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Thomas S

Economic growth and the ending of ... - Google Books - 1 views

shared by Thomas S on 10 Mar 10 - Cached
  •  
    This page, helps by revealing the relation of money to that of Slave trade. It also gives alot of information for three different regions which will be helpful.
Errett W.

Exploring Chavín de Huántar - 0 views

  • The point of this web site is to introduce you to the site of Chavín de Huántar through virtual reality and a variety of photographs integrated within that experience, and help you ponder some of the big questions that archaeologists face with such data.
    • Errett W.
       
      The stated agenda for this web page.
Chase Hale

Egypt: Who Were the Sea People - 3 views

  • loose confederation
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Is this related to the "nomadic" perception by Armesto.
    • Audrey Laker
       
      However, the Sea Peoples must have had some form of power to be able to conquer other societies.
  • originating in the eastern Mediterranean
    • Audrey Laker
       
      The Sea People's origin.
  • Between 1200 and 1176 BC, the chaos that occurred in that region was probably a direct outcome of Sea People activity
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Chaotic in the sense of battles and in power?
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • They had arrived in that area almost a century earlier
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Stable government to have been able to last over 100 years and not have a permanent home.
  • No land could stand before their arms
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Undefeated until Egypt.
  • The Peleset, who were non other than the Philistines that gave their name to Palestine.  The Lukka who may have come from the Lycian region of Anatolia.  The Ekwesh and Denen who seem to be identified with the Homeric Achaean and Danaean Greeks The Sherden who may be associated with Sardinia. The Teresh (Tursha or Tyrshenoi - possibly the Tyrrhenians), the Greek name for the Etruscans; or from the western Anatolian Taruisa  Shekelesh (Shekresh, Sikeloi - Sicilians?) 
    • Audrey Laker
       
      All possible origins or ancestors for the Sea Peoples.
  • widespread crop failures and famine
    • Audrey Laker
       
      The Sea People became nomadic because of scarce food.
  • the initial settlement
    • Audrey Laker
       
      They actually had a permanent residence?
  • they carried their possessions in ox-drawn cards, prepared to settle down though whatever territory they transverse
    • Audrey Laker
       
      They were constantly settling.
  • Sea People's alliance appears to have remained strong
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Alliance with Egyptians?
  • It was clear that their ultimate goal was Egypt. 
  • Egypt seems to have been ready for this onslaught,
    • Audrey Laker
       
      PREPARED!!!!!
  • In the brutal hand to hand fighting which ensued the Sea People are utterly defeated. 
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Did this end the Sea Peoples' society forever?
  • While the Sea People forever changed the face of the Mediterranean world
    • Audrey Laker
       
      Because they conquered so many other societies and civilizations.
  • loose confederation
  • loose confederation
  • loose confederation
  • loose confederation
  • loose confederation
  • loose confederation
  • they did manage to invade Egypt's northern coast and apparently mounted campaigns against the Egyptians on more than one occasion.
  • when it came was a complete success for the Egyptians. The Sea Peoples, on land, were defeated and scattered but their navy continued towards the eastern Nile delta.
  • Between 1200 and 1176 BC, the chaos that occurred in that region was probably a direct outcome of Sea People activity, and may be one reason why we find it difficult to find historical documentation beyond that date in Asia Minor.
  • It would seem that, rather then bands of plunderers, the Sea People were probably part of a great migration of displaced people.
  • As they began to enter Egypt, the warriors were usually accompanied by their wives and families, and it appears that they carried their possessions in ox-drawn cards, prepared to settle down though whatever territory they transverse.
  • However, the Sea People's alliance appears to have remained strong, for afterwards they destroyed the Hittite empire, ransacking the capital of Hattusas, and were probably responsible for the sacking of the client city of Ugarit on the Syrian coast, as well as cities such as Alalakh in northern Syria. Cyprus had also been overwhelmed and its capital Enkomi ransacked. It was clear that their ultimate goal was Egypt.
  • The Sea People, who we are told of on reliefs at Medinet Habu and Karnak, as well as from the text of the Great Harris Papyrus (now in the British Museum), are said to be a loose confederation of people originating in the eastern Mediterranean.
  • Although the Egyptians had a reputation as poor seamen
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    I am looking at a italisized document in the middle of the page which gives best mention to the identity, or rather lack of, of the Sea Peoples. They turn out to be miscellaneous societies from the Aegean such as the Phillistines. Sea Peoples seems to be a term encompassing any invaders of Egypt from the time that came by the sea.
stephen levy

http://www.periclespress.com/Hittites_iron.html - 1 views

  • From a distance, success seemed only explainable in mythical terms, unrelated to superior tactics, training or fighting ability. There was the suspicion (or hope) that it was the iron in their weapons that gave them an edge. The primitive bronze weapons of their enemies broke against the iron blades wielded by the Hittite soldiers.
    • stephen levy
       
      shows how iron was a secret weapon of sorts for the Hittites. Provided them with severe advantage over those with bronze weaponry even if the Hittites were less superior fighters
  • Their process was the result of years of metal-working experience, not simply an accidental  byproduct of an iron rock falling into a fire
  • The first was the discovery that solid rock would melt.  The second was the development of a process capable of producing the temperatures at which ore would turn into liqui
    • stephen levy
       
      amazing innovation by the Hittite people
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • In terms of the smelting process itself, the temperature threshold would be relatively easy to achieve and sustain. 
  • Tin may have represented the breakthrough metal.
    • stephen levy
       
      tin used before iron
  • The mining process at Göltepe began by heating the mine face. Fires would soften the ore so that it could be chiseled more easily.  Once the ore had been hauled to the surface it was smelted. Smelting involved heating in small ceramic crucibles.  Charcoal, which was layered between the tin ore, provided the heat source. Temperatures may have reached 2,000 degrees F, possibly achieved through the use of reed pipe "bellows."
    • stephen levy
       
      Hittites scientific approach to process
  • miners of Göltepe found the tin market sustained by the demand for bronze
    • stephen levy
       
      relationship of metals and the markets/ economics that surrond them
  • Some date its beginnings to 1500 B.C., about the time the Hittites may have started working with iron.  Others give it a range of between 1500 and 1000 B.C.. Still others have dated it to 1200 B.C., when the Hittite Empire came to an end. Others assign its beginnings to around 1000 B.C., some 200 years after the end of the Hittite Empire.  The basis for such a comparatively late date is that iron usage had become commonplace around the Mediterranean by that time. The start of the Iron Age also depended on location. 
    • stephen levy
       
      time surronding the apperance of these metals in the world
  • While gold articles and the work of ancient goldsmiths are the most enduring and familiar treasures of the ancient world, the likelihood of an Age of Gold is extremely remote. The experience and skills of early craftsmen demonstrated a thorough knowledge of metalworking. Unfortunately, the scarcity of gold limited the market to ornamental items, since only kings or wealthy individuals could afford it.
    • stephen levy
       
      factors of metal work and the classification for an age and why its tough
  • That would be a remarkable achievement, given what one would expect from an ancient technology.  However, there may be two other factors which might impact any analysis.  The first is the fact that while the melting temperature of pure iron is something of an absolute, the addition of carbon, (a process known as carburization), can reduce the melting point to about 1170 degrees C (2138 degrees F).  A second factor is the possibility that iron could be produced and worked at a temperature below its melting point.
    • stephen levy
       
      interesting point, Possibility of people working on iron with carbonization or below melting point would be HUGE accomplishments for the time
  • A Neanderthal dead-end or a continuing tradition
    • stephen levy
       
      not relevant to subject that I was reading about
  • Oxygen is not the only impurity found in iron ore.  Some can be removed with limestone, which, like a reducing agent, will combine with such impurities, lowering their melting point.  The slag which forms separates from the iron and floats to the surface.
    • stephen levy
       
      factors against the working with iron, Hittites came over these
  • The Hittites appear to have produced an iron which could be reheated and worked, suggesting that their product was a form of wrought iron or some version similar to carbon steel.  Charcoal was used as the reducing agent, layered with the iron ore in shallow hearths
  • Hittite iron makers involved the amount of carbon to be added
  • malleability. 
  •  
    this page describes why iron was improtant especially to the Hittites
Emily Englander

http://www.inmotionaame.org/bg.html - 0 views

    • Emily Englander
       
      this is a good source to use because it is easy to comprehend the information presented. it is also divided into very basic sections. that will help one to gain basic information over any part of the slave trade. this would not be the best source to use and your number one but it will definitely allow for you to verify know information.
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    this page will not allow for me to highlight. i am placing one floating sticky note at the top but i dont know if anyone else can see it because it will not let me change it from private
Amy Barrett

Handbook of Texas Online - SOLMS-BRAUNFELS, PRINCE CARL OF - 1 views

  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • ...76 more annotations...
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • s, Grafenstein, Münzenberg, Wildenfels, and Sonnenwalde, the first commissioner-gene
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • drich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelit
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelit
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • uded Prince Frederick
  • Princess
  • Princess
  • Friedrich
  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • Prince
  • Prince
  • SOLMS-BRAUNFELS, PRINCE CARL OF (1812-1875). Friedrich Wilhelm Carl Ludwig Georg Alfred Alexander, Prince of Solms, Lord of Braunfels, Grafenstein, Münzenberg, Wildenfels, and Sonnenwalde, the first commissioner-general of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Queen Victoria, Czar Alexander I of Russia, King Leopold I of Belgium, and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Not only well connected, but also handsome, highly spirited, and romantic, the trilingual Carl was educated both as soldier and courtier. Because of his connections, he secured prestigious military assignments, awards, and knightships, even though in 1839 he was sentenced by a Prussian court martial to four months in prison as a result of having absented himself from his command without leave. An early morganatic marriage, which had commenced in secret in 1834, dimmed his prospects after it became known, until, under duress from all sides, Carl consented in 1841 to the putting away of his wife, pensioned as the Baroness Luise "von Schönau," and his three children by that marriage. That same year Carl became a captain of cavalry in the imperial army of Austria, progressing though prominent assignments in the Balkans, Bohemia, and the Rhineland. While stationed at the imperial garrison at Biebrich, he read Charles Sealsfield's novel about Texas (see POSTL, CARL ANTON), William Kennedyqv's geography of Texas, and G. A. Scherpf's guide to immigrants to Texas. As one of the twenty-five members of the Adelsverein, organized initially in 1842 and reorganized in 1844, Carl worked tirelessly to promote the growth, finances, administration, and political acceptance of the society. He lobbied his many relatives, traveled incognito through France and Belgium to the Isle of Wight, where he may have met with Prince Albert, and, along with other members, secured the covert support of England, France, and Belgium for the Texas colonial project, which was at once philanthropic, mercantile, and political.
  • Prince
  • Prince
  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • eneral of the Adelsverein and imperial field marshal, was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Carl's illustrious connections included Prince Frederick of Prussia, Qu
  • was born at Neustrelitz on July 27, 1812, the youngest son of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels and Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
  • Carl was educated both as soldier and courtier.
  • An early morganatic marriage, which had commenced in secret in 1834, dimmed his prospects
  • Carl consented in 1841 to the putting away of his wife
  • and his three children by that marriage
  • That same year Carl became a captain of cavalry in the imperial army of Austria,
  • prince led the first wagon train into the interior of Texas.
  • secured the covert support of England, France, and Belgium for the Texas colonial project
  • 1844 Carl was appointed commissioner-general for the first colony that the society proposed to establish in Texas
  • he traveled to London
  • then to the United States, and westward down the Ohio and Mississippi to the Republic of Texas, where they arrived in Galveston on July 1, 1844.
  • Seeing himself at the head of a migration of German artisans and peasants to what one of his colleagues called "the new Fatherland on the other side of the ocean,"
  • German princes, counts, and noblemen...are bringing new crowns to old glory while at the same time insuring immeasurable riches for their children and grandchildren."
  • Carl purchased land on Matagorda Bay for the establishment of a port of debarkation named Carlshafen, or Indianola
  • traveled extensively throughout Texas and advised the Adelsverein, which already owned the right to settle Germans in the remote Fisher-Miller Land Grant, to buy even larger expanses reaching southward from the Llano River to Corpus Christi Bay and westward to the Rio Grande.
  • December 1844 of the society's first settlers,
  • As one of the twenty-five members of the Adelsverein, organized initially in 1842 and reorganized in 1844, Carl worked tirelessly to promote the growth, finances, administration, and political acceptance of the society.
  • purchase from Juan Martín Veramendi and Raphael C. Garza of a fertile, well-watered tract on the Guadalupe and Comal rivers.
  • The immigrant train reached this tract on Good Friday, March 21, 1845, and founded the settlement of New Braunfels, named for the Solms ancestral castle on the Lahn River, southwest of Wetzlar.
  • Before
  • Prince Carl left New Braunfels for Germany on May 15, 1845, he saw the work on the Zinkenburg, a stockade on a bluff on the east bank of Comal Creek, almost completed and work well underway on the Sophienburg, a fort on the Vereinsberg, a hill overlooking the old residential section of New Braunfels.
  • arl resumed his military service, from which he had been given a year's leave, and on December 3, 1845 at Bendorf, he married Sophie,
  • widowed princess of Salm-Salm and the daughter of the reigning prince of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort
  • 1846 he published Texas, a clear and succinct geography and guide to Texas.
  • fifty-nine-page memoir, transmitted to Queen Victoria in 1846, in which he explained that Europe and the westering United States were on a collision course to dominate world trade.
  • America would likely win this race, Carl told the queen, if the United States reached the Pacific
  • He left the Austrian army and became a colonel in the cavalry of the Grand Duchy of Hesse in 1846.
  • An attempt to rejoin the Prussian army failed.
  • In 1850 the Austrian army accepted him again, and by 1859 he had become a brigadier with command of dragoons on Lake Constance.
  • took part in the unsuccessful war of Austria against Prussia.
  • In 1866
  • He retired as a field marshal in 1868 to his residence at the estate of Rheingrafenstein near Kreuznach on the Nahe River.
  • Prince Carl died seven years later, on November 13, 1875, at the age of sixty-three
  • Sophie died the next yea
  • r. They were the parents of five children, four of whom survived them.
  • Characterized by one of his German contemporaries in Texas as a "Texan Don Quixote" and by an eminent German historian as the last knight of the Middle Ages
  • His two fixed passions, for which he was acknowledged to have had an expert eye, were fine horses and ruined castles-to which, in the early 1840s, he added empire-building
  • highly spirited, and romantic, the trilingual
  • the Baroness Luise "von Schönau,"
  •  
    A Biography of Prince Carl of Solms-Braufels and the history of his founding of New Braunfels.
Allison Hunt

Pietas: selected studies in Roman ... - Google Books - 0 views

shared by Allison Hunt on 26 Jan 10 - Cached
    • Allison Hunt
       
      Page 7--definition of pietas.
Allison Hunt

JSTOR: The Classical Journal, Vol. 39, No. 9 (Jun., 1944), pp. 536-542 - 0 views

    • Allison Hunt
       
      page 538
Dane Dyslin

Jazz - 0 views

  • Triumph of the Will was a masterpiece of propagandistic filmmaking and is still studied as an important milestone in the documentary genre. It played a key role in popularizing the Nazi Party, portraying it as an irresistible movement and introducing to the German people—and, to the rest of the world—the leaders of the party. Many film historians consider it one of the most important cinematic works of the 20th century.
  • The rallies set against Speer's grandiose backdrop became known to the rest of the world thanks to Leni Riefenstahl's powerful propaganda film Triumph of the Will.
  •  
    This page outline instruments and styles of early african music
abby c

Chapter 1 Page 2 - 2 views

shared by abby c on 12 Apr 10 - Cached
    • Brittany Alexis
       
      The already set social classes, and inheritance of the social classes, caused a lack of social mobility.
  • In addition to economic differences, early modern French society was legally stratified by birth. Its three traditional divisions, or "orders," were the clergy, the nobility, and the common people. Nobles ruled over commoners, but even among commoners, specific individuals (such as officeholders) or groups (such as a particular guild or an entire town) enjoyed privileges unavailable to outsiders
  • When the King called for an Estates-General in 1789, the social tensions plaguing the old regime emerged as a central issue of the Revolution
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Because these privileges were passed on primarily through inheritance, they tended to constrain social mobility—although without preventing it, since they could also be bought or sold. Thus individuals and groups
  •  
    This source reveals a multitude of social, economic, political causes and effects of the French Revolution. The source describes the harsh daily lives of both rural and urban people and how they were affected by the government and the economy in everyday life, as well as the difficult strict "caste system". It also gives a perspective on the "social unrest" and the political responses of the government to those small revolts. It shows the mistrustful relationship between the government and the common people and the means for the government attempting to maintain the satisifaction of the people.
francesca roberts

Politics, culture, and class in the ... - Google Books - 1 views

    • francesca roberts
       
      This book, Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution, tries to show how the "marxist interpretation of the French Revolution held water".
    • francesca roberts
       
      "merchants and manufacturers would emerge as revolutionary leaders on a local level" p xi
    • francesca roberts
       
      "French people had learned a new political repertoire...competing ideologies challenged the traditional European cosmology" (2)
  • ...5 more annotations...
    • francesca roberts
       
      "The French managed to invest [politics and the concept of politicak] with extaraordinary emotional and symbolic significance) (2-3)
    • francesca roberts
       
      "The French founded a revolutionary tradition that has endured down to our time" (3)
    • francesca roberts
       
      "The revolutionaries...opened up a new, internal political frontier and reaped the unforseen fruits of democracy and authoritarianism, socialism...and revolutionary dictatorship" (3)
    • francesca roberts
       
      "Both argue that the origins of the Revolution are to be found in a crisis of social mobility and status anxiety within an amalgamated elite made up of nobles and bourgeois. The growth of the population and prosperity had not been matched" (5)
    • francesca roberts
       
      pgs 6 and 7 contain information on what different people believe caused the French Revolution. There are too many points to retype, so just look on both pages.
stephen levy

Plato - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by stephen levy on 20 Oct 09 - Cached
  • was a Classical Greek philosopher, mathematician, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the Academy in Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the Western world. Along with his mentor, Socrates, and his student, Aristotle, Plato helped to lay the foundations of natural philosophy, science, and Western philosophy.[3] Plato was originally a student of Socrates, and was as much influenced by his thinking as by what he saw as his teacher's unjust death.
  • makes it clear, especially in his Apology of Socrates, that he was one of Socrates' devoted young followers
    • stephen levy
       
      page used as background information of plato
Peter Bowden

Buddhism - 0 views

shared by Peter Bowden on 23 Oct 09 - Cached
  •  
    This is a wikipedia page on Buddhism that helps with a general understanding of the religion.
Peter Bowden

Plato - 0 views

shared by Peter Bowden on 23 Oct 09 - Cached
  •  
    This is a wikipedia page on Plato that helped with general understanding of his philosophy.
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