1200 to 600 BCE.
The Vikings lived during the Viking Age, which is generally dated from the late 8th century to the early 11th century. This period falls within the Iron Age in Northern Europe, as the Iron Age began around 500 BCE and continued until the beginning of the Middle Ages. The Bronze Age, on the other hand, preceded the Iron Age and ended in this region around 500 BCE. Therefore, the Vikings were primarily Iron Age people.
Roughly from the 8th to 6th century BC, until the beginning of the middle ages, approximately in the 5th century
It was. The Iron Age - the period during which Iron was the principal metal used in tools and weapons - began in about 1300 BC and lasted for centuries.
The age of iron is the 19th century when it became possible to make iron and then steel in large quantities.
In the 12 century B.C..
in the iron age. in the 13th century bc
The used copper, bronze, lead, gold, silver, electrum and, iron. They did not start working iron until the late bronze age; And they started producing it until the Iron age II.
Late 8th century to mid 11th century.
The Viking Age began June 8, 793, when the Norse warriors ransacked the abbey of Lindisfarne, and lasted until the 11th century.
Ancient Greece experienced both the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. The Bronze Age, which lasted until around 1100 BCE, was characterized by the emergence of early civilizations, such as the Minoans and Mycenaeans, who used bronze for tools and weapons. Following the Bronze Age, the Iron Age began, marked by the widespread use of iron and the rise of city-states, culminating in classical Greece around the 5th century BCE. Thus, ancient Greece spanned both periods, with significant cultural and technological developments occurring in each.
The role of iron during the 6th century BC was highly important, in fact, this period was known as the Iron Age. Iron was used in tools - such as those used to dig, and in weaponry like spears and daggers.
The ancient Egyptians primarily thrived during the Bronze Age, which lasted until around 1200 BCE. While they did have some knowledge of iron, particularly during the later periods, the widespread use of iron tools and weapons did not occur until after the Bronze Age had ended. Thus, while iron was known to them, ancient Egypt is not considered to have been a true Iron Age civilization.