object in North America.
  • c. 9500 BC – Cordilleran and Laurentide Ice Sheets retreat enough to open a habitable ice-free corridor through the northern half of the continent (North America) along the eastern flank of the Rocky Mountains.
  • c. 1000 BCE-1000 CE – Woodland Period of Pre-Columbian Native Americans in Eastern America.
  • 200 CE – Pyramid of the Sun built near modern-day Mexico City.
  • 250–900 CE – Classic Period of the Maya Civilization
  • 600 CE – Emergence of Mississippian culture in North America.

988–1490

  • 986 – Norsemen settle Greenland and Bjarni Herjólfsson sights coast of North American mainland, but doesn't land[citation needed] (see also Norse colonization of the Americas).
  • c. 1000: Norse settle briefly in L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland.[2]
  • c. 1100 – Oraibi was founded the year of 1128 CE, making it one of the oldest continuously inhabited settlements within the United States.[3][4]
  • c. 1100-1200 – Cahokia near modern-day St. Louis reaches its apex population
  • c. 1190 – Construction begins on the Cliff Palace by Ancestral Puebloans in modern-day Colorado
  • c. 1325 – Tenochtitlan founded as part of the Aztec Empire
  • c. 1400 – Beginning of the European Age of Discovery.
  • c. 1450: Norse colony in Greenland dies out[citation needed].
  • 1473 – João Vaz Corte-Real perhaps reaches Newfoundland; writes about the "Land of Cod fish" in his journal.
  • 1479 - Treaty of Toledo ends the War of the Castilian Succession. Portugal won the exclusive right of navigating, conquering and trading in all the Atlantic Ocean south of the Canary Islands. Forcing Spain to sail west to India.
  • before 1492 – Population estimates in the New World before European contact may be as high as 112 million people.

1492–1499

Landing of Columbus, 1847 by John Vanderlyn, depicts Christopher Columbus landing in the New World.
  • 1492 – Christopher Columbus, financed by Spain, lands on the island of San Salvador in the Bahamas, discovering the New World for Europe.
  • 1496 – Santo Domingo, the oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in the Americas, is settled.
  • 1497 – John Cabot lands in Newfoundland, beginning the British colonial presence in Continental North America.

1500–1599

1600–1699

1600s

1610s

1620s

The Mayflower in Plymouth.

1630s

Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore, the founder of Maryland

1640s

1650s

1660s

New Amsterdam is captured by the English

1670s

1680s

1690s

1700–1759

1700s

1710s

1720s

1730s

1740s

1750s

See Timeline of the American Revolution for events starting from 1760.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Oldest Weapon Discovered in North America is a 15,000-Year-Old Spearhead". 31 October 2018.
  2. ^ Birgitta Wallace, "The Norse in Newfoundland: L'Anse aux Meadows and Vinland." Newfoundland and Labrador Studies 19.1 (2005). online Archived 2014-05-19 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Hopi Places". Cline Library, Northern Arizona University.
  4. ^ Casey, Robert L. Journey to the High Southwest. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot Press, 2007: 382. ISBN 978-0-7627-4064-2.
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