Heinsohn proposed a revision of ancient chronology based upon stratigraphy.
His work on ancient chronology, based on an examination of the stratigraphic record, has reached some dramatic conclusions.
Heinsohn's ideas on ancient chronology were introduced to the English-speaking world in the Velikovskian journal Kronos in 1985.
He gained for himself a foremost position amongst the investigators of ancient chronology, and his name occupies a place by the side of those of Ideler and Mommsen.
A bleached-out, dour hour of the day when cities slept and only cops and criminals wandered around, following some curious ancient chronology all their own.
He succeeded in reconstructing the lost Chronicle of Eusebius-one of the most valuable ancient documents, especially valuable for ancient chronology.
In laying the foundations of a science of ancient chronology he relied sometimes on groundless or even absurd hypotheses, often based on an imperfect induction of facts.
During 1898-1902, he held a senior demyship at Magdalen College, Oxford, and started to study ancient chronology.
It is one of the most important bases for our knowledge of ancient chronology.
The ancient Greeks reported similar figures on ancient Egyptian chronology.