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Rebel baron undressed the Cerne Abbas giant to get a rise out of Oliver Cromwell


Rebel baron undressed the Cerne Abbas giant to get a rise out of Oliver Cromwell
Hillside figure wore trousers for 700 years, says National Trust, before they were removed and a phallus added as parody of Civil War leader
The National Trust has revealed the giant figure on a hillside in Dorset dates from Saxon times
The origins of the Cerne Abbas giant have long been cloaked in mystery, and its vast anatomy has long caused shock by being cloaked in nothing at all.
But the National Trust has revealed that the hill figure is Saxon and actually had trousers for 700 years before a phallus was added in the 17th century as a possible parody of Oliver Cromwell, made on the orders of a disgruntled baron. ....

United Kingdom , Cerne Abbas , Denzil Holles , Oliver Cromwell , Cerne Abbey , Martin Papworth , John Hutchins , Baron Holles , Mike Allen , University Of Gloucestershire , National Trust , Civil War , Rev John Hutchins , Allen Environmental Archaeology , Pratt Bequest , Uk News , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , சிஇஆர்என்இ அப்பாஸ் , ஆலிவர் க்ரோம்வெல் , சிஇஆர்என்இ திருமடம் , மார்டின் பாப்வொர்த் , ஜான் ஹட்சின்ஸ் , மைக் ஆலன் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் க்லாஸ்டர்‌ஶைர் , தேசிய நம்பிக்கை , சிவில் போர் ,

Ancient Easter Island communities offer insights for successful life in isolation


 E-Mail
After a long journey, a group of settlers sets foot on an otherwise empty land. A vast expanse separates them from other human beings, cutting off any possibility of outside contact. Their choices will make the difference between survival and death.
The people of Easter Island may have something to teach future Martian colonists.
Binghamton University anthropologists Carl Lipo and Robert DiNapoli explore how complex community patterns in Rapa Nui the indigenous name for both the island and its people helped the isolated island survive from its settlement in the 12th to 13th century until European contact.  ....

Easter Island , Robert Dinapoli , Mark Madsen , Pacific Ocean , Carl Lipo , University Of Arizona Honors College , School Of Anthropology , University Of Washington Department Anthropology , Binghamton University , Harpur College , Rapa Nui , Terry Hunt , Honors College , Social Behavioral Science , Arts Culture , New World , ஈஸ்டர் தீவு , ராபர்ட் தினபோலி , குறி பைத்தியம் , பெஸிஃபிக் கடல் , கார்ல் லிபோ , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் அரிசோனா மரியாதை கல்லூரி , பள்ளி ஆஃப் மானுடவியல் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வாஷிங்டன் துறை மானுடவியல் , பிங்காம்டன் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , ஹார்பூர் கல்லூரி ,

Isotope study hints ancient Greeks used foreign fighters in key battle


Katherine Reinberger
The ancient Greeks relied on help from non-Greek mercenaries when it came to fighting their enemies, suggests an analysis of bodies in 2500-year-old mass graves.
The western Mediterranean witnessed several conflicts between about 2600 and 2300 years ago as a number of Greek-led city-states – including Syracuse on the island of Sicily – fought against the Carthaginians, whose base of power lay in what is now Tunisia. The Sicilian wars were documented by contemporary writers, including Herodotus in his book
The Histories. But given that Herodotus was Greek, it is possible that his accounts of the conflicts may have been biased to paint the Greek fighters in a favourable light. ....

Katherine Reinberger , Krista Charles , Ancient Greek , Attle Of Himera , கிறிஸ்டா சார்லஸ் ,

Who fought in the ancient Greek Battles of Himera? Chemical evidence provides answers


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IMAGE: Temple of Victory at Himera, Sicily, constructed by the defeated Carthaginians after the first Battle of Himera in 480 BCE.
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Credit: Katherine Reinberger
Geochemical evidence reveals that armies in the Battles of Himera were a mixture of locals and outsiders, according to a study published March 24, 2021 in the open-access journal
PLOS ONE by Katherine Reinberger of the University of Georgia, US, and colleagues. These data contradict certain claims made in historical accounts by ancient Greek writers.
In 480 BCE, the ancient Greek city of Himera successfully fought off a Carthaginian army. In 409 BCE, Carthage attacked again, and Himera fell. Historians of the time, including Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus, write that Himera stood strong in the first battle thanks to the aid of Greek allies, while it went unaided in the second battle. However, given the limited and partisan perspective of those ancient historians, these acc ....

Diodorus Siculus , Katherine Reinberger , Arts Graduate Research Award , Willson Center , National Science Foundation , University Of Georgia Graduate School Innovative , Research Experience For Undergraduates , University Of Georgia , Interdisciplinary Research Grant , Ancient Greek , Research Experience , Georgia Graduate School Innovative , Archaeological Science Norman Herz Grant , Student Research , வில்சன் மையம் , தேசிய அறிவியல் அடித்தளம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ஜார்ஜியா , இடைநிலை ஆராய்ச்சி மானியம் , பண்டைய கிரேக்கம் , ஆராய்ச்சி அனுபவம் , மாணவர் ஆராய்ச்சி ,

Arabian cattle cult built ancient monuments over 2,500 years before Stonehenge, study suggests


https://www.afinalwarning.com/516820.html
(Natural News)
The Arabian Peninsula is home to more than 1,000 ancient monuments that are more than 2,500 years older than the U.K.’s Stonehenge. Called “mustatils,” which is the Arabian term for “rectangles,” these rectangular stone structures were likely used by Arabian cattle herders to perform rituals.
Researchers from the
University of Western Australia arrived at this conclusion after excavating the site in northwestern Saudi Arabia. They uncovered cattle horns and skulls in one mustatil, suggesting that ancient Arabians might have used cattle fragments as ritual offerings.
Based on the age of the skulls, the researchers posited that mustatils were built between 5300 and 5000 B.C. This would make the monuments the earliest large-scale, ritual site anywhere in the world, predating Stonehenge and the Egyptian pyramids by more than two millennia. ....

Saudi Arabia , Arabian Peninsula , Saudi Arabia General , New South Wales , Gary Rollefson , Melissa Kennedy , Hugh Thomas , Whitman College , University Of Western Australia , Natural News , Western Australia , Holocene Humid Phase , Ancient Egyptian , Ancient History , Culture Amp Society , Ancient Civilizations , Ancient Monument , Real History , Real Science , Weird Science , சவுதி அரேபியா , அரேபியன் தீபகற்பம் , சவுதி அரேபியா ஜநரல் , புதியது தெற்கு வேல்ஸ் , மெலிசா கெந்நெடீ , ஹக் தாமஸ் ,