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I made a history timeline to learn what events happened around the same time

I added a couple items based on the comments here.

2 hours agoAkranazon

It would be great to make one for all the innovations and discoveries be its technical, mathematical, etc etc. Also maybe creating some linkage or graph sort of thing for showing the discovery or invention which led or built foundation for another discovery in later years (umm not sure, might be too complex... just an idea)

a day agopreetsojitra

I’ve been thinking about building precisely that sort of tech tree for a while, then extending it forwards in time to see if we can guess at how to work backwards from hypothetical technologies to where we are or if we can see obvious gaps

a day agocyrillite

If you are interested, would love to collaborate!

6 hours agopreetsojitra

This is very cool!

I wonder if you took inspiration from "The Timetables of History" (https://openlibrary.org/books/OL1756160M/The_timetables_of_h...)?

That book has always been a favorite of mine to just meander through and find interesting parallelism, but incorporating Wikipedia links as you've done adds a new dimension.

a day agoSpectraLeper

This is nice, I once did something similar for my SO to chart artworks on timeline by different geographic areas. Time was on x-axis, different geographic areas were different timelines vertically, and different art periods were colour coded.

The hardest thing was mapping approximate date descriptions (think "1st half of 17th century") into years to draw on chart.

2 days agozejn

Very nice, thanks for sharing! Is the source available somewhere? Do you want contributions?

I've once built something similar for myself (still at https://github.com/fdw/timelines/), but not half as polished as yours. I like yours better ;)

a day agofdw

The repository is open source, so you can contribute if you feel inclined.

https://github.com/SeanHollen/1300-2000

I like how your project has such a long time horizon, I'm glad you're showing it.

Another project in a similar vein that might influence you is the historical tech tree. https://www.historicaltechtree.com/ It has literally thousands of technologies all mapped together. I was curious so I calculated the most "influential" technologies: https://github.com/etiennefd/hhr-tech-tree/issues/12

a day agoAkranazon

Thanks, that's also a very impressive visualization. Slightly too much and confusing, but amazing nonetheless. Thanks for sharing!

I'll also have a look around your repo. And maybe I know feel inspired to put some more work into mine - thanks for the kind words.

a day agofdw

I always enjoy these types of timeline comparisons. In cases where the results are surprising, I think it highlights that we often learn history (and science) in specific silos. The idea even comes up in memes when, for example, we learn that Martin Luther King Jr., Anne Frank and Barbra Walters would all be the same age if alive today.

a day agojimmydddd

I like it very much. I could also include the philosophical advances in the timeline and also events that are happening.

I'm thinking of building one for climate change.

a day agodevdp430

I enjoyed browsing through it. One comment: the "philosophy and art" row is missing anything after 1890.

a day agoblueblimp

I love the design of your site

a day agobigthymer

Cool visualization! I was wondering if you could find sources for war deaths before 1800. I would be interested to see how they compared to the later wars. Also, making the icons and the labels for the categories sticky (so that they are always on the left side) would make it more useful and less cluttered. Thanks for sharing it!

a day agosebastianlay

I like that. Though I just skimmed it. What is missing IMO is volcanism, and how the larger eruptions overlap, maybe with a few years delay, with larger wars and epidemics, caused by misharvests. Maybe I've missed that, by only skimming?

2 days agoLargoLasskhyfv