排序方式: 共有10条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1
1.
2.
Mordechai Naor 《Journal of Israeli History》2013,32(1):103-109
Barnet Litvinoff, ed., Selected Letters of Weizmann, Am Oved and Yad Chaim Weizmann, 463 pp. Meir Miber‐Maiberg, In the Shadow of the Citadel: The Stand of Safed, Milo Publishers, 379 pp. Eliahu Eilat, Through the Mists of Time: Memoirs, Yad Yitzhak Ben‐Zvi, Jerusalem, 233 pp. Hagit Lavsky, ed., Jerusalem in Zionist Consciousness and Deed, Shazar Center and the Center for the Study of Zionism and the Yishuv, 464 pp. Twenty Years in Jerusalem — 1967–1987, a collection of articles edited by Professor Joshua Prawer and Ora Achimeir, Defense Ministry Publishing House and the Jerusalem Institute for the Study of Israel, 267 pp. 相似文献
3.
Mordechai Feingold 《The Seventeenth century》2017,32(1):63-79
Commenting in 1692 on the “Projecting Humour that now reigns” in England, Daniel Defoe nicknamed the period the “Projecting Age.” He dated its start to c. 1680, even as he conceded that “it had indeed something of life in the time of the late Civil War” as well. Defoe was wrong. Decades earlier both Elizabethan and Jacobean commentators had inveighed against the rampant passion for schemes, a perception increasingly documented by scholars. For the most part, however, the appraisal of early modern projects has been confined to the domain of economic and social history. Monopolies, inventions, plans to ameliorate the condition of the poor and infirm, and schemes guaranteeing the enrichment of the nation, have drawn the attention of historians; only sporadic attention has been paid to the numerous scholarly projects that also proliferated during the same period. My intention here is not to be exhaustive, but to offer a snapshot of the large number of proposals that sought to establish new institutions of higher learning, usually through substantial outlays of public capital. 相似文献
4.
A field survey revealed that Byzantine and Early Arab (ca. 5th to 8th century C.E.) agricultural systems in the semi-arid region of the Shephelah (central Israel) were similar to runoff agricultural systems in the arid region of the Negev (southern Israel). This similarity led to the hypothesis that systems in the Shephelah also function as runoff farms. This hypothesis is not trivial since runoff values in semi-arid regions are generally low due to intensive but short rainfall events, and due to the presence of sink patches that absorb runoff on slope surface. The aim of the current research is to examine whether runoff potential in a representative agricultural system in the Shephelah is sufficient for sustaining runoff farming. A geoarchaeological field survey and digital terrain analysis show that large Nari (calcrete) outcrops on the footslopes generate high runoff values that improve water potential. Hydrological simulations and calculations show that 230 mm of direct rainfall generates a water potential equivalent to 300 mm of direct rainfall. In view of these results, it is reasonable to conclude that the presence of Nari enabled runoff agricultural farming in the Shephelah region, even in drought years. 相似文献
5.
Ehud Weiss Mordechai E. Kislev Orit Simchoni Dani Nadel Hartmut Tschauner 《Journal of archaeological science》2008
While a division of domestic space into separate sectors dedicated to different activities has been suggested for a number of Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherer sites, it has never been demonstrated based on plant remains from this period. Moreover, due to the usual scarcity of plant macrofossils in archaeological deposits, only animal food preparation activities associated with hearths have been reported in the literature on Near Eastern prehistory. Ohalo II (Israel) is the first Upper Paleolithic site where such a patterned use of interior space and plant processing are evidenced by the distribution of plant remains on a sealed floor of a brush hut. This paper describes and interprets the distribution of almost 60,000 identified seeds and other plant remains on that floor, proposing a reconstruction of three activity areas in the interior of the 12-m2 hut: processing of food centered on a grinding stone; a flint knapping area; and an access area in between. Finally, it is suggested that these activity areas might represent male-female division of labor. 相似文献
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
1