unreferenced date December 2009 main History of NorthAfrica The history of NorthAfricaduring the period of Classical Antiquity c. 8th century BC 5th century CE can be divided roughly into the History ... Classical antiquity Roman history by territory DEFAULTSORT NorthAfricaDuring Antiquity Category Ancient Roman provinces in Africa Category History of NorthAfrica Antiquity Category Maghreb Link GA ... History of Persian Egypt Persian rule during the early phase of classical antiquity, passing to the Ptolemaic ... in Greek to describe natives of NorthAfrica. The Carthaginian state declined because of successive ... thumb right Northern Africa under Roman rule. The Roman military presence of NorthAfrica .... Aside from Carthage, urbanization in NorthAfrica came in part with the establishment of settlements .... Called the granary of the empire, NorthAfrica was one of the largest exporters of grain ... cereals as an export item. The beginnings of the decline was less serious in NorthAfrica than elsewhere ... NorthAfrica had a substantial Jewish population. Some Jews had been deported from Judea or Palestine ... as the Donatist controversy began in 313 among Christians in NorthAfrica. The Donatists stressed ... Exarchate of Africa Umayyad conquest of NorthAfrica The decline in trade weakened Roman control. Independent ... Empire Byzantine emperor Justinian I based in Constantinople , landed in NorthAfrica in 533 ... the province of Africa Roman province Africa in 146 BC after the defeat of Carthage . The Roman Empire eventually controlled the entire Mediterranean coast of Africa, adding Egypt Roman province Egypt ... lost parts of Africa to the Vandals in the 5th century. The Byzantine Empire finally lost all control of Africa as the region fell to the Umayyad conquest of NorthAfrica by the close of the 7th century. Early classicalperiod Late Period of ancient Egypt main Late Period of ancient Egypt see Persian Egypt The Late Period of Ancient Egypt refers to the last flowering of native Egyptian rulers after ... more details
Classicalperiod can refer to the following Classical Greece , specifically of the 5th and 4th centuries BC Classical antiquity , in the Greco Roman world Classicalperiod music , in music Classic stage , of American archaeology disambig nl Klassieke Periode ... more details
with frequent changes of mood and timbre were more commonplace in the Classicalperiod than they had ... related to that of the early Classicalperiod. He is best known for composing more than five ... , or at other times early Classical Citation needed date December 2010 . It is a period where ... services. Over the course of the Classicalperiod, symphonies and concertos developed and were presented ... with a period of integration of elements of both Baroque and Classical styles. Circa 1775 1790 ... ClassicalPeriod http www.classical.net Classical Net   Classical Music Reference Site http ... cname various classical composers music topics DEFAULTSORT ClassicalPeriod Music Category Austrian ... w muzyce pt Per odo cl ssico m sica ru simple Classical music period sl ...merge from First Viennese School date December 2011 History of European art music The dates of the ClassicalPeriod in Western music are generally accepted as being between about 1750 and 1830. However, the term classical music is used colloquially to describe a variety of Western musical styles from .... This article is about the specific period from 1750 to 1830. ref Michael Kennedy music critic Kennedy, Michael 2006 , The Oxford Dictionary of Music , 985 pages, ISBN 0 19 861459 4 ref The Classicalperiod falls between the Baroque music Baroque and the Romantic music Romantic periods. The best known composer s from this period are Joseph Haydn , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Ludwig van Beethoven , and Franz ... , Fernando Sor , Luigi Cherubini , Jan Ladislav Dussek , and Carl Maria von Weber . The period ... known as Classicism , which sought to emulate the ideals of Classical antiquity and especially those of Classical Greece . ref Kamien, Roger. Music An Appreciation. 6th. New York, NY McGraw Hill, 2008 ... of music, moving away from the layered polyphony of the Baroque period, towards a style where ... added to the continuo in the Classical world, all parts were noted specifically, though not always ... more details
Johns Hopkins, 86. ref Thousands of ships were built during this Classical antiquity classicalperiod ... 23 References Reflist 2 Ancient Rome topics DEFAULTSORT Deforestation During The Roman Period Category ... Italy to submission . Latium, Campania, Sardinia, Sicily, Spain, Northern Africa, as Roman granaries ..., in Northern Africa into desert. The forest clad hills were denuded. The decline of the Roman Empire ... was about 300,000 and increased to 600,000 toward the late empire period. ref name a Chew, Sing ... cities contributed to deforestation in the classical world. Overcrowding forced citizens to move ... . The wilderness in Roman Times. In Shipley, Graham & Salmon, John. Human Landscapes in Classical ... populations than the Roman period, can be at least as responsible for deforestation and soil erosion ... more details
during the Mamluk period, the impact of Mamluk architecture evident in the city today. Architecture ... of Jerusalem during the Mamluk period ranges from two families immediately after the Mamluk conquest 8 , and several hundred about 200 families of Ashkenazic and Sephardic during the period. Jews were ... to their communities and their relatives. Pilgrimage ritual stations during this period included the Western .... 19 According to another analysis 20 During this period, the Mamluks would harm Christians ... during the Second Temple Period External Links PDF http www.antiquities.org.il images archinfo 031 ... 1260 to 1516. This period coincides with the history of the city s years of Mamluk rule in Israel. Mamluk ... importance, both for the Muslim Mamluk rule and for Jews and Christians. Government in Jerusalem during the Mamluk period was in the hands of officials who were clerics and concentrate on building the Islamic ... in this period. The only place in Jerusalem product that has been the fort now called the Tower ... hand, near the Temple Mount the early period of white school in Al Omar and then close the gate attendant ... force see the history of the status of the Waqf in Jerusalem. Jerusalem land of Israel during the rule ... reflects the role of Jerusalem Muslim consciousness of the period, as illustrate Justice Mojo City ... military governor naive , but it was low grade officer. Great man in Jerusalem throughout the period ... maintenance and urban development. Not religious development projects, such as water supply during ... the period of Jerusalem remains a city of prose without walls . Initially this was explained in fear ... sector was services provided to pilgrims. Mamluk period increased flow of pilgrims Arabic Ziara, ... of the city s economy. Another important characteristic of the period is that 250 years of Mamluk ... migrated from Bukhara, Persia, India, Afghanistan, Kurdistan and Africa. Some refugees from ... neighborhood based, that is of North African origin, descendants of warriors Saladin s army Dean left ... more details
put the Land of Israel and Jerusalem to the Mamluk period, during which the status of Jerusalem fell ... of the period Vhisturiugrafim pilgrims writings of the period and schematic maps drawn during the Middle ... also served as the city dump. During the Islamic period buildings were built on the mountain ... is known from time immemorial lacks sufficient water resources. During the Crusader period was the water ... Zion Like the wall surrounding Jerusalem today, even during the Crusader period was Mount Zion outside ... period in the history of Jerusalem began with the conquest of the city by the Crusader army in 1099, during the First Crusade, as it is now known, Jerusalem became the capital of the kingdom for the crusading Christians, these events occurred after 450 years of Muslim rule. The period was turbulent ... period in the history of Jerusalem, called by the name the Ayyubid dynasty.The dynastic ruler Ayyubid had been the Muslim sultan who ruled the Middle East during early 12th century,who, At the end ... in Egypt in 1260 and the conquest of Israel by them. At the end of the Ayyubid period, there were ... and Crusaders taking foothold in the city and the region. This period, short lived relatively ... status during the British Mandate in the twentieth century, and was slated to return to the central position only after the declaration as the capital of Israel in 1948. The Crusader period in the history ... at the end of the Ayyubid period, the city sank geo status political dropped, when she became a secondary ... places and created a sequence Jordan populated North side of town, district called after them. Crusader ... various political and tactical considerations. Instead, both parties entered negotiations, during which ..., led to the destruction of the city during the Fifth Crusade. Ayyubid ruler of Syria, al Malik al Moaat Gem, who worked vigorously to the same period restoration of fortifications and buildings ... would do the same. 15 The end of the Crusader period Disintegration of the Crusader kingdom reached ... more details
. During this period the city s population ranged from about 5,000 at the beginning to about 60,000 people at the conclusion. By this time, the composition of the population has changed at the start of the period ... Gulf , reduced the interest in the various occupiers. During this period, the land of Israel was divided between two Plchim parishes the Parish of Sidon which ruled in the north and the coastal ... activity. The real task was to churches, mosques and soup kitchens during this period. People avoided ... Montefiore, with whom he was in contact during the period of Safed, a new printing machine. That prints ..., population growth and increased density . This period also gave rise to various institutions ... Muslim and Muslim. In the Late Ottoman period, a civil court was established in Saraya, also were ... occupation, during 1831 1840, brought little relief to Jews and Christians, was more orderly ... direct collection by the central government. This period is known as the Nezimat reforms , the Ottoman ... in the morning and close at nightfall for fear of the Bedouins. They were also closed during Friday prayers. Structure streets Many areas inside the walls in the north east and north west were not built ... by the end of Ottoman rule. Movement at night was made by Candle lanterns. During the 19th ... walls. The main government buildings in the old city in the Ottoman period were Saraya the municipal ... Ahittan the region. Late Ottoman period the city was crowded within the walls intolerable proportions ... west and north. Among those was Jewish philanthropist Moses Montefiore Englishman to visit the town ... and remain in place even from the Roman period, because of the relationship between the location to the location .... Downtown markets were three parallel north south were covered. Market goldsmiths, butchers market ... to the city. In 1869, during Mayor Yusuf al Khalidi, completed the first road paving of the carriage ... who lived by begging. Many streams were not within the Muslim community except Mughrabi North African ... more details
to the Civil War . New York G.P. Putnam s Sons. DEFAULTSORT Education During The Slave Period ...orphan date August 2009 Inline date March 2011 Colonial era Throughout the colonial period, education for slaves was not only tolerated but largely encouraged for religious purposes. The two most prominent religious groups, Congregationalists and Anglicans, both saw the conversion of slaves as a spiritual obligation, and the ability to read scriptures was seen as part of this process Monoghan 2005 . The First Great Awakening Great Awakening served as a catalyst for encouraging education for all members of society. While reading was encouraged, writing often was not. Writing was seen as a mark of status, and seen as unnecessary for many members of society, including slaves. Memorization, catechisms, and scripture formed the basis of what education was available. Despite the lack of importance generally given to writing instruction, there were some notable exceptions perhaps the most famous of these was Phillis Wheatley , whose poetry won admiration on both sides of the Atlantic. Legislation and prohibitions South Carolina passed the first laws prohibiting slave education in 1740. While there were no limitations on reading, it became illegal to teach slaves to write. This legislation followed the Stono Rebellion . As fears spread among plantation owners concerning the spread of abolitionist materials, forged passes, and other incendiary writings, the need to restrict slaves ability to communicate with one another became more pronounced. For this reason, the State Assembly enacted the following Be it therefore Enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That all and every Person and Persons ... during the summer of 1831. This event not only caused shock waves across the slaveholding South, but it had ... by an approved denomination. Even North Carolina , which had previously allowed free African American ... in the antebellum era In examining the educational practices of the period, it is difficult to ascertain ... more details
File NorthAfrica orthographic projection .svg right thumb 325px legend 346733 Northern Africa United Nations geoscheme UN subregion legend 088733 geographic, including above NorthAfrica or Northern Africa is the north ernmost region of the Africa n continent , linked by the Sahara to Sub Saharan Africa ... Madeira Islands , in the Atlantic Ocean North Atlantic Ocean northwest of the Africa n mainland ... separated the North from the rest of Africa and, as the seafaring civilizations of the Phoenicia ... across the Mediterranean Sea Mediterranean , the cultures of NorthAfrica became much more closely ... is significant, and NorthAfrica, along with the Middle East , is a major part of the Arab World . Some researchers have postulated that NorthAfrica, and not East or South Africa, was the original home ... 331 6013 20.summary Was NorthAfrica the Launch Pad for Modern Human Migrations? Michael Balter, science ... 10, 2007 vol. 104 no. 15 6128 6133 ref Geography File Africa Koppen Map.png right thumb NorthAfrica ... ececec Total, NorthAfrica style text align right 7,904,959 style text align right 195,637,341 ... 2011 02 11 ref small People Main Maghreb people Egyptians The inhabitants of NorthAfrica are generally divided in a manner roughly corresponding to the principal geographic regions of NorthAfrica the Maghreb ... part of NorthAfrica has been home to the Egyptians . Ancient Egyptians record extensive contact ... language or one of the official languages in all of the countries in NorthAfrica is Arabic. The largest ethnic groups in NorthAfrica are the Arabs and Berbers. All countries in NorthAfrica are predominantly Muslim, with Christian and Jewish minorities. Culture Main Culture of NorthAfrica ... . NorthAfrica formerly had a large Judaism Jewish population, many of whom emigrated to France or Israel ... to the modern establishment of Israel , there were about 600,000 700,000 Jews in NorthAfrica, including ... Africa Antiquity and Ancient Rome The most notable nations of antiquity in western NorthAfrica ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 The law court s in classical ancient Athens Athens 4th and 5th centuries Anno Domini BC were a fundamental organ of Athenian democracy democratic governance. According to Aristotle , whoever controls the courts, controls the state. These courts were jury courts and very large ones the smallest possible had 200 members 1 to avoid ties and sometimes 500, 1000 or 1500. The annual pool of jurors, whose official name was Heliaia comprised 6000 members. At least on one known occasion the whole six thousand sat together to judge a single case a plenary session of the Heliaia . This was very different from Rome s laws, as in Rome, jury representatives were elected. The Athenian jurors were chosen randomly by lot, which meant that juries would consist, in theory, of a wide range of members from all walks of life. Jurors were chosen on an annual basis, as were all other offices within the state with the exception of the generals, known as Strategos strategoi . After the reforms of Solon in 594 3 BC, anyone from each of the four classes the pentacosiomedimni, hippeis, zeugites and thetes could become a juror. This was meant to make the system much fairer to the poorer members of society, who had previously been excluded in favour of the elitist Aristocracy aristocrats . The archon s who convened the courts had a purely administrative function and gave no legal direction or advice to the jurors there was no judge but the jurors themselves. From the time of Pericles onwards, jury pay was introduced. This was two Obolus obols a day, which, despite not being a substantial amount of money, was enough to encourage even the poorest to become a juror. This was later increased to three obols a day. DEFAULTSORT Athenian Law Court ClassicalPeriod Category Athenian democracy Category Ancient Greek law Ancient Greece stub ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 Main Spring and Autumn Period Certain patterns emerged to govern the conduct of relations among the Sovereign state states of the Spring and Autumn period of ancient China . These patterns constituted a rudimentary system of interstate or international law based on the model of feudalism established under the Western Zhou . The norms of interstate relations during the Spring and Autumn period was one of the earliest systems of interstate relations and international law in the world. It was of importance in the early cultural and political development of China , allowing greater ease in maintaining relations, and facilitating the flow of trade and information . There was a growing body of customary international law which developed as contacts and commerce increased, a number of treaty treaties were signed, and appeal was frequently made to rules set up within the leagues of states. A great many of the canons of interstate law concerned diplomacy among the states. Interstate relations originated in the feudal system of the Western Zhou , whereby leaders of the states were granted hierarchical titles from the King of Zhou, known as the Son of Heaven . Within a few years after the beginning of the Spring and Autumn period, these ranks ... years of the Spring and Autumn period, the rulers of the various states were the most important personages ... outside his state. Up until the first half of the Spring and Autumn period, however, the rulers ... States period , when the establishment of an external policy had become almost the exclusive ... states in the north and the southern states which united under the banner of Chu state Chu . Qin state ... period, Wu state Wu headed a league of states in the southeast. Although when one league confronted ... to maintain security and solidarity within their area. DEFAULTSORT Interstate Relations During The Spring And Autumn Period Category History of the foreign relations of China Category Zhou Dynasty ... more details
during the First Jewish Roman War . In Jewish history this timespan is known as the Second Temple period or Second Commonwealth ref The Second Temple period in Jerusalem is typically defined as the period ... to foreign influences. Political state details Yehud Medinata During the Babylonian period the centre ... is a medieval one. During the Second Temple period Mount Zion was the hill on which the Temple stood ... expanded during the Hasmonean period due to Jerusalem s increased need for water. The Hasmonean period also witnessed efforts to deliver water to Jerusalem from further afield. It was probably during ... during religious festivals . Jerusalem was fertile grounds for religious creativity the Pharisees ... though exactly when this occurred remains disputed. It was also in Jerusalem during the later stages of this period that Origins of Christianity Christianity was born . The 600 years of the Second Temple period can be divided into several periods, each with its own distinct political and social characteristics ... established in the Temple. Persian Period File Cyrus II le Grand et les H breux.jpg right thumb ... onepage&q&f false Herbert Niehr, Religio Historical Aspects of the Early Post Exilic Period , in Bob ... Herbert Niehr, Religio Historical Aspects of the Early Post Exilic Period , in Bob Becking, Marjo Christina ... v onepage&q&f false Herbert Niehr, Religio Historical Aspects of the Early Post Exilic Period , in Bob ... of the early period of Persian rule in Yehud were the institutions of High Priest and Prophet ...&f false Lee I. Levine, Jerusalem portrait of the city in the second Temple period 538 B.C.E. ... 20yehud&f false Lester L. Grabbe, A history of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period ... portrait of the city in the second Temple period 538 B.C.E. 70 C.E. p.34 ref Social and religious state Judah during the 9th and 8th centuries BCE was basically polytheistic, with Yahweh Canaanite ... Lester L. Grabbe, A history of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period , vol.1 T&T Clark ... more details
The Gravettian period occurred in Europe between 30,000 and 22,000 years ago during the Upper Paleolithic . Gravettian lifestyle was shaped by the climate. Pleniglacial environmental changes forced early humans to adapt. West and Central Europe were extremely cold during this period. Gravettian culture thrived on their ability to hunt animals. They utilized a variety of tools and hunting strategies. Compared to theorized hunting techniques of Neanderthals and earlier human groups, Gravettian hunting culture appears much more mobile and complex. Acquiring the animals In order to use animals as a source of food, tools, and decorations, prey first needed to be caught. The Gravettian period saw hunting ... were the primary hunting tools during the Upper Paleolithic period, including the Gravettian period. Bone, antler, and ivory points have all been found at sites in France but proper stone arrowheads and throwing spears did not appear until the Solutrean period 20,000 Before Present . Due to the primitive ... as a hunting device during the Gravettian period. These nets were used to catch large numbers of small game in a short period of time. This offered a consistent food supply, an alternative to experiencing ... Europe was extremely cold during this time period, food sources needed to be high in energy and fat ... evidence of blade and bladelet technology during the Gravettian Period. The tools were often ... Use Of Animals During The Gravettian Period Category Anthropology Category Prehistoric Europe ..., Vol. 4, No. 1 pages 83 93 ref Use of topography Settlers in the Gravettian period experienced ... source for early humans of the Gravettian period. In addition to animal carcasses and remains, carbon ..., P. title TMammoth bone deposits and subsistence practices during mid upper Paleolithic in Central ... period is classified by the strong emphasis on meat consumption because agriculture had not been ... place during the field seasons of 1954 and 1956 at a location known as Pavlov I in southern Moravia ... more details
history, and coined the term North and South States Period to refer to this era. Language Due to the lack ...Infobox Korean name hangul hanja rr Nambukgukshidae mr Nampukkuksitae History of Korea North South States Period 698 small CE small 926 small CE small refers to the period in Korean history when Silla and Balhae coexisted in the south and north of the peninsula, respectively. ref citation url http 100.naver.com 100.nhn?docid 35519 publisher Naver title Encyclopedia . ref ref citation url http enc.daum.net dic100 viewContents.do?&m all&articleID b03n3235a title Korean Britannica Encyclopedia publisher Daum . ref Unified Silla Main Unified Silla After the unification wars, the Tang Dynasty established territories in the former Goguryeo, and began to administer and establish communities in Baekje. Silla attacked the Chinese in Baekje and northern Korea in 671. The Tang Dynasty then invaded Silla in 674 but Silla defeated the Tang army in the north. Silla drove the Tang forces out of the peninsula by 676 to achieve Silla Tang Wars unification of most of the Three Kingdoms. Korean arts flourished dramatically and Buddhism became a large part of Silla culture. Buddhist monasteries such as the Bulguksa are examples of advanced Korean architecture and Buddhist influence. State sponsored art and architecture from this period include Hwangnyongsa Temple, Bunhwangsa Temple, and Seokguram Grotto, a World Heritage Site . Silla began to experience political troubles in 780. This severely weakened Silla and soon thereafter, descendants of the former Baekje established Later Baekje. In the north, rebels revived Goguryeo, beginning the Later Three Kingdoms period. Unified Silla lasted for 267 years until, under Gyeongsun of Silla King Gyeongsun , it was absorbed by Goryeo in 935 ..., Balhae flourished,especially during the long reign of the third Emperor Mun r. 737 793 and King ... in communicating during the Japanese court Audience meeting audience . See also History of Korea Military ... more details
Too tired to add more sources... ill do it on another day... Chinese title Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion t linktext s linktext p D ngyu n K nlu n Sh q L nsh Ti oku n The Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion was a series of temporary constitutional provisions passed by the National Assembly of the Republic of China National Assembly of the Republic of China on May 10, 1948 that provided to the then President of the Republic of China President Chiang Kai shek extended powers amid the height of the Chinese Civil War against the Communist Party of China Chinese Communists . The provisions allowed the President and Vice President of the Republic of China to be exempted from the two term limit term office limit . After the Mainland China Chinese mainland was lost to the Communists and the government retreated to Taiwan in December 1949, these provisions were to remain in effect until the mainland could be recovered from the Chinese Communists. However, as history evolved, it became clear that Project National Glory retaking the mainland was more a dream than a real possibility. The National Assembly, on April 22, 1991, resolved to abolish the Temporary Provisions, and on April 30 of the same year, President Lee Teng hui declared the Period of Communist Rebellion to be terminated as of May 1. ref cite web url http www.sino.gov.tw en show issue.php?id 200068906052e.txt&cur page 2&table 2&distype &h1 About 20Taiwan&h2 Politics&search &height &type &scope &order &keyword &lstPage &num &year 2000&month 06 title A Pivotal President Lee Teng hui s 12 Years publisher Taiwan Panorama Sino date 2000 06 05 ref Wikisourcehas 1 has an official English translation of References reflist See also Chiang Kai shek Chinese Civil War Communist Party of China Constitution of the Republic of China Cross Strait relations Elections in the Republic of China History of the Republi ... more details
to benefit from trade with apartheid South Africa. During the 1980s, though, the number ... with United Nations Security Council Resolution 181 , and recalled its ambassador. During this period ... Africa South Africa under apartheid DEFAULTSORT Foreign Relations Of South AfricaDuring Apartheid ...International opposition to Apartheid South Africa introduced apartheid in 1948, as a systematic extension ... segregationist principles were not novelties in South Africa. From unification in 1910, the state ... of the Cold War, and South Africa, with its anti communist stance, was considered a possible assistant in the passive battle against the Soviet Union. The world did not, however, condone South Africa s discriminatory policies. At the first UN gathering in 1946, South Africa was placed on the programme ... between South Africa and India. In 1952, apartheid was thrashed out again in the aftermath ... state of affairs in South Africa. Although racial variance in South Africa was a cause for concern, most countries in the UN concurred that this was one of South Africa s in house issues, which fell outside the UN s jurisdiction. The UN only became resolute in challenging South Africa later. South West Africa Main Namibia under South African occupation Unreferenced section date January 2008 Separate from the issue of apartheid was a major quarrel between the UN and South Africa about the management of South West Africa . After World War I , all German colonies were made mandates of the League ... countries. The Treaty of Versailles declared German West Africa a League of Nations Mandate under South African administration, and it then became known as South West Africa. Walvis Bay was annexed ... 1993 ref It thus became part of the Union of South Africa in 1910. In 1915 the Union occupied German South West Africa at the request of the Allied powers. South Africa was granted a C Class mandate by the League of Nations to administer SWA as an integral part of South Africa. The South African government ... more details
n Ajjer cave paintings, predominated in NorthAfrica until the classicalperiod. Image African cave ... culture about 3200 BC. Iron Age see NorthAfricaduring Antiquity The amalgam of peoples of North ... DURING THE LAST 150,000 YEARS climate from ORNL Category History of NorthAfrica Category History of the Sahara Category Prehistoric AfricaNorthAfrica, Central pt Pr hist ria do Norte da frica ru ...nolead date November 2011 Early and middle Paleolithic Earlier inhabitants of central NorthAfrica have left behind equally significant remains. Early remnants of hominid occupation in NorthAfrica , for example .... According to some sources, Who date December 2009 NorthAfrica was the site of the highest .... Late Paleolithic and Mesolithic see Capsian culture The earliest blade industries in NorthAfrica ... throughout the coastal regions of NorthAfrica between 15,000 and 10,000 BCE. Between about 9000 ... agriculture developed in the Saharan and Mediterranean NorthAfrica after the Fertile ... date from the Green Sahara period of 7500 7000 to 3500 3000 BCE Citation needed date July 2010 Neolithic and Bronze Age see Neolithic Subpluvial Some parts of NorthAfrica began to participate in the Neolithic ... during this period. In Prehistoric Egypt , Neolithic settlements appear from about 6000 BC. ref ... of the Sahara The cave painting s found at Tassili n Ajjer , north of Tamanrasset , Algeria, and at other locations depict vibrant and vivid scenes of everyday life in central NorthAfricaduring the Neolithic Subpluvial period about 8000 to 4000 BCE . They were executed by a hunting people in the Capsian period of the Neolithic age who lived in a savanna region teeming with giant African Buffalo ... conditions during the Neolithic Subpluvial supported increased human settlement of the Nile Valley ... Press, 1992 , p. 6. ref Oher regions in Africa independently developed agriculture at about the same time the Ethiopian Highlands Ethiopian highlands , the Sahel , and West Africa . ref cite book last ... more details
s first civilization s. Classicalperiod See also NorthAfricaduring the ClassicalPeriod , Ptolemaic ...TOC right NorthAfrica is a relatively thin strip of land between the Sahara desert and the Mediterranean ... sea travel firmly brought the region into the Mediterranean world, especially during the Classical antiquity classicalperiod . In the first millennium AD the Sahara desert Sahara became an equally ... role in the history of NorthAfrica . Prehistory Main Prehistoric Egypt Prehistory of Central NorthAfrica See History of ancient Egypt The earliest known hominid s in NorthAfrica arrived around 200,000 ... drying, creating a barrier between NorthAfrica and the rest of the Africa n continent . The Nile Nile Valley on the Eastern edge of NorthAfrica is one of the richest agriculture agricultural areas ... of its power, Carthage controlled the Western Mediterranean and most of NorthAfrica outside of Egypt ... support. When the Roman Empire began to collapse, NorthAfrica was spared much of the disruption until the Vandal invasion of 429 AD. The Vandals ruled in NorthAfrica until the territories were regained ... see also Umayyad conquest of NorthAfrica , Byzantine Arab Wars , and the Battle of Carthage 698 File ... important mosque in NorthAfrica ref http books.google.com books?id sm0BfUKwct0C&pg PA248&dq ... of Tripoli by 645 AD. Further expansion into NorthAfrica waited another twenty years, due to the First ... in order to remove the Byzantine Empire Byzantine threat to the Umayyads advance in NorthAfrica ... century, Berbers of the Sahara began a jihad to reform Islam in NorthAfrica and remove any trace of cultural ... and 19th century, NorthAfrica was Colonialism colonized by France , the United Kingdom , Spain and Italy . During the 1950s and 60s, and into the 1970s, all of the North African states gained independence ... History DEFAULTSORT History Of NorthAfrica Category History of NorthAfrica Category Maghreb Category ... Nasr A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period, Cambridge University Press, 1987. ref The history ... more details
Nilotic and Nuba peoples begins. NorthAfrica formerly had a large Judaism Jewish population, almost all of whom emigrated to France or Israel when the North African nations gained independence ... DEFAULTSORT Culture Of NorthAfrica Category NorthAfrica pt Cultura do Norte da frica ... combine indigenous Berber, Arab and elements from neighboring parts of Africa and beyond. In the Sahara ... can be blurred. Some Berber languages Berber speaking North Africans may identify as Arab depending ... as a clear ethnic identification with Berber history and language. Arabic speaking Northwest Africa ..., often referred to as Berberist s, may view all Northwest Africa ns as principally Berber, whether ... 700,000 Jews in Northern Africa, including both Sephardic Sfard m refugees from France, Spain and Portugal ... music, exemplified by Idir , Ait Menguellet , or Loun s Matoub , have a wide audience. For more classical tastes, Andalusian classical music Andalusi music , brought from Al Andalus by Morisco refugees ... culture that influenced later cultures of Europe , the Middle East and Africa . After the Pharaonic ... in Ancient Egypt. Egypt s capital city, Cairo, is Africa s largest city and has been renowned for centuries ... and houses one of the finest collections of classical art in the Mediterranean. There has recently ... Berbers , Phoenicians , Carthaginians , Jews and Arabs , South Africans and North Ancient Rome ... Spanish colonialism colonial domination. All the surrounding territories were during the late 19th and early 20th century period of European colonial rule were generally under French colonial rule. Like ... by pre Islamic Berber and Africa n practises, and differs substantially from urban practises ... more details
descended from people from across the Mediterranean, into NorthAfrica. These people brought with them ... as the center for malouf , a derivative of the Andalusian music imported to NorthAfrica in the 15th ... , helping to keep the ancient tradition alive. Africa in topic Music of DEFAULTSORT Music Of NorthAfrica Category North African music ja ..., Egypt and elsewhere. The most well known derivatives of this style are Andalusian classical ... Music of Algeria Out of all the North African countries, Algerian popular music may be best known abroad ... from music imported from Andalusia in the 15th century, Algerian nuubaat is a kind of classical ... is the classical Egyptian music of stars like Abdel Halim Hafez . Other popular styles today ... more details
Infobox former country native name Africa Settentrionale Italiana conventional long name Italian NorthAfrica continent Africa common name Italian NorthAfrica region country era status text status Colony ... caption Italian NorthAfrica in November 1942, holding Libya , western Egypt , and Tunisia . capital ... leader1 year leader1 title leader footnotes Image Colonial Africa 1913 map.svg thumb right 250px Italian NorthAfrica and Italian East Africa around 1913, shown in light green. Italian NorthAfricaAfrica Settentrionale Italiana , or ASI was the aggregate of territories and colonies controlled by Kingdom of Italy 1861 1946 Italy in NorthAfrica from 1911 until World War II . In 1939 , Benito ... NorthAfrica. Brief history Italian NorthAfrica, unlike Italian East AfricaAfrica Orientale ... 1934, as Italian Libya Libya . Indeed, from 1934 to 1939, Italian NorthAfrica was then known as Libya as the North African territories were consolidated into one colony, Italian Libya . Successively ... of enlarging Italy s national borders around the Italian Mare Nostrum . From 1940 to 1943, during World War II , Italy attempted to conquer Egypt and Tunisia to enlarge the Italian NorthAfrica. Indeed Axis s military advances with Rommel in NorthAfrica allowed Italy to lay claim to significant ... Italian Fascist Army. All legally established territory of Italian NorthAfrica was dissolved by 1943 ..., 1942 43 p. 103 ref Colonies and territories within Italian NorthAfrica From 1912 to 1927, Italian NorthAfrica was an entity to itself, and from 1934 to 1941, Italian NorthAfrica was united ... 2011 Category Italian NorthAfrica Category Italian colonisation in Africa Category Former Italian colonies NorthAfrica Category States and territories established in 1912 Category History of NorthAfrica id Afrika Utara Italia ar it Libia italiana pl W oska Afryka P nocna ... history of Italy during World War II Italian occupied France South of France invasion , Mussolini ... more details
been present in NorthAfricaduring the Upper Paleolithic 45,000 years ago as attested by the Aterian ... Africa and Europe. During Sahara Pump Theory wetter phases of the Sahara, Sub Saharan Africans would have expanded into NorthAfrica. West Asian populations would have also been attracted to a wet ... from the Arabian peninsula brought Arabic language into NorthAfrica. ref Citation title Mitochondrial ... East and NorthAfrica haplogroup E Y DNA Haplogroup E is the most prevalent haplogroup amongst ... into NorthAfrica and Eurasia. The major sub clades of haplogroup E found amongst Berbers belong to E1b1b1 ... years ago, with the transition from the Oranian to the Capsian culture in NorthAfrica. http ... Y chromosome haplogroup in NorthAfrica , dominated by its sub clade E M183. It is thought to have originated ... people Mozabite Berber mtDNAs have a Near Eastern ancestry, probably having arrived in NorthAfrica ... U6 lineage was the Near East. Around 30,000 years ago it spread to NorthAfrica where it represents ... of mtDNA variation in NorthAfrica journal Hum. Biol. volume 77 issue 1 pages 61 70 year 2005 month ..., probably having arrived in NorthAfrica 50,000 years ago, and one eighth have an origin in sub Saharan ... not only led to the resettlement of Europe but also of NorthAfrica . ref Citation title Post last glacial maximum expansion from Iberia to NorthAfrica revealed by fine characterization of mtDNA H haplogroup ... L haplogroups in NorthAfrica was mainly due to trans Saharan slave trade. ref Harich et .al 2010 ... common clade in North and Northeast Africa and found in select populations in Europe, particularly ... Outside of North and Northeast Africa, E1b1b s two most prevalent clades are E1b1b1a E M78, formerly ... predominantly in North East Africa. It was originally thought to have been a marker of Neolithic ... , is specific to NorthAfrica n populations and almost absent in Europe except the Iberian Peninsula ... variation suggests a very recent arrival from NorthAfrica consistent with historical ... more details
Infobox Military Conflict image caption conflict Umayyad conquest of NorthAfrica partof the Muslim conquests and the Byzantine Arab Wars date 647 &ndash 709 place Egypt, NorthAfrica result Muslim victory territory NorthAfrica annexed by Muslims combatant1 Byzantine Empire combatant2 Umayyad Umayyad ... Arab Wars The Umayyad conquest of NorthAfrica continued the century of rapid Arab Muslim expansion ... Empire was essentially finished. It was at this point that Arab military expeditions into NorthAfrica ... empire Afghanistan and NorthAfrica would receive major invasions and Muslim sea raids would range from ... Empire in NorthAfrica, gathered his allies, confronted the Islamic invasion force and was defeated ... of northAfrica was subjugated to the Rashidun Caliphate , paid tribute, and became a vassal ... Nafi in 670 AD it is the oldest and most important mosque in NorthAfrica ref http books.google.com ... 665 to 689 , a new invasion of NorthAfrica was launched. It began, according to Will Durant , to protect ... of the Atlantic and the Sahara great desert . In his conquest of the Maghreb western NorthAfrica ... order that allowed the caliph to resume the Islamic conquest of NorthAfrica. It began with the retaking ... were again victorious, forcing the Byzantines to leave that part of NorthAfrica for good ... troops from the caliph. Meanwhile the people of NorthAfrica s cities chafed under a Berber reign of destruction .... By 698 the Arabs had conquered most of NorthAfrica from the Byzantines. The area was divided into three ... took Algiers in 700 . Completion of the conquest By 709 all of NorthAfrica was under the control of the Arab ... that Ceuta, the last Christian stronghold in NorthAfrica, was now part of the Arab empire. By this means the Umayyad conquest of Hispania brought to a close the total Islamic conquest of NorthAfrica ... of NorthAfrica by the Islamic Umayyad Caliphate between AD 647 709 effectively ... in the present day Maghreb. ref The Disappearance of Christianity from NorthAfrica in the Wake ... more details
italictitle The NorthAfrica Journal is a Boston based magazine focusing exclusively on North African issues, from business , finance , industry to politics and human issues. The magazine s contents are structured around several key economic topics from banking and finance, to energy and mining, all the way to corporate and people profiles. These topics ranging from the impact of Islamists on local and regional politics to the influence of oil and gas are covered weekly, with paying subscribers accessing all the premium content, while non paying subscribers receiving limited content to their email addresses. Established in 1996 by Arezki Daoud , the publication today has over 63,000 subscribers, ref name aboutus cite web url http www.north africa.com about.html title About us accessdate 2011 01 31 work The NorthAfrica Journal ref mainly English speaking readers based in Europe , the Americas , Asia and the Middle East . The majority of the subscribers are corporate executives and managers. However, the magazine is also a source of analysis used by governments, News media media , academia and NGO s. References reflist External links http www.north africa.com Magazine s website Category NorthAfrica Category American business magazines Category Political magazines pl NorthAfrica Journal ... more details