The 670s BC, or 670s BCE are the decade that runs from 679 BC to 670 BC. At the time it was known as 75-84 Ab urbe condita in Rome. The denomination 670s BC for this decade has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming decades.
Events and trends
679 BC
- Siomón Brecc's reign ends and is succeeded by Dui Finn, according to the chronology of Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar ÃÂirinn.
- The Assyrian king Esarhaddon () defeated the Cimmerians and killed their king TeuÃ
¡pa at ḪubiÃ
¡na. Esarhaddon appears to have reached ḪubiÃ
¡na by passing through the Göksu River valley and bypassing the Anti-Taurus Mountains and Tabal proper.
- Duke Huan of Qi was officially rewarded hegemony by the Zhou king Xi in 679 BCE.
- Esarhaddon, the son of Sennacherib, is mentioned in some texts as having taken a city called Arsa near the River of Egypt, and its king Asuhili was taken back to the Assyrian capital Ninveh.
- A large structure with a mudbrick self-supporting arch roof was discovered and dated to between this year and 630 BCE in Tell Jemmeh.
- Bartatua succeeds IÃ
¡pakaia as king of IÃ
¡kuza.
- Esarhaddon campaigned in the Tabalian region against the Cimmerians from his base in Que and Ḫilakku, resulting in the defeat and killing of the Cimmerian king TeuÃ
¡pâ in ḪubiÃ
¡na, who was succeeded by Dugdammî, and the annexation of a part of the territory of Ḫilakku and of the sub-kingdom of Kundu and Sissu in Que, whose king Sanduarri fled into the mountains, and of a part of the territory of Ḫilakku.
- Sennacherib's successor, King Esarhaddon, campaigned in Khor, destroyed Sidon, and forced Tyre into tribute from 677 to 676 BC.
- The Cimmerians attacked Lydia for the third time, led by their king Lygdamis. The Lydians were defeated, Sardis was sacked, and Gyges was killed, following which he was succeeded by his son, Ardys, who was the father of Sadyattes.
- The Cimmerians migrate to the east and west of Mannaea.
- The Assyrians used Cimmerians in their army as mercenaries; a legal document of 679 B.C. refers to an Assyrian âÂÂcommander of the Cimmerian regimentâÂÂ; but in other Assyrian documents they are called âÂÂthe seed of runaways who know neither vows to the gods nor oathsâÂÂ
678 BC
November
677 BC
676 BC
By place
Greece
China
Middle East
675 BC
674 BC
673 BC
672 BC
671 BC
670 BC
Significant people
Births
675 BC
Deaths
679 BC
678 BC
677 BC
676 BC
675 BC
673 BC
Autumn
672 BC
February
670 BC
References