The carrying away of the people of Judah was not accomplished at once. There were about four groups deported to Babylon at a period before 607 B.C. Then there was the two principle deportations to Babylon, the first in 607 B.C. which probably included Daniel and other "selected children"( Daniel 1;1-4). and then the second deportation in 587 B.C. (II Kings 25:1-21). At this time the City of Jerusalem was destroyed and King Zedekiah was captured and all but the very poorest of people were taken to Babylon.
There was a much earlier captivity accomplished by Sennacherib in 705 B.C. (II Kings 18:13) and it is said two hundred thousand captives were taken to Assyria from various cities.
Answer:That period was called the Babylonian Exile.According to the Hebrew Bible, there were three deportations of Jews to Babylon: the exile of King Jeconiah, his court and many others in Nebuchadnezzar's eighth year; Jeconiah's successor Zedekiah and the rest of the people in Nebuchadnezzar's eighteenth year; and a later deportation in Nebuchadnezzar's twenty-third year. These are attributed to c. 597 BCE, c. 587 BCE, and c. 582 BCE, respectively.
It was the Ancient period, generally accepted as between 600 BCE and 500 CE.
He didn't make the Jew go, he sent the aristocracies of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. The main body remained, under a new imported aristocracy to keep them quiet. Those sent to Babylon were similarly give control of local people, which is why so many did not return to Judah when the Persians took over and offered them the choice of returning - they were so prosperous in Babylon.
This exchange of aristocracies method of control had been pioneered earlier by the Assyrians, and part of their action a couple of centuries earlier had been to do the aristocracy swap on the 10 northern tribes of Israel.
It was called the Babylonian Exile or the First Diaspora and occurred from 586 B.C.E., when King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon deported the Jews to Babylon, to 538 B.C.E., when King Cyrus the Great of Persia conquered Babylon and allowed the Jews to return to the Land of Israel if they wished.
The Judean aristocracy was deported to Babylon in the early 5th Century BCE and a new aristocracy imported to Judea to rule them.
Nebuchadnezzar was the Chaldean king who restored Babylon and created the Hanging Gardens for his wife. The Hanging Gardens are listed among the "wonders of the ancient world". Naturally, he lived in the capital of the Chaldean Empire, Babylon. His rule is approximated at 1100 BC BCE.
Babylon was located in what is now Iraq.
a very few cultures were mixed with their dna
While the Median kingdom controlled the highland region, the Chaldeans, with their capital at Babylon, were masters of the Fertile Crescent. Nebuchadnezzar, becoming king of the Chaldeans in 604 B.C., raised Babylonia to another epoch of brilliance after more than a thousand years of eclipse. By defeating the Egyptians in Syria, Nebuchadnezzar ended their hopes of re-creating their empire. As we have seen (p. 29), he destroyed Jerusalem in 586 B.C. and carried thousands of Jews captive to Babylonia. Nebuchadnezzar reconstructed Babylon, making it the largest and most impressive city of its day. The tremendous city walls were wide enough at the top to have rows of small houses on either side. In the center of Babylon ran the famous Procession Street, which passed through the Ishtar Gate. This arch, which was adorned with brilliant tile animals, is the best remaining example of Babylonian architecture. The immense palace of Nebuchadnezzar towered terrace upon terrace, each resplendent with masses of ferns, flowers, and trees. These roof gardens, the famous Hanging Gardens of Babylon, were so beautiful that they were regarded by the Greeks as one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. - Nebuchadnezzar also rebuilt the great temple-tower or ziggurat, the Biblical "Tower of Babel," which the Greek historian Herodotus viewed a century later and described as a tower of solid masonry, a furlong [220 yards] in length and breadth, upon which was raised a second tower, and on that a third, and so on up to eight. The ascent to the top is on the outside, by a path which winds round all the towers. - Nebuchadnezzar was the last great Mesopotamian ruler, and Chaldean power quickly crumbled after his death in 562 B.C. The Chaldean priests - whose interest in Astrology so greatly added to the fund of Babylonian astronomical Knowledge that the word "Chaldean" came to mean astronomer - continually undermined the monarchy. Finally, in 539 B.C., they opened the gates of Babylon to Cyrus the Persian, thus fulfilling Daniel's message of doom upon the notorious Belshazzar, the last Chaldean ruler: "You have been weighed in the balances and found wanting" (Dan. 5:27). [Footnote 28: Herodotus History of the Persian Wars 1.181, trans. G. Rawlinson.]
The 17th and 18th centuries
Nebuchadnezzar was the Chaldean king who restored Babylon and created the Hanging Gardens for his wife. The Hanging Gardens are listed among the "wonders of the ancient world". Naturally, he lived in the capital of the Chaldean Empire, Babylon. His rule is approximated at 1100 BC BCE.
This question should be under Mesopotamia; he ruled over Babylon from 605-562 BCE. Therefor he lived in BABYLON
The time was in 597 B.C. when the Chaldean King, Nebuchadnezzar, captured Jerusalem and made 10,00 Jews leave the city and live in Babylon.
Babylon was located in what is now Iraq.
babylon
Babylon .
the juadism live near ejypt and Babylon the Islams live in saudia Arabia by Christine combs
a very few cultures were mixed with their dna
The queen used to live in Medo Persia.
"Third year of the reign of Jehoakim, king of Judah". Daniel 1:1
It live on Late Jurassic Period, 154-150Ma.
This answer depends on how picky you want to be about what Babylon is (or was) historically. As a general answer the kingdom's of Babylon existed from 2,000 BC through about 700 BC (this includes all 5 eras of the empire).