It was a golden age for al-Andalus because the scholars made important contributions to the study of mathematics, Astronomy, geography, medicine and philosophy. Also because the Jews had freedom there and they contributed important stuff too.
It was a golden age for al-Andalus because the scholars made important contributions to the study of mathematics, astronomy, geography, medicine and philosophy. Also because the Jews had freedom there and they contributed important stuff too.
they went to the concert
It was a golden age for al-Andalus because the scholars made important contributions to the study of mathematics, astronomy, geography, medicine and philosophy. Also because the Jews had freedom there and they contributed important stuff too.
Iraq, Iran, and Spain all had Islamic golden ages in the late 700s-1000s C.E.
If you are referring to the Golden Age of Islamic Spain (800s-1000s), the Muslims were in power at that time, so they treated themselves quite well. The Jews and Christians were treated as second-class citizens in what would today be called apartheid, but what was at that time rather tolerant.
During the Heian period, the city of Heian was a center of culture and learning, as fashion, literature, visual arts, architecture, and performing arts flourished.
It's the Golden Age
During the Heian period, the city of Heian was a center of culture and learning, as fashion, literature, visual arts, architecture, and performing arts flourished.
Gore is old English and saxon in origin from the early 1000s to 1100s. The name also is early Norse from what I could find from the spellings of Goar, Gaor, Gor, Gorr. So basically the name didnt appear in England until the Vikings came over. So its a Norse/Saxon/Celtic name from the early viking age.
Islam had a golden age. Islamism has never had a golden age.
The ISBN of A Golden Age is 0719560101.
The Golden Age of Pirates
It was not the golden age of Rome. it was the golden age of Roman literature, which, in turn is subdivided into the Age of Cicero and the Augustan Age. Therefore, the emperor associated with the second part of this golden age was Augustus.