Maritime timeline
This is a timeline of events in maritime history.
Prehistory
- About 45,000 BC: first humans arrive in Australia, presumably by boat
Antiquity
- About 6,000 BC: earliest evidence of dugout canoes[1]
- 5th millennium BC: earliest known depiction of a sailing boat[2]
- About 2,000 BC:
- Hannu dispatches a fleet to the Land of Punt
- Austronesian people migrate from Taiwan to Indonesia, preceding the colonization of Polynesia[3][4][5]
- 1575-1520 BC Dover Bronze Age Boat, oldest known plank vessel, was built
- about 1175 BC: Battle of the Delta, one of the first recorded naval battles
- 1194-1174 BC: supposed timespan for the events of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey.
- Around 600 BC: according to Herodotus, Necho II sends Phoenician expedition to circumnavigate Africa
- 542 BC: first written record of a trireme
- 5th century BC: Hanno the Navigator explores the coast of West Africa
- 480 BC: Battle of Salamis, arguably the largest naval battle in ancient times
- 247 BC: Lighthouse of Alexandria completed
- 214 BC: Lingqu Canal built
- 31 BC: Battle of Actium decides the Final War of the Roman Republic
- About 200: Junks are developed in China.
Middle Ages
- 793: The raid of Lindisfarne, first recorded Viking raid
- 984: Pound locks used in China; See Technology of the Song Dynasty
- About 1000: Leif Ericson reaches North America, first recorded crossing of the Atlantic Ocean.
- 1025: Chola invasion of Srivijaya
- 1088: Dream Pool Essays by Shen Kuo, first description of a magnetic compass
- 1159: Lübeck is rebuilt, and the Hanseatic League is founded.
- About 1190: Alexander Neckam writes the first European description of a magnetic compass.
- 13th century: Portolan charts are introduced in the Mediterranean.
- About 1280: Polynesian settlers arrive at New Zealand, the last major landmass to be populated.
- 1274: First Mongol invasion of Japan
- 1325-1354: Ibn Batuta visits much of Africa and Asia.
- 1405: Zheng He's expeditions begins.
Age of Discovery
See also: Timeline of European exploration
- 1488: Bartolomeu Dias reaches the Cape of Good Hope.
- 1492: Christopher Columbus' first voyage, first recorded non-Arctic crossing of the Atlantic
- 1497: John Cabot reaches North American mainland, as first European since the Vikings.
- 1498
- Vasco da Gama completes the first voyage from Europe to India.
- Columbus reaches continental South America.
- 1513: Jorge Álvares completes the first voyage from Europe to China.
- 1522: Ferdinand Magellan's last ship arrives in Europe, first recorded circumnavigation, and crossing of the Pacific Ocean
- 1571: Battle of Lepanto, last major naval battle fought entirely between galleys.
- 1580: Francis Drake returns home from Nehalem Bay, Oregon to become the 1st circumnavigation by an Englishman.
- 1588: The Spanish Armada is destroyed, shifting naval superiority to England.
- 1602: The Dutch East India Company is founded.
- 1606: Willem Janszoon becomes the first European to reach Australia.
- 1620: Cornelis Drebbel constructs the first submarine.
- 1628: The Vasa sinks in Stockholm harbour on its maiden voyage.
- 1736: John Harrison tests the first successful marine chronometer.
- 1757: First sextant constructed
- 1771: James Cook completes the first circumnavigation without casualties to scurvy.
- 1790: Battle of Svensksund, the last major battle with participation of galleys.
Rise of steamboats and motorships
- 1783: Claude de Jouffroy constructs the first recorded steamboat.
- 1805: The battle of Trafalgar marks the rise of the Royal Navy to a century of world domination.
- 1807: North River Steamboat, the first commercially successful steamboat, is launched.
- 1820: Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen discovers mainland Antarctica.
- 1845: SS Great Britain becomes first iron steamer to cross the Atlantic.
- 1853: American commodore Matthew C. Perry arrives in Tokyo Bay, enforcing the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854.
- 1856: Paris Declaration Respecting Maritime Law outlaws privateering.
- 1859: The first ironclad warship, the Gloire, is launched.
- 1861: USS Ice Boat (1861), the first purpose-built icebreaker, is launched.
- 1862: The Battle of Hampton Roads becomes the first battle between ironclads.
- 1864: Ictineo II, the first submarine powered by an internal-combustion engine.
- 1869: The Suez Canal opens
- 1871: Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld braves the Northeast Passage on the Vega
- 1880: The American passenger steamship Columbia becomes the first outside usage of Thomas Edison's incandescent light bulb.[6][7][8][9]
- 1894: The Turbinia, the world's first turbine-powered ship, is launched.
- 1895: The Kiel Canal opens.
- 1903: The Vandal, the world's first diesel-electric ship, is launched.
- 1906
- Roald Amundsen conquers the Northwest Passage on the Gjøa.
- HMS Dreadnought launched, commencing the era of battleships.
- 1912: The Titanic sinks in the North Atlantic.
- 1914: The Panama Canal opens.
- 1916: Battle of Jutland, claimed to be the largest naval battle in history, counting tonnage of engaged ships.
- 1918: HMS Furious (47) becomes the first aircraft carrier used in warfare.
- 1937: USS Leary (DD-158) becomes the first American vessel to be equipped with radar.
- 1941: The attack on Pearl Harbor starts the Pacific War.
- 1942: The battle of Midway marks the demise of battleships and the domination of aircraft carriers.
- 1944: Normandy landings, the largest amphibious invasion in history.
- 1951: The first purpose-built container ships enter operation.
- 1955: USS Nautilus (SSN-571), the world's first nuclear-powered vessel, is launched.
- 1959
- The USS Skate (SSN-578) surfaces at the North Pole.
- The SR.N1, the first practical hovercraft, is launched.
- 1960: The Trieste descends to the Challenger Deep.
- 1962: The Cuban Missile Crisis; a major naval confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union.
- 1977: Russian icebreaker Arktika makes the first surface voyage to the North Pole.
- 1982: Falklands War, one of the largest naval campaigns since World War II.
- 1985: The Sea Shadow (IX-529), an early stealth ship, is launched.
- 1987: The MV Doña Paz is lost, claiming 4,375 lives, the worst peacetime maritime disaster in history.
- 1994:
- The Global Positioning System becomes operational.
- M/S Estonia is lost in the Baltic Sea.
- 2005: Piracy in Somalia becomes an international concern.
- 2007: Arktika 2007 becomes the first manned expedition to the North Pole seabed.
- 2012:
- M/S Costa Concordia disaster.
- James Cameron reaches the Challenger Deep solo with the Deepsea Challenger.
See also
- Age of Discovery
- History of navigation
- List of circumnavigations
- List of explorers
- List of naval battles
- Timeline of transportation technology
- Timeline for aircraft carrier service
- Timeline of European exploration
References
- ↑ 1000 Inventions and Discoveries, by Roger Bridgman
- ↑ Carter, Robert "Boat remains and maritime trade in the Persian Gulf during the sixth and fifth millennia BC"Antiquity Volume 80 No.307 March 2006
- ↑ Hage, P.; Marck, J. (2003). "Matrilineality and Melanesian Origin of Polynesian Y Chromosomes". Current Anthropology. 44 (S5): S121. doi:10.1086/379272.
- ↑ Kayser, M.; Brauer, S.; Cordaux, R.; Casto, A.; Lao, O.; Zhivotovsky, L. A.; Moyse-Faurie, C.; Rutledge, R. B.; et al. (2006). "Melanesian and Asian origins of Polynesians: mtDNA and Y chromosome gradients across the Pacific". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 23 (11): 2234–2244. doi:10.1093/molbev/msl093. PMID 16923821.
- ↑ Su, B.; Underhill, P.; Martinson, J.; Saha, N.; McGarvey, S. T.; Shriver, M. D.; Chu, J.; Oefner, P.; Chakraborty, R.; Chakraborty, R.; Deka, R. (2000). "Polynesian origins: Insights from the Y chromosome". PNAS. 97 (15): 8225–8228. Bibcode:2000PNAS...97.8225S. doi:10.1073/pnas.97.15.8225.
- ↑ Jehl, Francis Menlo Park reminiscences : written in Edison's restored Menlo Park laboratory, Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village, Whitefish, Mass, Kessinger Publishing, 1 July 2002, page 564
- ↑ Dalton, Anthony A long, dangerous coastline : shipwreck tales from Alaska to California Heritage House Publishing Company, 1 Feb 2011 - 128 pages
- ↑ Swann, p. 242.
- ↑ "Lighting A Revolution: 19th Century Promotion". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
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