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Journal articles on the topic 'History Chronology, Historical'

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1

Willis, Michael. "Later Gupta History: Inscriptions, Coins and Historical Ideology." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 15, no. 2 (2005): 131–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s135618630500502x.

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AbstractThis article argues for a radical revision of later Gupta chronology based on a review of the primary evidence. The paucity of dated material has meant that historical reconstructions of the period have been based on late-Victorian assumptions about the nature of society and kingship. Removing this ideological framework allows not only for a revision of chronology — a traditional historical concern — but for a new understanding of Gupta kingship and the constitution of state.
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2

Rose, Amy D. "History as Method or Does Chronology Count?" International Journal of Adult Vocational Education and Technology 7, no. 3 (2016): 51–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijavet.2016070105.

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This articles introduces some of the differing approaches to historical research that are utilized within adult education and lifelong learning. It discusses archives, types of sources, and approaches to interpretation. Whenever the author talks about history or historical research one of two things happen: People get excited and start telling her how fascinated they are by a particular aspect of history or their eyes glaze over. In this article, the author is hoping for a different kind of reaction.
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3

Ibragimov, Rakhmon. "ON THE ISSUES OF PERIODIZATION AND CHRONOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE TASHKENT OASIS." JOURNAL OF LOOK TO THE PAST 12, no. 3 (2020): 30–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.26739/2181-9599-2020-12-5.

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This article is devoted to the issue of chronology and periodization of the ancient history of the Tashkent oasis. It details the historiography of chronology and historical periods of the Tashkent oasis. Moreover, the research issue was enriched with additional information. As a result of scientific work, new proposals were made on the periodization and chronology of the ancient history of the oasis
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4

Gokten, Soner, Yildiz Ozerhan, and Pinar Okan Gokten. "The historical development of sustainability reporting: a periodic approach." Zeszyty Teoretyczne Rachunkowości 107, no. 163 (2020): 99–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.2466.

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History is the main backbone of understanding the reasons behind developments, and sustainability re-porting is one of the most important developments in accounting. In this sense, the purpose of this study is to provide a chronology of the historical development of sustainability reporting. The historical re-search method with a periodic approach was applied. This paper divides the development history of sustainability reporting into three main periods: the pre-standardization period, between 1962 and 1998, the standardization (institutionalization) period, between 1999 and 2016, and the post
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5

Kubarev, V. V. "SYNCHRONIZATION OF HISTORICAL AND RELIGIOUS CHRONICLES." EurasianUnionScientists 11, no. 5(74) (2020): 25–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.31618/esu.2413-9335.2020.11.74.813.

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The author correctly synchronizes historical and religious Chronicles of the Ancient World based on a short chronology and linking events to unique celestial phenomena reflected in the annals and Scriptures. The author believes that discrepancies in dates,geographical localities and ethnic origin of historical and religious figures are due to erroneous traditional chronology and historical geography, as well as the deliberate adaptation of phenomena and events to an established paradigm. In addition, differences in religious traditions and facts of real history are caused by ignorance and fana
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6

Garami, Bosmat. "Chronology and Ideology." European Television Memories 2, no. 3 (2013): 99. http://dx.doi.org/10.18146/2213-0969.2013.jethc036.

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This paper examines two major Israeli historic-documentary television series, PILLAR OF FIRE (POF), product of the 1970's, and REVIVAL (RL), product of the 1990's.The series deal with the Zionist enterprise and its realization. The research applies Gerard Genette's central narratological typology to the series' temporal structures, through the categories of Order, Duration and Frequency. Findings show that while POF's classic, linear, , historicist structure serves its celebration of the Zionist narrative, RL employs a unique, complex , multi-dimensional structure, which enables its historical
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7

Ng, Su Fang. "Indian Interpreters in the Making of Colonial Historiography: New Light on Mark Wilks’s Historical Sketches of the South of India (1810–1817)*." English Historical Review 134, no. 569 (2019): 821–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cez213.

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Abstract A forgotten archive at Oxford, the working library of Mark Wilks (1759–1831), sometime Resident of Madras who wrote the influential Historical Sketches of the South of India (1810), offers evidence of Anglo-Indian collaboration in the early colonial period following the 1799 defeat of Tipu Sultan. Examining new manuscript evidence, this article shows how Wilks, a friend of Colin Mackenzie, the surveyor of Mysore, used texts from the vast Mackenzie Collection to compose his history, abstracting selected translations for his own library. Wilks had the help of Mackenzie’s assistants, in
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8

PETERSON, DEREK R. "CULTURE AND CHRONOLOGY IN AFRICAN HISTORY." Historical Journal 50, no. 2 (2007): 483–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x07006164.

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Sources and methods in African history: spoken, written, unearthed. Edited by T. Falola and C. Jennings. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2004. Pp. xxi+409. ISBN 1-58046-140-9. £50.00.Honour in African history. By John Iliffe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. xv+404. ISBN 0-521-54685-0. £16.99.Black experience and the empire. Edited by P. Morgan and S. Hawkins. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Pp. xv+416. ISBN 0-19-926029-x. £39.00. Muslim societies in African history. By D. Robinson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Pp. xx+220. ISBN 0-521-533566-x. £
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9

Et.al, Baharuddin Jabar. "Mastery Level of Historical Thinking Skills (KPS) among Form Two Students." Turkish Journal of Computer and Mathematics Education (TURCOMAT) 12, no. 3 (2021): 281–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.17762/turcomat.v12i3.665.

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This study aimed to explore the Historical Thinking Skills among Form Two students. This study involved five aspects of the historical thinking skills: understanding chronology, exploring evidence, making interpretations, imagining and rationalizing while the focus of content standard referred to the four Content Standards in DSKP KSSM Form One History subject which are Introduction to Knowledge of History, Prehistoric Age, Ice Age and World Civilization and Its Contributions. The research instrument used in this study was a set of questionnaires in a form of multiple choice objective items ab
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10

James, Peter. "Archaic Greek colonies in Libya: historicalvs.archaeological chronologies?" Libyan Studies 36 (2005): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900005471.

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AbstractThe presently accepted ceramic chronology places the earliest episodes of Greek colonisation in Libya some three to four decades earlier than the traditional historical dates. A similar offset between the archaeological and historical chronologies can be seen at Naukratis and other Archaic Greek sites. A review of ‘fixed points’ for Archaic dating shows that the balance of evidence now strongly favours a reduction of late seventh to early sixth century BC Greek ceramic chronology by three to four decades. Such a reduction would bring harmony between the archaeological and historical pi
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11

Ogburn, Dennis E. "Reconceiving the Chronology of Inca Imperial Expansion." Radiocarbon 54, no. 2 (2012): 219–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/azu_js_rc.v54i2.16014.

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The basic chronology of Inca imperial expansion in Andean South America derives from historical accounts from the Spanish Colonial era, but several issues with this traditional chronology have arisen in recent decades. Advances in radiocarbon dating and calibration now give us some ability to refine or rebuild the chronology, and guidelines for obtaining the most useful dates are discussed. Dates recently obtained from the site of Chamical in the southern highlands of Ecuador are evaluated according to those guidelines, and they suggest Inca expansion to the north began 1 to 2 decades earlier
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Ogburn, Dennis E. "Reconceiving the Chronology of Inca Imperial Expansion." Radiocarbon 54, no. 02 (2012): 219–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200046944.

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The basic chronology of Inca imperial expansion in Andean South America derives from historical accounts from the Spanish Colonial era, but several issues with this traditional chronology have arisen in recent decades. Advances in radiocarbon dating and calibration now give us some ability to refine or rebuild the chronology, and guidelines for obtaining the most useful dates are discussed. Dates recently obtained from the site of Chamical in the southern highlands of Ecuador are evaluated according to those guidelines, and they suggest Inca expansion to the north began 1 to 2 decades earlier
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13

Unz, Ron K. "The Chronology of the Pentekontaetia." Classical Quarterly 36, no. 1 (1986): 68–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838800010545.

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The true chronology of the Pentekontaetia is difficult, perhaps impossible, to establish conclusively. The events between 477 and 432 were of the greatest possible importance: these years saw the creation of the Athenian empire and a precipitous decline in Spartiate manpower, drastic political realignments involving nearly every state in Hellas, and military activity often rising to a crescendo scarcely matched at the peak of the Peloponnesian War. Indeed, one might strongly argue that the fifty-odd years prior to 432 had a substantially greater historical significance than the three decades o
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14

Green, Nile. "Locating Afghan History." International Journal of Middle East Studies 45, no. 1 (2013): 132–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743812001316.

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Afghanistan's 20th century has long been seen through an analytical dichotomy. One concentration of historical scholarship has sought to explain the fraught progress of Afghan nation-building in the 1910s and 1920s. A second has sought to explain the unraveling of the Afghan nation after 1979. Weighted toward the decades at either end of the century, this dichotomized field has been problematic in both chronological (and thereby processual) and methodological terms. On the level of chronology, the missing long mid-section (indeed, half) of the century between the framing coups of 1929 and 1979
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15

Bruins, H. J., and W. G. Mook. "The Need for a Calibrated Radiocarbon Chronology of Near Eastern Archaeology." Radiocarbon 31, no. 03 (1989): 1019–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200012662.

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Progress in radiocarbon dating and calibration accuracy should lead to the development of a calibrated radiocarbon chronology of Near Eastern archaeology, particulary for historical times. The lack of such an independent and impartial chronology is a major constraint, not only in archaeological studies, but also for interdisciplinary research involving the history of man, landscape and climate in the Near East and adjacent regions.
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16

Simmons, Caleb. "History, Heritage, and Myth." Worldviews 22, no. 3 (2018): 216–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685357-02203101.

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Abstract This essay examines popular and public discourse surrounding the broad, amorphous, and largely grassroots campaign to “Save Chamundi Hill” in Mysore City. The focus of this study is in the development of the language of “heritage” relating to the Hill starting in the mid-2000s that implicitly connected its heritage to the mythic events of the slaying of the buffalo-demon. This essay argues that the connection between the Hill and “heritage” grows from an assumption that the landscape is historically important because of its role in the myth of the goddess and the buffalo-demon, which
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17

Jansen, Maarten. "The Search for History in Mixtec Codices." Ancient Mesoamerica 1, no. 1 (1990): 99–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956536100000122.

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AbstractThis article begins with a historical review of the study of ancient Mixtec civilization and how codices became alienated from the Oaxaca region and culture. Current interpretations of codices' geographic reality, their religious dimension, and the problems of chronology are discussed. Accurate interpretation of the Mixtec codices is shown to be very much dependent on the collaboration of modern Mixtecs, as the inheritors of the ancient culture.
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18

Grafton, A. T., and N. M. Swerdlow. "Technical Chronology and Astrological History in Varro, Censorinus and Others." Classical Quarterly 35, no. 2 (1985): 454–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838800040295.

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Technical chronology establishes the structure of calendars and the dates of events; it is, as it were, the foundation of history, particularly ancient history. The chronologer must know enough philology to interpret texts and enough astronomy to compute the dates of celestial phenomena, above all eclipses, which alone provide absolute dates. Joseph Scaliger, so we are told, was the first to master and apply this range of technical skills:Of the mathematical principles on which the calculation of periods rests, the philologians understood nothing. The astronomers, on their side, had not yet un
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19

Ogbomo, Onaiwu W. "Constructing a Precolonial Owan Chronology and Dating Framework." History in Africa 21 (1994): 219–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171887.

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Oral tradition has been recognized by historians as a vital source for historical reconstruction of non-literate societies. However, one of its “deficienc[ies] is an inability to establish and maintain an accurate assessment of the duration of the past [it] seeks to reconstruct.” As a result of its time-lessness it has been declared ahistorical. In the same vein R.A. Sargent argues that [c]hronology is the framework for the reconstruction of the past, and is vital to the correlation of evidence, assessment of data, and the analysis of historical sources. Any construction of history [which] fai
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20

Nicholl, Robert. "Some Problems of Brunei Chronology." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 20, no. 2 (1989): 175–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463400018087.

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Owing to the absence of dates in historical manuscripts and on monuments, Brunei chronology has been based upon traditional dates of uncertain origin. The object of this article is to take such events in Brunei as can be chronicled in external sources and to compare these foreign dates with those traditionally accepted.
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21

Schultze, C. E. "Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Roman chronology." Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 41 (1996): 192–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068673500001991.

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For Dionysius of Halicarnassus, an important part of the historian's task is the gathering and analysis of material. The present article is concerned with one particular aspect of this, namely, the investigation of chronology. It has two aims: first, to defend the accuracy of Dionysius' chronological system against the sometimes unfair criticisms of modern scholars; second, to assess how, in his perception, the role of chronographical research related to a historical work on a noncontemporary subject.The research qualities Dionysius singled out for praise in the writings of Theopompus – a hist
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22

Huster, Angela C., and Michael E. Smith. "A New Archaeological Chronology for Aztec-Period Calixtlahuaca, Mexico." Latin American Antiquity 26, no. 1 (2015): 3–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.7183/1045-6635.26.1.3.

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We describe the development of a new chronology for the Postclassic site of Calixtlahuaca, Toluca, Mexico. We identify three ceramic phases using discriminant analysis of decorated and plainware types. These phases are consistent with excavated stratigraphy, as well as a series of 54 radiocarbon dates. We then assign absolute dates to the phases using Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates and historical information on the date of site abandonment. The resulting chronology identifies three phases at the site: Dongu (A.D. 1130-1380), Ninupi (A.D. 1380-1450), and Yata (A.D. 1450-1530). We then d
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23

Aveni, Anthony F., and Edward E. Calnek. "ASTRONOMICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN THE AZTEC EXPRESSION OF HISTORY." Ancient Mesoamerica 10, no. 1 (1999): 87–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956536199101111.

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In this paper, we present a complete list of eclipses documented in the Mexica manuscripts. We use this list together with information in the chronicles to outline a possible method used by Mexica chronologists for linking historical with retrodictable cosmic events that were deliberately chosen to fit historical circumstances. Solar events, particularly eclipses, figure prominently in a scheme that stresses the recurrence of like-in-kind events positioned at multiples of the Xiuhmolpilli (52-year) cycle. Thus, both the foundation of the empire and calendrical adjustments related to the fictio
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Romney, Charles W. "New City Guides and Anachronic Public History." Public Historian 37, no. 3 (2015): 29–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2015.37.3.29.

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A new group of urban field guides highlight novel strategies for interpreting cities with multiple scales of time. While these new city guides—printed and digital—reveal the range of options for understanding an urban space, they also let public historians reflect on the larger intellectual problem of selecting a historic context for a place. A single historical timeframe remains a simple and accessible way to connect places to history, but the new city guides demonstrate the complexities and opportunities of representing chronology.
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Sharon, Ilan, Ayelet Gilboa, A. J. Timothy Jull, and Elisabetta Boaretto. "Report on the First Stage of the Iron Age Dating Project in Israel: Supporting a Low Chronology." Radiocarbon 49, no. 1 (2007): 1–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200041886.

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The traditional chronology of ancient Israel in the 11th–9th centuries BCE was constructed mainly by correlating archaeological phenomena with biblical narratives and with Bible-derived chronology. The chronology of Cyprus and Greece, and hence of points further west, are in turn based on that of the Levant. Thus, a newly proposed chronology, about 75–100 yr lower than the conventional one, bears crucial implications not only for biblical history and historiography but also for cultural processes around the Mediterranean. A comprehensive radiocarbon program was initiated to try and resolve thi
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Kubarev, V. V. "ASTRONOMICAL DATING OF BIBLICAL EVENTS." EurasianUnionScientists 6, no. 3(72) (2020): 11–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.31618/esu.2413-9335.2020.6.72.655.

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The Dating of biblical events is legendary and weakly correlated with the bright astronomical phenomena described in the Chronicles and which can be identified with modern mathematical tools. According to the author this is due to false traditional chronology, erroneous geographical reference, and deliberate adaptation of phenomena and events by theologians and historians to established stereotypes. The study of ancient Chronicles, Biblical descriptions and his own reconstruction of the history of Ancient Egypt, Ancient Rome and the chronology of monotheistic religions, allowed the author to u
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Nivison, David S. "23. Pre-Chou Chronology: History VS. Numerology in Hsia, Shang, and Chou." Early China 9, S1 (1986): 52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0362502800003102.

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ABSTRACT(Ed. Note: This paper was an adaptation of Section X of my article “The Dates of Western Chou,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 43.2[1983]:482–580. In the article, this section is titled “Numerological Postscript,” and occupies pp. 556–566.)As now revised, this section (with related earlier sections of the article) represents my arguments that pre-Conquest dates in the present Bamboo Annals ([Chin-pen] Chu-shu chi-nien) that are relevant to the beginning of Chou are partly historical and partly numerological. I argue that most of the dates that have historical validity have been dis
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Gray, Russell D., Quentin D. Atkinson, and Simon J. Greenhill. "Language evolution and human history: what a difference a date makes." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 366, no. 1567 (2011): 1090–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2010.0378.

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Historical inference is at its most powerful when independent lines of evidence can be integrated into a coherent account. Dating linguistic and cultural lineages can potentially play a vital role in the integration of evidence from linguistics, anthropology, archaeology and genetics. Unfortunately, although the comparative method in historical linguistics can provide a relative chronology, it cannot provide absolute date estimates and an alternative approach, called glottochronology, is fundamentally flawed. In this paper we outline how computational phylogenetic methods can reliably estimate
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Skopa, Vitalii Aleksandrovich. "Historical Chronology at History Lessons and Its Place in Development of Students’ Cognitive Interest." Pedagogika. Voprosy teorii i praktiki, no. 2 (April 2020): 207–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.30853/pedagogy.2020.2.14.

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30

Aardsma, G. E. "Evidence for a Lost Millennium in Biblical Chronology." Radiocarbon 37, no. 2 (1995): 267–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200030733.

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Biblical and secular data seem to tell entirely different stories about Near Eastern history prior to the first millennium bc. Most modern critical scholars in Bible-related fields regard this as proof of the nonhistoricity of the premonarchical biblical narrative. However, the incongruity between biblical and secular data seems also to be explainable by the postulate that exactly 1000 yr were accidentally dropped from traditional biblical chronology just prior to the first millennium bc. I evaluate this postulate relative to extra-biblical data for the exodus, Joseph's famine and Lot's observ
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Spaulding, Jay. "The Chronology of Sudanese Arabic Genealogical Tradition." History in Africa 27 (January 2000): 325–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3172119.

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Modern nationalisms first arose during the later eighteenth century around the wide periphery of the ancient heartland of western culture and gnawed their way inward during the course of the nineteenth century to the core, culminating in World War I, Each new nationalism generated an original “imagined community” of human beings, part of whose ideological cohesion derived from a sense of shared historical experience. Since the actual historical record would not necessarily satisfy this hunger, it was often found expedient to amend the past through acts of imagination aptly termed the “inventio
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32

WIRSCHING, ANDREAS. "Reply to Frank Trentmann's comment: Consumer Society – RIP." Contemporary European History 20, no. 1 (2010): 33–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777310000354.

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Frank Trentmann is not very happy with my article, for the following three main reasons: First: the term ‘consumer society’ is applied too extensively and is not sufficiently defined. Second, my parameters of space and time are unclear, with the result that I neglect the differences in consumption and ‘consumer society’ in different parts of the world and at different periods. Furthermore, I do not establish a clear chronology with respect to the historical relationship between work and consumption. On this basis, third, Trentmann remains unconvinced by my critical remarks on the problems of i
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Agostini, Domenico. "Non-Iranian historical lands in Pahlavi literature." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 82, no. 3 (2019): 453–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x1900065x.

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AbstractAlthough Zoroastrian Pahlavi literature preserves few geographical and ethnographic descriptions of non-Iranian historical regions, the popular book Ayādgār ī Jāmāspīg devotes several chapters to an extensive account of the landscape, social customs and religious practices of India, China, Arabia, Barbary, Ceylon (or the region of Slavs), Mazandarān and Turkestan. These descriptions share many similarities with the accounts of Muslim geographers between the ninth and twelfth centuries ce, though they also contain many Late Sasanian elements. In providing an English translation of these
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Marcus, Ezra S., Michael W. Dee, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Thomas F. G. Higham, and Andrew J. Shortland. "Radiocarbon Verification of the Earliest Astro-Chronological Datum." Radiocarbon 58, no. 4 (2016): 735–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/rdc.2016.67.

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AbstractPapyri 10012A and 10012B from Illahun, Egypt, provide the earliest astro-chronological datum in history and, while calculated to various years in the 19th century BCE, have never been independently verified. As this datum enables the Middle Kingdom (MK) section of Egyptian historical chronology to be anchored in absolute time, it establishes the principal calendrical timeline for the eastern Mediterranean Bronze Age in the first half of the 2nd millennium BCE. AMS radiocarbon measurements of Papyrus 10012B establish its date range to 1886–1750 BCE, confirming the astronomical calculati
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35

Giacona, Florie, Nicolas Eckert, and Brice Martin. "A 240-year history of avalanche risk in the Vosges Mountains based on non-conventional (re)sources." Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 17, no. 6 (2017): 887–904. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-17-887-2017.

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Abstract. Despite the strong societal impact of mountain risks, their systematic documentation remains poor. Therefore, snow avalanche chronologies exceeding several decades are exceptional, especially in medium-high mountain ranges. This article implements a combination of historical and geographical methods leading to the reconstruction, at the scale of the entire Vosges Mountains (north-east of France), of more than 700 avalanches that have occurred since the late eighteenth century on 128 paths. The clearly episodic nature of the derived geo-chronology can be explained by three interrelate
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Newbury, David. "Trick Cyclists? Recontextualizing Rwandan Dynastic Chronology." History in Africa 21 (1994): 191–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171886.

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Chronology used to be an object of great interest among African historians because it was seen as essential to history, it provided exactitude where so much else was analytic, and it was such a difficult feature to handle in oral accounts. More recently, historical analysis has been concerned more with processes and periods than with defined events and dates. Although deemed to be useful when available, precise chronology is now seen as less essential to historical reconstruction; it is accepted that chronologies are subject to interpretation and debate, and that these debates themselves illum
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37

Stoyanov, Roman. "The Materials to the Porthmion Chronology." Nizhnevolzhskiy Arheologicheskiy Vestnik, no. 1 (July 2019): 165–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/nav.jvolsu.2019.1.13.

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The Bosporus expedition of the Institute for the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences conducted a small archaeological research in the northwestern sector of Porthmion in 2002–2003. Two exploration trenches were laid on the excavation area. Archaeological assemblages of the trenches contain information on historical chronology of the settlement. The fire-destruction layer recorded in trench 1 marks the period of destabilization of Greek-barbarian relations in the region, probably connected with the activity of nomadic tribes during the early 5th c. BC. The foundations
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38

Krasilnikova, Irina. "Analyzing users’ ILL and EDD orders." Scientific and Technical Libraries, no. 9 (September 1, 2016): 64–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/1027-3689-2016-9-64-69.

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Findings of the study of ILL and EDD users’ orders in the subject area of history being forwarded through the RAS Siberian Branch are discussed. The orders are classified by types, chronology, media, delivery terms, types of libraries to fulfill the orders, decline reasons. Prospects for acquiring historical documents from digital resources are examined.
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Bányai, Michael. "Ein Vorschlag zur Chronologie der 25. Dynastie in Ägypten." Journal of Egyptian History 6, no. 1 (2013): 46–129. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18741665-12340004.

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Abstract The first mention of Kush in the Assyrian sources comes in the context of the resolution of the conflict between Sargon and the rebellious prince of Ashdod, Iamani, in ca. 707 BCE. However, this event plays a critical role in our understanding of the chronology of the end of the 24th and beginning of the 25th Dynasties. This paper re-examines the relevant data pertaining to the period in an attempt to synchronize the historical and chronological relationships presented in the Assyrian and Egyptian sources. As a result of this work, a reversal of the conventional order of the kings Sch
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Gallia, Andrew B. "Reassessing the ‘Cumaean Chronicle’: Greek Chronology and Roman History in Dionysius of Halicarnassus." Journal of Roman Studies 97 (November 2007): 50–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3815/000000007784016052.

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A biographical digression on the Cumaean tyrant Aristodemus Malacus in Dionysius' Roman Antiquities has elicited widespread speculation about the existence of an early Greek source for events in Italy contemporaneous with the origins of the Roman Republic. The communis opinion about the importance of this hypothetical ‘Cumaean chronicle’ warrants reconsideration on two grounds. First, the events in question fall well before the development of Greek historical writing concerned with contemporary events. Second, we must not overlook the potential impact on the tradition of Roman historians who w
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TODEA, Corina, Olimpiu Traian Pop, and Daniel GERMAIN. "Snow–avalanche history reconstructed with tree rings in Parâng Mountains (Southern Carpathians, Romania)." Revista de Geomorfologie 22, no. 1 (2020): 73–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.21094/rg.2020.099.

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Snow avalanches are a common phenomenon in Parâng Mountains (Southern Carpathians, Romania) perturbing tourism activities and associated infrastructures, damaging forests, and causing fatalities. Its past history is an es­sential information to gather while assessing the hazard zonation areas. Usually, in Romania snow–avalanche activ­ity occurring in forested areas are neither monitored, nor recorded by historical archives. In these areas, environ­mental archives such as tree rings may provide useful information about the past avalanche activity. The purpose of the present study is to reconstr
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Fokin, Aleksandr. "Ilya Surguchev's theater in the history of Russian foreign theater." KANT Social Sciences & Humanities, no. 3 (July 2020): 40–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.24923/2305-8757.2020-3.5.

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Drama is defined as the main phenomenon of Ilya Surguchev's creative biography. ON this basis, the main chronology of his life and work during the period of emigration is presented. Biographical and historical-functional methods of literary research are used. The plays of the 1910s and 1940s, their themes and problems are characterized. An overview of the main premiere performances based on Surguchev's plays in theaters in Russia and Europe is presented. Questions of I.D. Surguchev's poetics of drama are raised; the prevailing genres, plots, themes, and stylistic dominants are highlighted. The
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Manuelli, Federico, Cristiano Vignola, Fabio Marzaioli, Isabella Passariello, and Filippo Terrasi. "THE BEGINNING OF THE IRON AGE AT ARSLANTEPE: A 14C PERSPECTIVE." Radiocarbon 63, no. 3 (2021): 885–903. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/rdc.2021.19.

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ABSTRACTThe Iron Age chronology at Arslantepe is the result of the interpretation of Luwian hieroglyphic inscriptions and archaeological data coming from the site and its surrounding region. A new round of investigations of the Iron Age levels has been conducted at the site over the last 10 years. Preliminary results allowed the combination of the archaeological sequence with the historical events that extended from the collapse of the Late Bronze Age empires to the formation and development of the new Iron Age kingdoms. The integration into this picture of a new set of radiocarbon (14C) dates
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De Graef, Katrien. "Dual power in Susa: Chronicle of a transitional period from Ur III via Šimaški to the Sukkalmaḫs". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 75, № 3 (2012): 525–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x1200136x.

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AbstractThis article brings together evidence from both documentary texts and royal inscriptions from Susa in order to develop a chronological and historical perspective on the transitional period between the loss of control of the Ur III empire and the institutionalization of the Sukkalmaḫ regime. A study of the archaeological and archival context of the administrative texts resulted in a new chronology for the beginning of the Sukkalmaḫat, the basic argument for which is the early dating of the rule of Atta-ḫušu. Newly discovered inscriptions and new interpretations of existing inscriptions
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Floria, Boris N. "The Slavic World and Its Destiny in the Earliest Epoch of Its History according to the First Redaction of the Chronicle by Marcin Kromer." Slovene 6, no. 1 (2017): 381–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2305-6754.2017.6.1.15.

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Research on the first edition of the Chronicle by Marcin Kromer allows one to trace the genesis of elements of scholarly research into Polish historical thought of the mid-16th century; this includes the treatment of such issues as the homeland of the Slavs and the routes and chronology of their migration to the lands of Central and South-Eastern Europe.
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Pleshkevich, E. A. "A brief chronology of librarianship in Russia: status and prospects of development." Bibliosphere, no. 3 (September 30, 2018): 14–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.20913/1815-3186-2018-3-14-1.

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The article provides an overview of the chronological table on the history of the national librarianship prepared by the Russian State Library staff. The chronology covers over 1,250 library and related events and facts that took place in the period from the mid XI-XX centuries. The paper reveals basic methodological problems of chronological surveys and gives methodical recommendations to overcome them. It notes that the foundation to construct the chronological table should be a model of historical development on which basis is the selection of specific events. The author shows the most sign
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Popko, Lutz. "Ammeris/Marrhos/Moiris:Herodot, Manetho, P.Lips. Inv. 590 und Diodors Neues Reich." Journal of Egyptian History 4, no. 1 (2011): 99–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187416611x580723.

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AbstractPapyrus Lips. Inv. 590 contains the remains of an Egyptian king-list of the Late Period. Although it is highly fragmentary and its interpretation is difficult, a short sequence of kings plays a catalytic role in identifying some pharaohs in Manetho’s and Diodorus’ works. Furthermore, it is now possible to rehabilitate Diodorus’ Egyptian chronology in one aspect, and to explain some obvious discrepancies in Herodotus’ historical framework: Ammeris the Nubian is Kashta, Marrhos is Amenhotep III, and Moiris is an amalgam of Amenemhet III, Amenhotep III and Kashta.
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Wiener, Malcolm H. "Dating the Emergence of Historical Israel in Light of Recent Developments in Egyptian Chronology." Tel Aviv 41, no. 1 (2014): 50–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/0334435514z.00000000035.

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EDEN, JEFF. "A Sufi Saint in Sixteenth-Century East Turkistan: New Evidence Concerning the Life of Khwāja Isḥāq". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 25, № 2 (2014): 229–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s135618631400056x.

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AbstractThe rise of Khwāja Isḥāq, one of the most influential figures in the history of Central Asian Sufism, has often been explained by the patronage of particular royals. This “royal patron” model has, however, been based on a flawed reading of hagiographical sources by which crucial questions of genre are overlooked in the effort of mining these complex narratives for apparent historical facts. New evidence, presented here, allows us to question the “royal patron” model, along with the commonly-accepted chronology of Khwāja Isḥāq's life, and calls for a different approach to Sufi hagiograp
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Kihika, Maureen. "Ghosts and Shadows: A History of Racism in Canada." Canadian Graduate Journal of Sociology and Criminology 2, no. 1 (2013): 35–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.15353/cgjsc.v2i1.3775.

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A history of racism reinforces discrimination and exploitation of racialized immigrants in general and African-Canadians in particular. My paper contends that historically institutionalized structures are the ideological fulcrum from which ongoing socio-economic inequalities derive and retain their legitimacy. Specifically, I argue that the historically institutionalized system of slavery and ensuing systemic structures of racial discrimination negatively influence the incorporation of racialized immigrants into the Canadian labour market. A historically racially segmented labour market contin
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