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I specialize in the Minoan (Eteocretan) autarchy: 3650-1100 BCE of Gortya, Lyttus and Knossus, and its other peripherals; the Peloponnesian War: 431-404 BCE; the Theban hegemony: 371-362 BCE under Epaminondas, Philip II's Macedonian extension to the Grecian ecumene for his despotate from 351-338 BCE, the 'Successors' to Alexander III 'Eupator' of Macedonia: 335-146 BCE, the Carthaginian Oligarchy: (during the Second Punic War: 219-201 BCE), the Roman struggle between Gnaeus Pompeius 'Magnus' and Gaius Julius Caesar: 49-45 BCE, and the campaigns of Flavius Belisarius of the Grecian Byzantine Empire in its early timeframe: 330-610 CE, from the tetrarchy to Basileus Heraclius: 610-641 CE.
Amateur historian of Greek, Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Studies. (I have written conjectural emendations on the concepts of empire from apogee to nadir, from apotheosis to subjugation.) Examples: Hellenistic Despotates: 335-146 BCE, the Roman Principate: 27 BCE-96 CE and Dominate: 96-476/1453 CE, and the Libyo-Phoenicians: 814-146 BCE.)
Molloy College Student Literary Magazine (Subject Matter): Machiavellian Philosophy
Honors Level Student at Molloy College (Sophomore College/University Student)= Undergraduate Level
The correlation between the academic/intellectual fields of history and philosophy. 1. Edmund Burke's analysis on the French Revolution through an ethical, socio-political and historical viewpoint with the framework of the historical event/timeframe in combination with philosophical concerns.
| User | Date | K | C | T | P | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Georgina | 03/28/09 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 10 | Not blaming the volunteer as much as ..... |
| jerry | 10/25/08 | 10 | 9 | 9 | 10 | great summary |
| john | 09/02/08 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | thanks so much it really helped |
| john | 08/30/08 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | thanks |
| john | 08/26/08 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | thanks once again conrad |
Thank you for the question; I wish great success for your historical research. Here is a list of events around the world at at the year 1 AD/CE: Roman Empire: -Tiberius, under order of Augustus,
Thank you for the two questions, I am honored to be of assistance. Question #1): The Roman Republic's conquest of the Italian promontory by 264 BCE can be attributed to two of the available choices:
Thank you for the question sir, it is an honor to be of help. Some examples of interesting (secondary sources) nonfiction works include Edward Gibbon's The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, George
Thank you for the question even though I have not studied into the abstract form of the defining characteristics of what constitutes a civilization, I will do my best to answer the question at hand. I
Thank you for the question sir. However, please keep in mind that this period in history is not my area of expertise, however, I will do my best to answer it for you. The different stages of human
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