). who superimposed upon the network of degrees all the geographical objects they knew. The intensive military expansion of the early Roman Empire and the development of its commercial relations made it possible for Ptolemy to indicate on his map the outlines of Britain and the island of Ierne...
Egypt rose thanks to the rich soil and the annual flooding which were used for growing crops that built the first unified societal entity within its current geographical borders and with time a system of management, law, and order was created to spin the wheel of innovation, fortune and ...
Egypt rose thanks to the rich soil and the annual flooding which were used for growing crops that built the first unified societal entity within its current geographical borders and with time a system of management, law, and order was created to spin the wheel of innovation, fortune and progre...
Some geographical notes on ancient Egyptdoi:10.1080/00369221708734257KermackW. R.Scottish Geographical Journal
Everything in the world is afraid of time, and time is afraid of the pyramids. We would like to invite our visitors to have a bird-eye view of the Great Pyramids of Giza in Egypt - the only one of Seven Wonders of the World which is still standing...
peninsula lies to the southwest of Attica is called Peloponnesus. Peloponnesus is shaped like a giant hand reaching toward Crete. This region is ringed by a thin band of fertile land and contains many rivers; however, these rivers dry up in the summertime unlike the rivers in Egypt or ...
Ancient Rome: Geographical Setting Rome is a city and the capital of both Italy and the region of Lazio, and the province of Rome, located on the Tiber River, in the central part of the country, near the Tyrrhenian Sea. The Urban Landscape of the First Roman Period ...
Map of Egypt depicting the location of the archaeological site Abusir-el Meleq (orange X) and the location of the modern Egyptian samples (orange circles) (design of the graphic by Annette Günzel). Samples and anthropological analysis
Hutterer, R. 1994 Shrews of ancient Egypt: biogeographical interpretation of a new species. In Advances in the biology of shrews (ed. Merritt, J., Kirkland, G.L. Jr & Rose, R.K.), pp. 407-414. Pittsburgh, PA: Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication 18....
the editors have welcomed the expression of all views, however discordant, while requesting that contributors observe a common chronology for the sake of editorial uniformity (see the king list which, along with a map of Egypt and its neighbors, is printed on the endpapers of each volume). Al...