Humankind the Gatherer-hunter: From Earliest Times to IndustryMyddle-Brockton, 1992 - 410 pagine |
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Pagina 114
... enemy . Rowing gave most manoeuvrability but took numerous oarsmen to attain the minimum speed of ten knots required to hole an opponent below the water line . In order to accommodate the extra crew , the Greeks expanded the penteconter ...
... enemy . Rowing gave most manoeuvrability but took numerous oarsmen to attain the minimum speed of ten knots required to hole an opponent below the water line . In order to accommodate the extra crew , the Greeks expanded the penteconter ...
Pagina 189
... enemies . Complete indifference was exhibited to the fate of those who were outside the circle of worldview , dreamtime , language and geography and were identified for retribution by some characteristic , token or badge . The ...
... enemies . Complete indifference was exhibited to the fate of those who were outside the circle of worldview , dreamtime , language and geography and were identified for retribution by some characteristic , token or badge . The ...
Pagina 314
... enemies of the people . The Second World War ( referred to in Russia as the Great Patriotic War ) was fought as much for nationalist as for communist ideology , against a remorseless opponent , who claimed their foes were subhuman and ...
... enemies of the people . The Second World War ( referred to in Russia as the Great Patriotic War ) was fought as much for nationalist as for communist ideology , against a remorseless opponent , who claimed their foes were subhuman and ...
Parole e frasi comuni
Aborigines abundant-scale adults agricultural dreamtime agricultural worldview animals Asia attributes Australian Aborigines behaviour beliefs capitalist cent chimpanzee citizens climate competition countries crops cubic centimetres cultivated custom domestic economic Egypt elite emotions England ensuing entailed environment especially eventually example factory farming favoured female fertility forest Gakken gatherer-hunter gathering and hunting German Greece Greek habitat hominid human humankind husband imperialism individual industrialists initial innovation instance kilometres labour land later less living Low Countries male manufacture marriage Mbuti merchants Mesopotamia metres military million mode Mohenjo-daro moral nomadic Northwest Europe original outlook output patterns plough political population population densities primary group production prosperity reasoning region relatively responsibility restricted Roman Empire savanna scale scarce-scale gatherer-hunters secondary group sexual slaves social soil South Asia Southwest Asia spouse status structure theory Thucydides trade tradition Turnbull whereas women workers worldview and dreamtime