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  1. Nomad (1162 bytes)
    1: ''The [[video game console]] is called the [[Sega Nomad]].''
    3: ... more common in industrialised nations travelling from place to place offering a trade wherever they g...
    5: ==Nomadic people in industrialized nations==
    13: ==Modern nomads in industrialized nations==
    14: * [[Freetekno soundsystem|Freetekno soundsystems]]

Page text matches

  1. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    1: ...ntury|18th]] and early [[19th century]] resulting from the replacement of an economy based on manual l...
    3: ... merged into the [[Second Industrial Revolution]] from about [[1850]], when technological and economic...
    5: ...developed [[agriculture]] and gave up its [[nomad|nomadic lifestyle]].
    7: ...erm industrial ''revolution'' was introduced by [[Friedrich Engels]] and [[Louis-Auguste Blanqui]] in ...
    10: ...itain. The steam engine was created to pump water from coal mines, enabling them to be deepened]]effic...
  2. Hunter-gatherer (4757 bytes)
    1: ...n. [[Image:Native_Encampment_by_Skinner_Prout%2C_from_Australia-historic-illustration.jpg|thumb||400p...
    3: ...ome shelters. Their shelters give them protection from predators and the elements.
    12: ... vast majority of hunter gatherer societies are [[nomad]]ic.
    18: ...es, but this is not always the case. As many are nomadic, they generally do not have the possibility to ...
    20: ...ny anthropologists claim the egalitarianism stems from the lack of control over food production, lack ...
  3. Kazakhstan (26806 bytes)
    3: ...ww.stat.kz/en/info/stat-bul/stbr&e0303.pdf], down from 16,464,464 in [[1989]] [http://www.stat.kz/ru/d...
    50: | From [[Soviet Union]], [[December 16]], [[1991]]
    70: ...erritory of Kazakhstan was ruled by a series of [[nomad]]ic nations. Following the Mongolian invasion in ...
    72: ... the livestock-based economy. The Kazakhs emerged from a mixture of tribes living in the region in abo...
    76: ...ose still further once the [[Trans-Aral Railway]] from [[Orenburg]] to [[Tashkent]] was completed in 1...
  4. Kyrgyzstan (23226 bytes)
    37: established_dates = From the [[Soviet Union]]<br> [[31 August]] [[1991]]...
    52: ...led along the [[Yenisey River]], where they lived from the [[6th century|6th]] until the [[8th century...
    56: ...mid-[[1920s]] by the Russians to distinguish them from the Kazakhs, who were also referred to as Kirgh...
    58: ...[Joseph Stalin]], who controlled the Soviet Union from the late 1920's until [[1953]].
    62: ...eks form a majority of the population. Violent confrontations ensued, and a state of emergency and cur...
  5. Ukraine (22193 bytes)
    37: ... Soviet Union|Independence]]'''<br>&nbsp; Date || From [[Soviet Union]]<br>[[August 24]] [[1991]]
    55: ...r the name. Most translate it as "borderland" or "frontier" (compare [[Krajna]], [[Krajina]] - in Poli...
    60: ... the speakers of the Proto-Iranian language moved from Ukraine to the southeast but many also remained...
    64: ...us' was founded by [[Varangian]]s, Scandinavians, from present-day [[Sweden]]. The Varangians later be...
    66: ...ars]] (a [[Turkic]] semi-[[nomad|nomadic people]] from [[Central Asia]] who adopted [[Judaism]]) found...
  6. Silk Road (23757 bytes)
    1: ...ally in [[Japan]]. ''Silk road'' is a translation from the [[German language|German]] ''Seidenstraߥ''...
    3: ...hrough the [[Levant]] into [[Egypt]] and [[North Africa]].
    11: ...y as circa [[11th century BC|1100 BC]], and the [[nomads]] of the vast Eurasian [[steppe]]-lands had dome...
    13: ... the way from the shores of the [[Pacific]] to [[Africa]], and deep into the heart of [[Europe]]. Thes...
    18: [[Lapis lazuli]] was being traded from its only known source in the ancient world &#82...
  7. Human (48024 bytes)
    24: Humans have an erect body carriage that frees the upper limbs for manipulating objects, a hi...
    30: ... [[state]]s down to [[Family|families]], and also from the [[community]] to the [[self]]. Seeking to [...
    54: ...species of [[chimpanzee]]s should be reclassified from ''[[Pan troglodytes]]'' and ''[[Pan paniscus]]'...
    56: ...had]] and seems to indicate an earlier divergence from the ape lineage.
    58: ... genome is significantly affected by assimilation from archaic humans (i.e., 80% of loci may have some...
  8. Tundra (7482 bytes)
    10: ...Nganasan people|Nganasan]] and Nenets in the permafrost area (and the [[Sami people|Sami]] in [[Laplan...
    12: ..., temperatures rise and the top layer of the permafrost melts, leaving the ground very soggy. The tund...
    14: ...d reproduce, but because the ground below this is frozen, the water cannot sink any lower, and so the ...
    20: ...its surface layer melts. The melting of the permafrost in a given area on human time scales (decades ...
    22: ... is in [[taiga]] and tundra areas. When the permafrost melts, it releases carbon, in the form of [[ca...
  9. Maasai (4392 bytes)
    2: ...obably one of the most familiar tribes of [[East Africa]]. Despite the growth of modern civilisation, ...
    6: ...kingdoms, the Maasai never surrendered their semi-nomadic lifestyle. The ability to graze their cattle ov...
    8: ...heir "property". The huts of the Maasai are built from dried cattle dung, and certain sacred rituals i...
    10: ...asai ''morani'' (warrior-youth) leap into the air from a standing position, in order to demonstrate th...
    14: ...k [[Swahili]], the ''[[lingua franca]]'' of East Africa.
  10. History of Slovakia (43199 bytes)
    5: The oldest surviving archeological artifacts from Slovakia have been carbon dated to 270,000 BCE,...
    7: Other stone tools from the [[Middle Palaeolithic|Middle Paleolithic Er...
    9: ... Pie&#353;tany. Numerous necklaces made of shells from Cypraca thermophile [[Gastropoda|gastropods]] o...
    11: From an archeological standpoint, the discovery of d...
    13: ... years by the same tribes who created the pottery from the Massif Bukové ¨ory.
  11. Ottoman Empire (15917 bytes)
    45: ...mply as ''the Porte'', from the [[French language|French]] translation of the [[Ottoman language|Ottom...
    47: ...tantinople]] (modern [[Istanbul|&#x130;stanbul]]) from the [[Byzantine Empire]], it became the Ottoman...
    53: ... in the east to [[Hungary]] in the northwest, and from [[Egypt]] in the south to the [[Caucasus]] in t...
    60: ...his was the [[Crimean war]] in which the English, French, Ottomans and others united against Russia.
    61: ...om foreign occupation (e.g. Egypt occupied by the French in 1798, Cyprus occupied by the British in 18...
  12. Attila the Hun (23655 bytes)
    3: ... he drove the western emperor [[Valentinian III]] from his capital at [[Ravenna]] in [[452]].
    9: ...n or proto-[[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] nomad tribes from north-eastern [[China]] and [[Central Asia]]. T...
    14: ... steppes of Central Asia into modern Germany, and from the Danube river to the Baltic Sea]]
    15: ...ns. The Huns, satisfied with the treaty, decamped from the empire and departed into the interior of th...
    17: ...ations and that the [[bishop]] of Margus (not far from modern Belgrade) had crossed the Danube to rans...
  13. Genghis Khan (31537 bytes)
    17: ...e and his family lived the life of impoverished [[nomad]]s, surviving primarily on [[marmot]]s and other ...
    19: ...oden collar around his neck. He escaped with help from a sympathetic captor. His mother, Hoelun, taugh...
    21: ...], was born suspiciously soon after she was freed from the Merkit, leading to questions regarding the ...
    31: ...ollowers. He remained true to his shamanistic and nomadic traditions throughout his life, despite the spr...
    43: ... of honor. Generally, the Mongol Empire was also friendly to outside trade along the [[Silk Road]], a...
  14. Hebrews (6043 bytes)
    2: ...languages]]), although their culture was distinct from the local [[canaanite]] culture. The extent of ...
    6: ...biru]] were [[Hurrian]], and thus not having flew from Egypt.
    8: ...was from [[Thebes, Egypt|Thebes]], down the river from the seat of power &ndash; [[Memphis, Egypt|Memp...
    10: ...ous areas of Canaan, over time becoming separated from other Canaanites, and thus taking separate path...
    18: Today, modern-day [[Jews]] are descended from only a few of these Tribes. The Tribes of [[Ju...
  15. History of science in the Middle Ages (30877 bytes)
    14: ...became a tapestry of rural populations and semi-[[nomad]] peoples. The political instability and the down...
    16: ...rpretation. Given the limited scientific advances from about [[476]] to about [[1000]], this period ca...
    18: ...ic]], [[geometry]], [[astronomy]] and [[music]]). From the year [[787]] on, [[decree]]s began to circu...
    20: ...e rebirth of the interest in speculative inquiry; from this interest would follow the rise of the [[Sc...
    27: ...the texts of the ''ancients'' and started a new infrastructure which was needed for scientific communi...
  16. Van (road vehicle) (3679 bytes)
    5: ...ween a dry van, used to carry most goods, and a refrigerated van (a "reefer") used for cold goods. A r...
    24: *[[Chevrolet Nomad Van]]
  17. Nomad (1162 bytes)
    1: ''The [[video game console]] is called the [[Sega Nomad]].''
    3: ... more common in industrialised nations travelling from place to place offering a trade wherever they g...
    5: ==Nomadic people in industrialized nations==
    13: ==Modern nomads in industrialized nations==
    14: * [[Freetekno soundsystem|Freetekno soundsystems]]
  18. Barbarian (4015 bytes)
    7: ...'', because the Portuguese ships appeared to sail from the South.
    17: ...ducts of his flocks, and follows their needs. The nomad may barter for necessities, like metalwork, but d...

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