A talent is a measure that can be used for gold, silver, copper, or other substances. The ordinary talents (not for Temple-usage) weighed about 30 kilo. Let's assume that you're talking about silver. The silver talent had 3,000 shekels. Now you have to decide whether you're asking about today's worth (30 kilo silver at today's price) or its ancient purchasing power, which was quite different. A single silver shekel was enough to support a small family for about one week.
In 100 BCE, the value of a talent varied depending on the region. In ancient Greece, a talent was generally equivalent to around 26 kilograms of silver. In the Roman Empire, a talent was equivalent to around 32.3 kilograms of silver.
A talent of silver was enough for one person to live on for a lifetime.
Hinduism (c. 1500 BCE) Judaism (c. 2000 BCE) Buddhism (c. 6th-5th century BCE) Christianity (1st century CE) Islam (7th century CE)
Hebrew as a language is believed to have first appeared around the 10th century BCE. It developed from Canaanite dialects spoken in ancient Israel.
It is believed that Zoroaster, the founder of Zoroastrianism, lived before Moses, who is a central figure in Judaism. Zoroaster is estimated to have lived around 1500-1200 BCE, while Moses is traditionally placed around 1391-1271 BCE.
No one knows for certain, but Jewish tradition places the time of Abraham at around 1800 BCE.No one knows for certain, but Jewish tradition places the time of Abraham at around 1800 BCE.
Major Religions (that still exist in some form): Hinduism - 2000 BC Judaism - 1500 BC Zoroaster - 620 BC Janism - 600 BC Taoism - 580 BC Confusious - 550 BC Buddhism - 524 BC Christianity - 30 AD Shinto - 100 AD Islam - 570 AD Sikhism - 1530 AD Baha'u'llah - 1890 AD These are all approximate dates (especially pre-Christian) and hotly disputed, bnu the chronology is pretty much right. When does a religion start? On the birth of the "holy man"? With his/her first convert? After death? First "church"? See, it can be difficult to pin a tail on such a donkey.
200 years.
100 BCE
Don't know
its from 200BCE all the way to 101BCE then 100-1BCE is 1st C BCE
From 100 to 44 BCE
around 1,042 years
199. There was no year 0.
The first century CE began at the beginning of 1 CE and ended at the end of 100 CE. The first century BCE ended at the end of 1 BCE, and the second century CE began at the beginning of 101 CE. (Note that there is no year 0, so 1 BCE immediately precedes 1 CE.)
The Jews shifted from Hebrew to Aramaic around 500 BCE - 100 BCE. They started shifting back to Hebrew in the 1890's and today there are more than 6 million Hebrew speakers.
600
100 bcAnswer:The Mahayanic tradition has the Sutra being written in the lifetime of the historic Buddha (about 500 BCE). Present thinking is tha the oldest parts of the text (Chapters 1-9 and 17) were written between 100 BCE and 100 CE, and that the text, in its modern form, dates fron 200 CE.
paper, as we know it today, was invented in china.Answer:The invention of paper is often dated at 105 CE, More recent investigation indicates that about 100 BCE is a more defendable date. This during the reign of Emperor Wu (140 BCE and 86 BCE).