Mesopotamians.
Only the Minoan Culture, from Greece's Bronze Age, dates as far back as that 3500 BCE.
4,000 years.
yes. bce was before christ jesus. but since jesus is a myth, there were people in bce.
In the southern Mesopotamia the Sumerians developed the first great ancient civilisation. By 3000 BC there were 10 Sumerian city states (e.g. Ur, Uruk) along the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates.
There are a lot of candidates for this particular first. The top 10 contenders are: 1: Uruk, the Official Earliest City: Located in Turkey inhabited between 7500 BCE and 5700 BCE. Population between 5,000 people up to 10,000. 2: Ur - Sumerian capital: Founded as far back as 5,000 BCE but didn't become a city until 3,000 BCE. Population may have reached 65,000 residents. 3: Nippur, City of Enlil also in Sumeria: First settled in 5,000 BCE but by the 3rd millennium it was a city. Population around 20,000 inhabitants. 4: Tell Hamoukar (a contender for earlist first city): Located in Syria. Founded in 4000 BCE and a city by 3500 BCE. 5: Tell Brak (Northern Mesopotamia): Late 5th millennium BCE to early 4th millennium BCE. 6: Nekhen (Early capital of Egypt):As early as 3500 BCE. 7: Memphis, Egypt: Founded in 3100 BCE. Population as up to 30,000. 8: Mohenjo-daro (Indus Valley): Founded at around 2600 BCE. It had a population of 35,000. 9: Harappa (Indus Valley): Founded at around 2600 BCE, population up tp 20,000 residents. 10: Caral, Peru: Founded in 2600 to 2000 BCE. Population as high as 20,000 residents.
Remembering that there was no year zero, 3500 years before 2014AD would have been 1487BC.
The period between 1,500 BCE-1,000 BCE during which the Aryans settled in Sapta Sindhu region is called the Early Vedic Period.
3500 BCE
Only the Minoan Culture, from Greece's Bronze Age, dates as far back as that 3500 BCE.
The Wheel and Hammurabi's Code
4,000 years.
In about 3000 BCE, their first city, Ur, was established. By about 2500 BCE they had established a ruling system that involved dynasties.
Cuneiform was first developed by the ancient Sumerians of Mesopotamia c. 3500-3000 BCE.
The Mesolithic period dates back to around 10,000 to 5,000 BCE and was characterized by the use of more advanced stone tools, a focus on hunting and gathering, and the beginning of domestication of plants and animals. The Neolithic period followed the Mesolithic around 8,000 BCE and was marked by the development of agriculture, settled communities, and the production of polished stone tools and pottery.
Abraham lived sometime after 2000-1800 BCE. He is called the father of the Hebrews. The Jews, however, not always synonymous with the Hebrews as the religion of Judaism actually came later. It evolved over the period of ca. 1200-500 BCE. When you date the end of the ancient Hebrews is harder to pinpoint, as they were successively conquered by Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, and Arabs. The Assyrians conquered them in 722 BCE, the Babylonians in 586 BCE, the Persians in 538 BCE, Alexander thet Great and the Greeks in 332 BCE, and the Romans in 63 BCE. The ancient Hebrews were always around though during these conquests, and are still here to this day.
3500 - 32 (bc)
first picts in the north and brtonsin the south, then gaels settled from irelandin the west, then vikings settled in the islands and angles settled in the south. they all contributed to the modern Scottish identity.