Results 181 to 190 of about 6,830 (217)
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Traditio, 1971
Perhaps not unnaturally, but disastrously for itself, Byzantine historiography has so far, if at all, tended to view the role played by the Caucasians, especially Armenians, in the history of the Eastern Empire with somewhat parochial, or microcosmic, eyes.
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Perhaps not unnaturally, but disastrously for itself, Byzantine historiography has so far, if at all, tended to view the role played by the Caucasians, especially Armenians, in the history of the Eastern Empire with somewhat parochial, or microcosmic, eyes.
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2007
Published as part of Nurettin Meriç, Lütfiye Eryilmaz & Müfit Özulug, 2007, A catalogue of the fishes held in the Istanbul University, Science Faculty, Hydrobiology Museum., pp.
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Published as part of Nurettin Meriç, Lütfiye Eryilmaz & Müfit Özulug, 2007, A catalogue of the fishes held in the Istanbul University, Science Faculty, Hydrobiology Museum., pp.
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Strigamia caucasia Verhoeff 1938
2012Strigamia caucasia (Verhoeff, 1938) References for morphology: Verhoeff 1938b; Dobroruka 1977. Taxonomic notes. Described originally as a species of Scolioplanes (Protoplanes), it was assigned to Strigamia by Dobroruka (1977), though misspelled as “ Strigamia caucasica ”.
Bonato, Lucio +3 more
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Antiquity, 1933
The Caucasus is by no means a homogeneous region. It consists of a very high mountain-chain, the main parts of which reach to a height of over 5000 metres, with others of 1000–1600 metres. Forming an isthmus between two seas, the Asiatic Caspian and the Mediterranean Black Sea, it is open to both eastern and western influence.
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The Caucasus is by no means a homogeneous region. It consists of a very high mountain-chain, the main parts of which reach to a height of over 5000 metres, with others of 1000–1600 metres. Forming an isthmus between two seas, the Asiatic Caspian and the Mediterranean Black Sea, it is open to both eastern and western influence.
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Caucasia and Byzantine Studies
Traditio, 1956All too slowly, but nevertheless, it is to be hoped, steadily, Byzantine scholars are becoming aware of the special importance of studies dealing with Christian Caucasia — principally Armenia and Georgia — for the studies ex professo their own. That this claim of Caucasiology to a place of special importance in Byzantine studies is no empty boast, an ...
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State Incoherence in Southern Caucasia
2013From the distant vantage point of the macro-perspective, the Southern Caucasus is clearly plagued by state incoherence, in both its horizontal and its vertical forms. Two of its constituent states — Georgia and Azerbaijan — have fragmented, spawning three secessionist statelets.
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Prometheus Unbound: Southern Caucasia in Prehistory
Journal of World Prehistory, 2006This paper examines the intellectual traditions and recent advances in the archaeology of the Bronze and Iron Ages of the South Caucasus. The first goal of the paper is to provide an account of the scholarly traditions that have oriented research in the region since the mid-nineteenth century.
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NOGHAYS AROUND THE CAUCASIA AND CRIMEA
2013Living in a wide area lying from Kazakhstan to Romania some of the Noghay tribes settled in around the Crimea. In the 18th century some Noghay tribes were settled on the northern steppes of the Caucasus by Russians. Noghays have established ethnic and cultural relations with the Caucasian peoples.
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