Results 161 to 170 of about 9,188 (201)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Cranial trephination in ancient Iran
Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics, 2007Majid Dadmehr
exaly +3 more sources
2021
One major challenge of the study of ancient Iran is that it does not exist in Western academia as a discrete field of study. Prehistory, for example, which ends in the 3rd millennium in Elam but persists into the 1st millennium bce elsewhere on the Iranian plateau, has been studied primarily by anthropologists, the Iron Age by Assyriologists, the ...
openaire +1 more source
One major challenge of the study of ancient Iran is that it does not exist in Western academia as a discrete field of study. Prehistory, for example, which ends in the 3rd millennium in Elam but persists into the 1st millennium bce elsewhere on the Iranian plateau, has been studied primarily by anthropologists, the Iron Age by Assyriologists, the ...
openaire +1 more source
2017
What do we know about the Indo-European peoples and the origins of Iran? What we know begins with the fact that the Persian language (known to Iranians in their own tongue as Farsi) along with English and most other European languages, as well as Sanskrit,...
openaire +1 more source
What do we know about the Indo-European peoples and the origins of Iran? What we know begins with the fact that the Persian language (known to Iranians in their own tongue as Farsi) along with English and most other European languages, as well as Sanskrit,...
openaire +1 more source
Agnatic Groups in Ancient Iran
Soviet Anthropology and Archeology, 1970The family, whether conjugal or joint (consisting of brothers living together), became the primary unit of Iranian society long before the Sassanid period. The terms dūtak (literally "smoke") and katak (literally "house") were employed to denote the concept of "family." They appeared primarily in the composites katak-xvatāy (master of the house, head ...
openaire +1 more source

