The first Jewish Diaspora was the forcible exile to Babylon in 586 BCE. However, the famous second Jewish Diaspora happened under the Romans from 70 CE to 132 CE. Jewish Zealots had fought the Romans on these two occasions and the Romans had enough of it. The Romans realized that the Jews had a fundamental connection to the land, so separating them from it and from each other would make them more docile. As a result, the Romans evicted the majority of Jews from the province of Syria-Palaestina.
After the Bar Kokhba revolt, or second Jewish-Roman War, of 132-135 CE, the Roman authorities banished Jews from the province of Judea. Many migrated to Galilee, but others moved to other parts of the Roman Empire.
It hasn't ended yet. Diaspora means dispersion. Until the Jews all return to Israel and live in peace, the Diaspora is still in effect.
The second diaspora going on right now. It is from 70 CE to the present day, a span of nearly 2000 years.
The religion you are looking for is Judaism, however Diaspora is not an exclusively Jewish term and Zionism is not an exclusively Jewish phenomenon. Diaspora applies to any ethnic group living outside of its original land. While the Jewish Diaspora is the most famous, there is also the Armenian Diaspora, the Palestinian Diaspora, the Greek Diaspora, the Circassian Diaspora, and numerous other Diasporas. Zionism is the belief that the Jews should have political self-sovereignty and is the patriotic sentiment behind the Establishment of the State of Israel. It is entirely political in nature and a large number of Zionists are Christians, even though the the question is about Jewish sovereignty. Similarly, a person does not have to be Polish to support the right of Poles to have self-determination (as Woodrow Wilson did in 1918) or a person does not have to be Bengali to believe that Bangladesh had the right to be free of India in 1947 and Pakistan in 1971. Additionally, there are some Jews who are either apathetic towards Zionism or are Anti-Zionist.
The Jewish diaspora was when the Jews were forced to immigrate out of their home country. It was a forced move, and it caused illness and death.
The Diaspora (scattering of the Jewish communities) began at the destruction of the First Temple, some 24 centuries ago. At that time, Jewish communities were established in North Africa, Iraq, Persia, the Arabian Peninsula, and adjacent areas. From there, they gradually spread to further regions.
That refers to the Jews who left the region of the Kingdom of Judah and Roman Judea as well as those who later emigrated from wider Eretz Israel. Another group of Jews fled to Egypt, where they settled in the Nile delta. A large number of Jews in Egypt became mercenaries in Upper Egypt on an island called the Elephantine. It was important for preserving the caste.
If you are referring to the Jewish Diaspora, then it was the Jews that experienced it.
The romans carried on the Jewish diaspora, begun by the Assyrians and Chaldeans.
abraham
The Jewish diaspora occured Babylonia, Eastern Europe, Israel, Poland, Spain, Greece, and Italy
"Diaspora" is not capitalized when used in a general sense to refer to any dispersed population of people, such as the Jewish diaspora or the African diaspora. It is typically capitalized when used as part of a specific name or title, such as the Diaspora community or the Diaspora Studies department.
The dispersal of the Jewish population is known as Diaspora
Diaspora.
The diaspora refers to the scattering of Jewish communities when they were exiled from their land.
Hellenism
It is called the diaspora.
The Diaspora.
It is unclear what this question is asking. Some possible interpretations include, but are not limited to: What can a person learn about the Jewish Diaspora? What is there to know? What can Jews learn from the experience of the Diaspora? What can Jews learn from non-Jews in the Diaspora? What can a person apply from Jewish Diaspora to examine similar cases and problems? Please see the Related Questions below. At the time that this answer is written only the first one has been answered, but hopefully others will contribute the remaining answers.