They were actually called "Jews" by the time of the diaspora (not Hebrews), and they went to every continent in the world.
Diaspora. "Saul" "Hebrews" and "Esther" are names, not events.
It was called the "Destruction of the 2nd Temple". It was also the start of the Diaspora.
diaspora diaspora diaspora
That depends when. From the time of Abraham, and again after the sojourn in Egypt, they went to Canaan (Israel). Later, the large majority were exiled to other places. See also:http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-history/timeline-of-jewish-historyhttp://judaism.answers.com/jewish-history/destruction-and-diaspora
The diaspora refers to any area outside of the land of Israel. In Hebrew diaspora is go-lah.Diaspora refers to people not land. It refers to the dispersion, scattering of the Jewish people. The words origins are Greek or French.
To Babylon
"The Diaspora" isn't a time period. The Diaspora is a place; specifically, anywhere in the world that isn't Israel. Numerous powers in the Diaspora have dominated Jews; one might even go so far as to say almost all of the Western ones. However, none of them were 'foreign', as the countries were discriminating against their own citizens.
The return of the Jews from the Diaspora.
1:assyrian 2:babylonian 3:greek 4:roman
If you are referring to the Jewish Diaspora, then it was the Jews that experienced it.
Santeria is an example of the African diaspora.
Soul Diaspora was created in 2009.