Anatolia

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    the Armenians or the deportation the number of Armenians living in Turkey fell from 2 million to under 400,000 by 1922. According to the website armenian-genocide.org, "The great bulk of the Armenian population was forcibly removed from Armenia and Anatolia to Syria, where the vast majority was sent into the desert to die of thirst and hunger." The Turkish government is most outspoken in the Denial of the Armenian Genocide. The government of Turkey deny that the Ottoman Empire attempt was to…

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    additional comparable forms. Symmetrical pottery consists of approximately the premium Greek creations, by means of urns classically prepared conferring to a stringent arrangement of magnitudes. As of about seven hundred, transformed connections thru Anatolia, the Black Sea dishes as well as the Mediterranean region, directed to an evident eastern muse, which stayed becoming proficient at via Corinth craftsman. The original expression bring forward a wider assortment of motifs, such by means…

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    In the article, Anatoli Boukreev (responds to Krakauer), Anitoli Boukreev addresses the topic of how John Krakauer unjustly criticizing his actions and decisions on Mount Everest. He argues that he had more experience and knew what he was doing as he climbed the harsh mountain. Boukreev first main point is that he has 20 years of experience climbing high altitudes. Moreover, he had been to the highest point of Mount Everest at a minimum of three times. He also points out the fact that he has…

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    Nomads Vs Mongols

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    the Abbasids. In 1055, the Tughril Beg was elected sultan of the Abbasid Empire, which was key in the uprising of the Seljuk people. Soon, they expanded to Syria, Palestine, and other focused their attention to Anatolia. Seljuk warriors were able to overthrow Byzantium and transform Anatolia. They put taxes of the Byzantine church and welcomed Islamic converts. Overall, the Seljuk were important to the history of Eurasia and although they were a nomadic force, they were able to conquer…

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    The Crusades were a series of religious wars between Christians and Muslims started primarily to get control of holy places considered sacred by both groups. There were 9 crusades total. It lasted from 1095-1291. It lasted 4 decades. The entire structure of the European society changed during the 12th and 13th centuries. The word crusade comes from the Latin word crux, meaning cross. The Christian warriors called Crusaders wore the cross as a symbol. Seljuk Turks took control of the Holy places…

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    The people who were involved in the First Crusade were the Christians and the Muslims. This Crusade lasted from 1095–1099 and took place at the Holy Land in Jerusalem because. In 1095, the armies of Christians from Western Europe responded to Pope Urban II’s plea to go to war against Muslim forces in the Holy Land, this is why the First Crusade began. The Christians won The First Crusade by seizing armies on their way to take back Jerusalem. Since the crusades won their fight it encourage other…

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    Pope Urban II

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    At the end of the 11th century, Western Europe had emerged as a significant power, causing a considerable amount of territory loss for the Byzantine Empire. After years of destruction and chaos from the civil war between the Seljuk Turks, General Alexius Comnenus sent envoys to Pope Urban II pleading for help to confront the Turkish threat. Little did he know that his cry for help would casue one of the biggest power struggles in history. Religious confliction, Pope Urban II, and the fight for…

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    The Trojan War

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    archaeological level that was certainly destroyed by a big war that also looks like it would match the “Homeric” Troy. Certainly a 10 year large scale conflict seems quite unlikely, but raids/skirmishes involving the communities along the Western coast of Anatolia and the Mycenaean Greeks are documented in letters and treaties found at the Hittite capital of Hattusa. “My personal opinion is that the poems combine Near Eastern literary traditions, remembered historic events, various historic…

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    Sarah (originally named Sarai) was one of several women in the Bible who were unable to have children. That proved doubly distressing for her because God had promised her husband Abraham that he would be the father of the Jewish nation, with descendants more numerous than the stars in the sky. After waiting many years, Sarah convinced Abraham to sleep with her handmaiden, Hagar, to produce an heir. That was an accepted practice in ancient times. The child born of that encounter was named Ishmael…

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    depicts the Gigantomachy from Greek mythology. Like the Parthenon in Athens - another icon of classical antiquity - the Zeus Altar was constructed on a terrace of the acropolis overlooking the ancient city of Pergamon, situated on the west coast of Anatolia (now Turkey) in Asia Minor. However, unlike the Parthenon, it was not a temple but merely an altar, possibly connected to the Doric Temple of Athena which had been built 150 years earlier and which stood above…

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