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Excavations (Archaeology) --- Antiquities, Prehistoric --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Antiquités préhistoriques --- South Africa --- Afrique du Sud --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Antiquités préhistoriques --- Antiquités --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Prehistoric antiquities --- Prehistoric archaeology --- Prehistory --- Prehistoric peoples --- Africa, Southern --- Southern Africa --- Antiquities.
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Painting --- Europe --- Fleurs dans l'art --- Natures mortes --- Peintres
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'Horse Nations' provides the first globally comparative study of the impact of the horse on the indigenous societies of North and South America, southern Africa, and Australasia following its (re-)introduction as a result of European contacts and settlement after Columbus' first voyage to the Americas in 1492.
Horses --- Horsemanship --- Indigenous peoples --- Indians --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- History. --- Domestic animals
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Donkeys carried Christ into Jerusalem while in Greek myth they transported Hephaistos up to Mount Olympos and Dionysos into battle against the Giants. They were probably the first animals that people ever rode, as well as the first used on a large-scale as beasts of burden. Associated with kingship and the gods in the ancient Near East, they have been (and in many places still are) a core technology for moving people and goods over both short and long distances, as well as a supplier of muscle power for threshing and grinding grain, pressing olives, raising water, ploughing fields, and pulling carts, to name just a few of the uses to which they have been put. Yet despite this, they remain one of the least studied, and most widely ignored, of all domestic animals, consigned to the margins of history like so many of those who still depend upon them. Spanning the globe and extending from the donkey's initial domestication up to the present, this book seeks to remedy this situation by using archaeological evidence, in combination with insights from history and anthropology, to resituate the donkey (and its hybrid offspring such as the mule) in the unfolding of human history, looking not just at what donkeys and mules did, but also at how people have thought about and understood them.
Donkeys --- Mules --- Mammal remains (Archaeology) --- Mammalian remains (Archaeology) --- Mammals in archaeology --- Animal remains (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Livestock --- Horses --- Ass, Small --- Burros --- Domestic ass --- Equus africanus asinus --- Equus asinus asinus --- African wild ass --- Equus --- Hinnies --- History --- Methodology
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Developmental psychology --- Development (Psychology) --- Piaget, Jean, --- Ppiaje, --- Pʻei-ya-hsieh, --- Pʻi-ya-chieh, --- Piazhe, Zhan, --- Piaze, Zan, --- Pʻiaje, --- Piʼaz'eh, Z'an, --- Piaget, J. P. --- Pi-a-je, --- Piyajie, --- פיאז׳ה, ז׳אן --- פיאז׳ה, ז׳אן, --- Developmental psychobiology --- Psychology --- Life cycle, Human --- Piyāzhah, Zhān, --- پياژه، ژان,
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Art --- sales catalogs --- Mitchell, John --- Mitchell, Peter --- Pluym, Karel van der --- John Mitchell & Son [London]
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Art --- sales catalogs --- Mitchell, John --- Mitchell, Peter --- Perroneau, Jean Baptiste --- John Mitchell & Son [London]
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