The Timeline of Slovene history reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Timeline of Slovene history

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This is a timeline of key events in the history of Slovenia and the nations that lived and live on Slovene ethnic territory, mostly Slovenes. 1

History, unlike mathematics, is an imperfect science and can never be complete or totally impartial. Ivan Kobal

Table of contents
1 1300s BC
2 1200s BC
3 1100s BC
4 700s BC
5 300s BC
6 100s BC
7 0s
8 100s
9 200s
10 300s
11 400s
12 500s
13 600s
14 700s
15 800s
16 900s
17 1000s
18 1200s
19 1300s
20 1400s
21 1500s
22 1600s
23 1700s
24 1800s
25 1810s
26 1820s
27 1830s
28 1840s
29 1850s
30 1860s
31 1880s
32 1890s
33 1900s
34 1910s
35 1920s
36 1930s
37 1940s
38 1950s
39 1960s
40 1970s
41 1980s
42 1990s
43 2000s
44 See also
45 External links

1300s BC

NOTE a theory about connections between the Veneti and Proto-Slovenes is believed to be speculative. This page won't discuss much of it, but it is at least worth mentioning it.

The neutrality of this page is disputed. See discussion here


1200s BC


1100s BC

700s BC

300s BC

100s BC


0s

100s

200s


300s


400s


500s

Karantania with Carniola around 597

600s


700s


800s

Central Europe around 870

900s


1000s


1200s

1300s

1400s


1500s

1600s


1700s


1800s


1810s

1820s

1830s


1840s


1850s


1860s


1880s


1890s


1900s


1910s


1920s


1930s


1940s

Flag of SR Slovenia

1950s


1960s


1970s


1980s


1990s

Flag of Slovenia

2000s

Flag of European Union

See also


Notes:
1 It clearly shows that 'exactly' 1246 ~ 3 × 400 Years have passed for this small nation to be somehow in a foreign Jewish-like Babylonian 'slavery' on a state's scale-view. But as Prešeren says: "No Devil, but the Neighbour shall be a Borderer".
2X See also and Subject page Moravia. (Temporary but interesting)
2Y Some modern sources imply that Veneti and Etruscans were highly connected and it is not known yet which nation influenced on each other. We can also freely say that Etruscans can be somehow the predecessors of the Slovenes. (More on this to come)
2Z The discovery of an expert Catalan archaeologist Pere Bosch-Gimpera.
3 See English translation of Charles C. Mierow: http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/%7Evandersp/Courses/texts/jordgeti.html

External links