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David McDowall

David McDowallModern Kürt Tarihi yazarı
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7.9/10
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35
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En Eski David McDowall Sözleri ve Alıntıları

En Eski David McDowall sözleri ve alıntılarını, en eski David McDowall kitap alıntılarını, etkileyici sözleri 1000Kitap'ta bulabilirsiniz.
Araplardan Gürcülere kadar bak,Kürtler burçlar gibi olmuşlardır.Türkler ve Farslar onlarla çevrilmiştir.Dört bir köşede Kürtler vardır.Her iki taraf da Kürt halkını Kaderin oklarının hedefi haline getirmiştir.Yenilmesi güç bir siper oluşturan her bir aşiretin Sınırlar için çok önemli olduğu söylenmektedir
Sayfa 36
At moments of great danger Britain has been saved from danger by its surrounding seas. Britain's history and its strong national sense have been shaped by the sea.
Reklam
Around 700 BC, another group of people began to arrive. Many of them were tall, and had fair or red hair and blue eyes. These were the Celts, who probably came from central Europe or further east, from southern Russia, and had moved slowly westwards in earlier centuries. The Celts were technically advanced.
From this time, too, power seems to have shifted to the Thames valley and southeast Britain. Except for short periods, political and economic power has remained in the southeast ever since. Hill-forts replaced henges as the centres of local power, and most of these were found in the southeast, suggesting that the land successfully supported more people here than elsewhere. There was another reason for the shift of power eastwards. A number of better-designed bronze swords have been found in the Thames valley, suggesting th at the local people had more advanced metalworking skills. Many of these swords have been found in river beds, almost certainly thrown in for religious reasons. This custom may be the origin of the story of the legendary King Arrhur's sword, which was given to him from out of the water and which was thrown back into the water when he died.
During the Celtic period women may have had more independence than they had again for hundreds of years. When the Romans invaded Britain two of the largest tribes were ruled by women who fought from their chariots. The most powerful Celt to stand up to the Romans was a woman, Boadicea. She had become queen of her tribe when her husband had died. She was tall, with long red hair, and had a frightening appearance. In AD 61 she led her tribe against the Romans. She nearly drove them from Britain, and she destroyed London, the Roman capital, before she was defeated and killed. Roman writers commented on the courage and strength of women in battle, and leave an impression of a measure of equality between the sexes among the richer Celts.
The name "Britain" comes from the word "Pretani ", the Greco-Roman word for the inhabitants of Britain. The Romans mispronounced the word and called the island "Britannia".
Reklam
The Romans had invaded because the Celts of Britain were working with the Celts of Gaul against them. The British Celts were giving them food, and allowing them to hide in Britain. There was another reason . The Celts used cattle to pull their ploughs and this meant that richer, heavier land could be farmed. Under the Celts Britain had become an important food producer because of its mild climate. It now exported corn and animals, as well as hunting dogs and slaves, to the European mainland. The Romans could make use of British food for their own army fighting the Gauls.
The Romans brought the skills of reading and writing to Britain. The written word was important for spreading ideas and also for estab lishing power. As early as AD 80, as one Roman at the time noted, the governor Agricola "trained the sons of chiefs in the liberal arts .. . the result was that the people who used to reject Latin began to use it in speech and writing. Further the wearing of our national dress came to be valued and the toga [the Roman cloak] came into fashion.
The Romans could not conquer "Caledonia", as they called Scotland, although they spent over a century trying to do so. At last they built a strong wall along the northern border, named after the Emperor Hadrian who planned it. At the time, Hadrian's wall was simply intended to keep out raiders from the north. But it also marked the border between the two later countries, England and Scotland.
The strength of Anglo-Saxon culture is obvious even today. Days of the week were named after Germanic gods: Tig (Tuesday), Wodin (Wednesday), Thor (Thursday), Frei (Friday)
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