All of the dates and information provided below are based on the Jewish Torah, Talmud and oral tradition. Note that many hundreds of names and dates have been omitted for the purpose of brevity, and descriptions have been kept to a minimum. See the highlighted Related Links for more complete detail.
Era of the Patriarchs:
Era of the Judges: (See also: Who were the Judges?) The era of the Judges was 1244-879 BCE. Here are some of the prominent Judges:
Era of the Kings: The era of the Kings lasted until the destruction of the First Temple in 422 BCE. (See also:Who were the Kings?) Here are some of the prominent kings, prophets and events:
Era of the Babylonian Exile (422-352 BCE):
Second Temple Era (352 BCE-68 CE):
Era of the Mishna and Talmud-sages:
Era of the Geonim (Torah-leaders in Babylonia):
European Jewry:
Later Rabbis and events:
You should go to an encyclopaedia or online dictionary to get this answer.
no its just a description to describe people who are not Jewish
Jewish people belong to the Judaism, so they believe (most of them) in the Jewish stories and bible; but every Jewish man has his own story, so we can't say every Jew has the same history of the Judaism.
Antisemitism.
Baruch is a common Jewish name. There were many thousands of people named Baruch in Jewish history.
In the Torah.
Yes, they did throughout history.
Rabbis.
The Jewish and christian people. the Jewish were persecuted by the romes and by the Germans
Yes. Unfortunately, both Anti-Semitism and genocide were quite common in Jewish history.
There is no one most important person to the Jewish people. Jewish history contains accounts of literally thousands of leaders, sages, and heroes.
The history of the Jewish nation.
Only Jews celebrate Channukah because it is a Jewish holiday that commemorates an event in Jewish history.