Caro Renzo le tue provocazioni sono utili, guarda cosa ho trovato:Originally posted by Renzo Audisio
Cavolo è vero!
ho persino inserito Egypt... e non da nulla! Eppure c'è nello Stesso Sito... Probabilmente non funziona il motore...
Beh comunque, quelli erano solo i primi 2 indirizzi di motori specifici che ho provato, ma ho provato da tante parti, dove i motori funzionavano.
Ti faccio un altro esempio funzionante: http://searchengineguide.com/pages/S...d_Archaeology/
... ma lo ripeto è solo uno dei tanti esempi di motori specialistici (più o meno azzeccati) che ho passato velocemente in rassegna.
http://www.courses.psu.edu/cams/cams...w/shardana.htm
The Shardana were among the first of the peoples now categorized as "Sea Peoples" to appear in the historical record. They made their first appearance in the Amarna letters (mid 14th c. BCE), serving as part of an Egyptian garrison in Byblos, where they provided their services to the mayor, Rib Hadda (EA 81, EA 122, EA 123 in Moran 1992: 150-1, 201-2). They would appear next during the reign of Ramesses II, in the mid-13th century BCE. Ramesses tells us, in his Kadesh inscriptions, that he assimilated some of the Shardana into his own personal guard (Kadesh Battle Inscriptions in Lichtheim 1976: 63ff).
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According to Dr. Donald Redford, the Shardana can be equated with the Sardonians of the classical era, a people from the Ionian coast who were skilled in fighting (1992: 243). A battle between the Phocaeans and the Sardonians is recorded in Herodotus' History, book I, 165, in which we are told that the Sardonians were a formidable naval force. In the 14th-13th centuries BCE, the Shardana also had a reputation as pirates, and it is possible that their success in this occupation provided one of the motivations for the activities of other groups of Sea Peoples. However, this idea is tied to the theory that the primary factor in the Late Bronze Age-Iron Age transition was massive pillaging and piracy on the part of certain groups in the Aegean (Redford 1992: 244).
Adam Zertal (2001) proposes that the Sea Peoples, who have been connected by some scholars with classical Sardinia, may have occupied certain sites of central Israel for a short period of time. This theory is based on a marginal similarity between unusual stone corridors and false domes built into the Iron Age I settlement at El-Ahwat and later architectural elements found on Sardinia . Zertal (2001: 228-230) theorizes that these sites may have been established for the Shardana by the Egyptians during the transitional period from the Late Bronze Age to the Iron Age. However, as Zertal points out, the resemblance between the Sardinian sites and El-Ahwat are marginal, and no Shardana pottery has turned up at the sites in Israel. The Israel sites are also far from the coast, which does not match the historical image of the Shardana as maritime people (2001: 229).
un altro
http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/h...%22shardana%22
vai su mama.com (the mother of search engine) e scrivi shardana....
ciao
L




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