Part one: The four specific roles of an artist: 1- Artist helps us to see the world in new or innovative ways: they create new way to us to see and think about the world around us. For example Impression—Sunrise for Claude Monte‚ it resembles the world of natural appearance to create a new way of thinking about this works. Claude Monte‚ Impression—Sunrise‚ 1872. Oil on canvas‚ 19.50x25.50 in. Musee Marmottan‚ Paris. Page 506. Fig.20-24 2- Artist makes a visual record of the people‚
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Bucket Manyweather Ancient History Professor Kaatz 1‚686 Words Bucommequalia[Buc•cǜm•ǝqual•lee•uh]: The Forgotten City-State Bucommequalia is an ancient civilization‚ city-state based near what is now modern-day west Crete that flourished between 1400 BC and 1159 BC and is surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea1. This essay will explore the foundation of this civilization up until the Minoan take over around 1155 BC. This civilization contains considerable conjecture due to influences of other
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CHAPTER II CITATIONS Today‚ we live in an electronic age where knowledge is produced and communicated at expanding rates and this will certainly bring changes in the character of conventional library operations. Libraries in this rapidly changing society underscore access to information rather than building a collection of books and other forms of printed knowledge. In this historical development of libraries‚ Prof. Vallejo mentioned that the provision of information was done through traditional
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ART 1/PREHISTORIC THROUGH GOTHIC ART Chapter 1: The Birth of Art 1-5 Nude Woman (The Venus of Willendorf)‚ 28‚000-25‚000 B.C. 1-6 Woman Holding a Bison Horn‚ from Laussel 25‚000-20‚000 B.C. 1-7 Two Bison‚ 15‚000-10‚000 B.C. 1-9 Bison‚ detail of cave at Altamira‚ 12‚000-1‚000 B.C. 1-10 Spotted Horses and Negative Hand Prints‚ cave at Pech-Merle‚ 22‚000 B.C. 1-11 Hall of Bulls‚ Left wall‚ 15‚000-13‚000 B.C. 1-14 Stone Tower‚ Jericho‚ 8‚000-7‚000 B.C.
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Emilie White Mrs. Barnett Language Arts IV 9 December 2011 King Tutankhamun Tutankhamun‚ better known as King Tut‚ was unwanted by his subjects‚ ignored by his successors and forgotten for more than thirty centuries. Thanks to the discovery of his tomb by Lord Carnarvon and Howard Carter‚ he has been reborn as Egypt’s most famous son‚ achieving true immortality. Tut was born during the Amama Age‚ around 1341 BC. His mother was believed to be Kiya and his father was Akhenaten. When Tut was
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Linear B tablets as a-ku-pi-ti-yo. The adjective aigýpti-‚ aigýptios was borrowed into Coptic as gyptios‚ ‚ and from there into Arabic as qubṭī‚ back formed into طبق qubṭ‚ whence English Copt. The Greek forms were borrowed from Late Egyptian (Amarna) Hikuptah "Memphis"‚ a corruption of the earlier Egyptian name Hwt-ka-Ptah (ḥwt-k-ptḥ)‚ meaning "home of the ka (soul) of Ptah"‚ the name of a temple to the god Ptah at Memphis.[13] Strabo attributed the word to a folk etymology in which Aígyptos
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Akhenaten: The Man‚ The Myth‚ The Mess How young is too young to rule? Every culture has its own answer to this particular question. In ancient Egypt‚ young men were allowed to inherit the throne at a very young age. In the instance of the pharaoh Akhenaten he was given the throne at age eleven. Even though he did not directly rule for the first years of his reign‚ his name is still attributed to them. Akhenaten was born to a father who was an amazing and beloved pharaoh‚ Amenhotep III. A sickly
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Stonehenge: In England… features in Arthutian legend and in other novels… built during the Neolithic‚ meaning new stone 2950-1600 BCE Middle Eastern Art BCE Dates: Sumerian/Mesopotamian/Old Babylonian – present day Iraq 4‚000 – 1‚925 BC Hittite – from Turkey 1‚500 – 700 BC control overlaps with Assyrian Assyrian – drive out Hittites 1‚000 – 612 BC Neo-Babylonian/Chaldean – 605 – 562 BC Persian – (present day Iran) 538 – 330 BC Innovations of the culture: Plough‚ cuneiform‚ developed tax
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Hatshepsut and Tuthmosis: a royal feud? http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/egyptians/hatshepsut_print.html http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ Hatshepsut and Tuthmosis: a royal feud? By Dr Joyce Tyldesley After her death‚ Pharoah Hatshepsut vanished from Egyptian history. Was her stepson‚ Tuthmosis III‚ to blame? Colossal red granite sphinx of Hatshepsut from Deir el-Bahari Endless death Pharaoh Hatshepsut enjoyed a peaceful and prosperous reign. She built magnificent temples‚ protected
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Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues (English) | Close X | Understanding the text «Prev Page 28 Next» | | Q1 Q1(ii) Q1(iii) Q1(iv) Q1(v) Q2(i) Q2(ii) Q2(iii) Q2(iv) | Question 1: King Tut’s body has been subjected to repeated scrutiny. * ------------------------------------------------- Answer * ------------------------------------------------- Discussion * ------------------------------------------------- Share This was so because King Tut was just a teenager when he died. Since the
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