The Evolution of Man and Society, المجلد 1Simon and Schuster, 1969 - 753 من الصفحات Col. maps on lining papers. Bibliography: p. 681-711. |
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الصفحة 133
... fact reached Northern Europe before the more heavily equipped and less mobile agriculturists . These new types of colonists ( as we have already seen ) had often benefited by hybridization with the local populations of natives ...
... fact reached Northern Europe before the more heavily equipped and less mobile agriculturists . These new types of colonists ( as we have already seen ) had often benefited by hybridization with the local populations of natives ...
الصفحة 298
... fact that the teaching was not in its details original we might conclude that Christianity had a dis- creditable beginning , owing as much to what was false in it as to what was true . But it is the fact that we can now separate the ...
... fact that the teaching was not in its details original we might conclude that Christianity had a dis- creditable beginning , owing as much to what was false in it as to what was true . But it is the fact that we can now separate the ...
الصفحة 418
... fact that the Celts had been expelled as troublesome by Athelstan a thousand years ago . The Celts in their frontier city had failed to be assimilated by the Saxons : they were too equal for slavery , too different for marriage . A ...
... fact that the Celts had been expelled as troublesome by Athelstan a thousand years ago . The Celts in their frontier city had failed to be assimilated by the Saxons : they were too equal for slavery , too different for marriage . A ...
المحتوى
THE FOUNDATIONS page | 19 |
PROVIDENT SOCIETIES | 67 |
EXPANDING PEOPLES | 127 |
حقوق النشر | |
7 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Africa agriculture Alexander Anatolia ancient Arab Arabia army Aryan Asia Babylonia Bantu barbarian became began breeding brought capital Carthage caste century character China Christian Church cities civilization colonies conquest continued craftsmen created Crete crops cultivation culture diverse Dynasty east effect Egypt Egyptian Emperor Empire England established Etruscan Europe European evidence evolution expansion favoured feudal followed genetic governing class Greece Greek groups hereditary Hittite Huguenots human hybridization inbreeding India invaders invention Islam islands Jewish Jews kings land language later London marriage married Meroë Mesopotamia migration military millennium movement Muslim nation native neolithic numbers origin outbreeding paleolithic patrician patrilinear peasants Persian Persian Empire Phoenician political population priesthood priests principle Ptolemies races racial reform religion religious Roman Rome royal rulers rules Russian selection slaves social society stratified success Sumer Sumerian survival tion trade tribes western whole