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Mutlu Kalp Kafalar (The HappyHeartHeads), cok genc bir sanatcinin yarattigi mutlu bir aile. Onlarla yil boyunca; yeni yili, paskalyayi, karnavali ve tatili yasayabilirsiniz ... Kisa metinler, birinci ve ikinci sinif ögrencileri tarafindan kolayca okunabilir. Okumaya baslayan cocuklar karakterleri anlayabilir ve onlarla konusabilirler. Mutlu Kalp Kafalar sizi okumaya, konusmaya, yazmaya ve cizmeye davet ediyor. Haydi ...
The production of military equipment is a subject that is much more complicated than often thought as Roman soldiers were not completely equipped by the state in an uniform manner. While a certain amount of ¿near-uniformity¿ was necessary in the army, it was logistically impossible to ensure complete uniformity, even within a single unit. One reason for this was that Roman soldiers owned most of the equipment themselves, which allowed them to choose their own preferences (within limits). After an introduction and overview of the subject, the three case studies look at what the tools found in a fort can say about the production of military equipment on the site, at the influence of workshop traditions on the making of mail armour and at whether state control or local production was the main impetus in the production of crossbow brooches.
In this volume the author studies Roman baths in Israel, including a section on the miqveh (ritual Jewish bath), which first appears in the 2nd century BCE and becomes a fairly common feature both of Hellenistic private baths and other areas such as cemeteries, oil or wine presses and synagogues in Palestine in the 1st century BCE. The geographical limits of this study are set by the ancient identification of Palestine that is Cis- and Transjordania and the scope covers the time between the reign of Alexander Jannai (103-76 BCE) and the Muslim conquest (640 CE). The author draws a picture of the development of Roman baths and thermae in Palestine using a combination of literary and archaeological sources. This includes not only an account of the purely architectural development of the buildings, but also an account of the development of the institution of "bathing the Roman way" itself and the utilisation of the Roman baths and thermae in Palestine. The book concludes with a complete catalogue of baths in Roman Palestine and a selective catalogue of Miqva'ot in Roman Palestine.
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