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Description
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Publié par | Everest Media LLC |
Date de parution | 11 octobre 2022 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9798350040074 |
Langue | English |
Poids de l'ouvrage | 1 Mo |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
Insights on Matthew Green's Shadowlands
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8
Insights from Chapter 1
#1
A storm in 1850 killed two hundred people in the British Isles. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#2
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#3
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#4
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#5
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#6
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#7
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#8
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#9
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#10
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#11
The ghosts of two nuns were said to have haunted a house in Orkney, Scotland, from which they were eventually exorcized.
#12
Scientists excavated a house in Orkney, Scotland, and found no beds, no dressers, and no tanks. Instead, they found alcoves and a partitioned-off recess in the wall. This was a place of manufacturing and commercial exchange.
#13
The village of Skara Brae in Scotland was excavated in 1850, and it was found to be completely peaceful. The entire Stone Age was peaceful, until the first humans met each other.
#14
A British settlement in Orkney, Scotland, was excavated in 1850 and found to be completely peaceful. The entire Stone Age was peaceful until the first humans met each other.
#15
In 1850, a storm in the British Isles killed two hundred people. The archipelago was a relatively new addition to the UK, having been annexed from Norway in the sixteenth century. The wind’s destructive force also proved an impetus of discovery, as some of the villagers who lived on the western coast of Orkney discovered a five-thousand-year-old settlement at the Bay of Skaill.
#16
The first houses in Skara Brae, around 3200 BC, were a radical new trend that cut against the grain of 2. 5 million years of human history. Humans had been nomadic hunter-gatherers until the Stone Age, when they settled down and began to bury their dead nearby.
#17
England was a relatively late bloomer when it came to agriculture, but it was the first place where farming became the norm.
#18
Farming was the first instance of large-scale cooperation among humans, and it brought about a self-perpetuating cycle that led to a higher population.
#19
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC. The idea of earthly permanence itself represented a fundamental shift in the Neolithic world view, making these types of settlements all the more radical.
#20
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC. The idea of earthly permanence itself represented a fundamental shift in the Neolithic world view, making these types of settlements all the more radical.
#21
Farming was the first instance of large-scale cooperation among humans. It brought about a self-perpetuating cycle that led to a higher population. The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#22
There is an agreeable symmetry to the account of the demise of Skara Brae, the apocalyptic storm of 2500 BC serving as a foil to the revelatory one four thousand years later. The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#23
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#24
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#25
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#26
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#27
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.
#28
The first permanent agricultural settlements were built in the Neolithic age, around 3200 BC.