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  1. Jan 3, 2022 · §1. In the first millennium BCE, which is the era when alphabetic writing was developed by Greek-speaking people, starting in the eighth century BCE, there is evidence for a wide range of dialects, which can be divided roughly into four groups: (1) Arcado-Cypriote, (2) Aeolic, (3) Ionic, and (4) Doric or “West Greek.”

  2. On the ambivalence towards eating meat during the second half of the 1st millennium BCE Edeltraud Harzer University of Texas at Austin, USA The middle of the last millennium BCE, overlapping the late post-Vedic and also the śramaṇa1 period, was the most decisive phase for the development of the culture of the Indian subcontinent which ...

  3. A number of Old Assyrian limmu lists have been combined into the so-called Revised Eponym List (REL), which spans a period of 255 years in the early second millennium BCE (1972-1718 BCE in the Middle Chronology dating system). [3] The central figure of this period was Šamšī-Adad I who conquered Aššur in the year REL 165, and reigned ...

  4. Dec 1, 2020 · New Evidence on Central Anatolia during the Second Millennium BCE Excavations at Büklükale. December 2020. Near Eastern Archaeology 83 (4):234-247. DOI: 10.1086/708506. Authors:

  5. Title: The Amorites : a political history of Mesopotamia in the early second millennium BCE / by Nathan Wasserman and Yigal Bloch. Other titles: Political history of Mesopotamia in the early second millennium BCE Description: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2023] | Series: Culture and history of the ancient Near East, 1566–2055 ; Volume 133 ...

  6. Sternitzke, Katja. "Babylon in the Second Millennium BCE: New Insights on the Transitions from Old Babylonian to Kassite and Isin II Periods" In Babylonia under the Sealand and Kassite Dynasties edited by Susanne Paulus and Tim Clayden, 125-145.

  7. Jan 24, 2022 · Which of the following is a way territorial states in the second millennium BCE differed from city-states of the previous millennium? Authority was centered on the monarch; power was passed from one generation to the next.

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