Where do you live - in history?

One of the Duwamish villages (specifically the Skak-TELB-sbabsh, or Lake People).
Rainier Valley, Oregon Territory.
Rainier Valley, Washington Territory.
Rainier Beach.
Seattle.

Ice Age Hunter gatherers
Powhatan Confederacy
Virginia Colony [Pieces of MD in Virginia Charter (disputed)]
Maryland Lord Baltimore’s Colony [Proprietorial Rule]
Puritan Rule (9 Years Catholics and Episcopalians outlawed)
Reestablishment of Proprietorial rule
Royal Colony of Maryland (Appointed Governor)
Revolutionary Government of Maryland
State of Maryland (USA Articles of Confederation)
State of Maryland (USA under the Constitution)
Occupied Maryland (briefly War of 1812)
State of Maryland (USA)
Occupied Maryland (briefly Civil War)
State of Maryland (USA)

Various Native American tribes
French territory
British territory
American territory
Indiana

Paleo - Indian inhabited
Muskogee / Yuchi inhabited
Cherokee Territory
British Territory
North Carolina, USA
Tennessee, USA
Tennessee, CSA
Tennessee, USA

Weckquasgeek (I love it. Native American geeks!)
New Netherlands under the Dutch
New York under the British / Sleepy Hollow, according to Washington Irving
New York, U.S.A., Westchester County, Town of Greenburgh, Village of Irvington

I have no idea what this thread is about. “where do I live in history?” What do you mean? :confused:

Each nation will have undergone changes in name and rulers.

So although I now live in the UK, it’s not always been called “United Kingdom”. Someone living in London 2000 yrs ago would have been part of the Roman Empire, for example.

So for Stockholm you would look back and figure out the various distinct nations in which the people of Stockholm have found themselves.

Just think about your current location, then pretend to go back and then forward in the history of your location, mention the name of the countries, civilizations, or tribes that you notice on your trip.

Oy.

Canaan
Phoenicia
Philistine holdings
Egyptian Empire
Israel
Judea
Assyrian Empire
Chaldean (Neo-Babylonean) Empire
Persian Empire
Macedoniam Empire
Ptolmeian Empire
Seleucid Empire
Hasmonean Kingdom of Israel
Roman Empire
Byzantine Empire
Umayyad Caliphate
Abbasid Caliphate
Selejuk Empire
The Frankish Kingdom of Jerusalem
Egyptians (Mameluks)
Various Mongols
The Ottoman Empire
The British Empire
Israel

I may have missed a few.

Fishing village
Central Kingdom
France
International Concession
Japan
Republic of China
People’s Republic of China

Ah yes, I forgot - Napoleon conquered the area in 1799 (and lost it a few months later). So add the French Empire.

Same here. Glad you did it, since I know nothing of the local history.

Remebered another one: In 132 AD Simon Bar Kochva drove the Romans out and established an independant Jewish state, which lasted until basically the entire Roman army came down on their heads three years later.

So my revised list is as follows:

Canaan
Phoenicia
Philistine holdings
Egyptian Empire
Israel
Judea
Assyrian Empire
Chaldean (Neo-Babylonean) Empire
Persian Empire
Macedoniam Empire
Ptolmeian Empire
Seleucid Empire
Hasmonean Kingdom of Israel
Roman Empire
Israel (Bar Kochva Rebellion)
Byzantine Empire
Umayyad Caliphate
Abbasid Caliphate
Selejuk Empire
The Frankish Kingdom of Jerusalem
Egyptians (Mameluks)
Various Mongols
The Ottoman Empire
The French Empire
The British Empire (Mandatory Palestine)
Israel

Even old New York was once New Amsterdam
Why they changed it I can’t say
People just liked it better that way

If I summarize the wikipedia article correctly:

Algonguin territory - “First Stopping Place”
Iroquois village of Hochelaga
Ville-Marie, Nouvelle France 1642-1760
Ville-Marie, Province of Québec 1763-1791
1775 - briefly held by American Revolutionists, who left when they determined they could not get hold of Canada
Ville-Marie, Lower Canada, 1791-1841
Montreal (1832), United Province of Canada (1841-1867)
Montreal, Province of Québec, Dominion of Canada (1867- ) (Since the 1950s, the country has been simply called Canada)

Apologies for my previous answer- I misunderstood the question. I live in:

-the Creek Confederacy
-The Spanish New World
-The French New World
-The Creek Village of Econhate (eh-kon-hah-TAY)
-The Colony of Georgia
-The Georgia Territory
-The State of Alabama
-The frontier town of New Philadelphia
-The site of one of the largest concentration camps in American history (1830s Creek removal depot)
-Fourth (and current) Capitol of Alabama
-First Capitol of the Confederate States of America
-The City where Rosa Parks was arrested and MLK gained national prominence
-Home of the New World’s best funded Shakespearean theater

Sampiro, I just thought you were being a wise-ass earlier. Heh.

I think Alessan is currently winning the thread. It’s neat to see the countries and empires we have in common, though. At several points in history, he and I would be living in the same nation.

Some four or five thousand years ago there were the Red Paint People, whose name for the area we don’t know.

Then came the Susquehana.

Then came the Algonquians, largely Abenaki in this area, who called this place Ndakinna.

In 1604, the area became part of New France, the colony of Acadia.

The English came in 1607, the Plymouth Company, and founded the Province of Maine.

The province was divided in 1629 into Province of New Hampshire and New Somersetshire.

Nothing ever came of New Somersetshire, however, and the more populated parts were given over to a new Province of Maine and the less to the Territory of Sagadahock.

In 1669, the whole thing was absorbed into the Province of New York.

Then we became part of the flash-in-the-pan Dominion of New England

In 1692, Province of Massachusetts Bay took over and our district was called Yorkshire.

Then there was the whole Seven Years War thing that went back and forth between the English and the French–who, as far as they were concerned, still called the place Acadia.

Between that and the Revolution, things get a bit hazy, but we were either part of Massachusetts, Nova Scotia, or some combination of the two.

The War of 1812 put us firmly in Massachusetts, the District of Maine.

In 1820, we gained independence through the Maine-Missouri Compromise.

In 1839, we lost a bit of land to New Brunswick in the bloodless Aroostook War.

And that brings us up to today.
Or, if you want to simplify it, some Indians, some French, some British, a bit of back and forth, some Americans, then some British came back for round two and gave a chunk to the Canadians.