977 resultados para Roman provinces
Resumo:
Se basa en exhaustivas investigaciones destinadas a cumplir las necesidades de los estudiantes y profesores. Utiliza una combinación de narrativa e intriga como fuente para contar la historia. Se invita a los alumnos a explorar y analizar algunas de las opciones que enfrentan a las personas, para tener sus propios juicios históricos sobre la base de las pruebas presentadas. La mezcla de descripción y fuentes de información cumple los requisitos del Programa Nacional de Estudios, del conocimiento y la investigación histórica para alumnos de siete a nueve años.
Resumo:
Cada capítulo en el libro alumno tiene su propio conjunto de actividades que pueden abordarse de distintas maneras: como trabajo individual; como base para las discusiones en clase. Además, cada capítulo en el libro del alumno cuenta con el apoyo de hojas de cálculo en la evaluación y el paquete de recursos. Estas hojas de trabajo se basan en las actividades del texto del alumno ampliando los trabajos sobre un tema en particular. Otras hojas, introducen nuevos temas en áreas no cubiertas, o se les da menos énfasis, por el libro del alumno, hay hojas de trabajo que siempre cubren los conceptos básicos de la Edad Media. Esta cobertura se hace por medio de : juego de roles, tarjetas con resolución de problemas, trabajo en grupo, trabajo de discusión, el uso de organizar gráficos, diagramas de anotación. Las respuestas a las preguntas han sido incluidas en el fin de ofrecer un estímulo en las actividades que también están diseñadas para llevar algo de diversión en el estudio de la historia.
Resumo:
Desarrolla en los estudiantes conocimientos y aptitudes en historia y, también, comprensión de la historia de la antigua Roma. Se divide en unidades que presentan diferentes aspectos del mundo romano: el advenimiento de la república romana, la vida familiar, los dioses y diosas, Gran Bretaña romana, y el declive y caída del imperio. Utiliza una amplia gama de fuentes primarias, mapas y esquemas explicativos, y al final de cada sección, preguntas para consolidar conceptos y temas.
Resumo:
This paper examines the landscape context of the Bartlow Hills, a group of large Romano-British barrows that were excavated in the 1840s but have been largely neglected since. GIS is employed to test whether it was possible to view the mounds from nearby roads, barrows and villas. Existing research on provincial barrows, and especially their landscape context, and some recent relevant applications of GIS are reviewed. We argue that barrows are active and symbolically charged statements about power and identity. The most striking pattern to emerge from the GIS analysis is a focus on display to a local rather than a transient audience.
Resumo:
Previous anthropological investigations at Trentholme Drive, in Roman York identified an unusual amount of cranial variation amongst the inhabitants, with some individuals suggested as having originated from the Middle East or North Africa. The current study investigates the validity of this assessment using modern anthropological methods to assess cranial variation in two groups: The Railway and Trentholme Drive. Strontium and oxygen isotope evidence derived from the dentition of 43 of these individuals was combined with the craniometric data to provide information on possible levels of migration and the range of homelands that may be represented. The results of the craniometric analysis indicated that the majority of the York population had European origins, but that 11% of the Trentholme Drive and 12% of The Railway study samples were likely of African decent. Oxygen analysis identified four incomers, three from areas warmer than the UK and one from a cooler or more continental climate. Although based on a relatively small sample of the overall population at York, this multidisciplinary approach made it possible to identify incomers, both men and women, from across the Empire. Evidence for possible second generation migrants was also suggested. The results confirm the presence of a heterogeneous population resident in York and highlight the diversity, rather than the uniformity, of the population in Roman Britain. Am J Phys Anthropol 140:546-561, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc
Resumo:
Resistivity imaging was carried out on four large Roman barrows at Bartlow in Cambridgeshire. The geophysical survey formed part of a wider research project designed to record and assess the landscape context of the largest surviving Roman burial mounds in Britain. The barrows today range in height from 6.6 m to 13.2 m and their steep profile loosed particular practical and modelling challenges. Data were obtained using a Campus Geopulse resistance meter with up to 50 electrodes spaced at 1 m intervals and lines up to 76 m long. A total of 24 lines was obtained. Topographic corrections were applied to the pseudosections, whichwere inverted using Res 2 Dinv and Res3 Dinv. Resistivity imaging was particularly successful in identifying evidence for the antiquarian explorations of the site. Central collapse features or in-filled tunnels image as high resistance features in all barrows and in one (Barrow IV) there is also a low resistance feature in the approximate position of a known antiquarian tunnel. Barrow VI had a thick covering of high-resistivity that may relate to nineteenth century landscaping and reconstruction of this monument. Resistivity imaging also revealed possible evidence for ancient revetments in all four large barrows. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.