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2800 BC

A Wisdom Archive on 2800 BC

2800 BC

A selection of articles related to 2800 BC

We recommend this article: 2800 BC - 1, and also this: 2800 BC - 2.
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2800 BC, 28th century BC, 28th century BC - Events, 28th century BC - Inventions discoveries introductions, 28th century BC - Significant persons

ARTICLES RELATED TO 2800 BC

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Bratislava Castle - History

Bratislava Castle - Prehistory 2800 – 450 BC. The castle, like today's town, has been inhabited for thousands of years, because it is strategically located in the center of Europe at a passage between the Carpathians and the Alps, at a very important ford used to cross the Danube river, and at an important crossing of central European ancient (trade) routes running from the Balkans or the Adriatic Sea to the Rhine river or the Baltic Sea, th ...

See also:

Bratislava Castle, Bratislava Castle - The castle site, Bratislava Castle - Castle building the Palace, Bratislava Castle - Entrance Gates to the site, Bratislava Castle - Other buildings and objects, Bratislava Castle - History, Bratislava Castle - Prehistory 2800 – 450 BC, Bratislava Castle - Celts and Romans 450 BC – 5th century AD, Bratislava Castle - Slavs Nitrian Principality Great Moravia 500 – 907, Bratislava Castle - High and Late Middle Ages 907 – 1531, Bratislava Castle - Main castle of the Kingdom of Hungary 1531 – 1783, Bratislava Castle - Loss of importance and destruction 1783 – 1811, Bratislava Castle - Castle in ruins 1811 – 1953, Bratislava Castle - Restoration and modern history after 1953

Read more here: » Bratislava Castle: Encyclopedia II - Bratislava Castle - History

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Bratislava Castle - The castle site
The castle site includes the following: Bratislava Castle - Castle building the Palace. The castle building includes 4 towers (one on each corner) and a courtyard with a 80m deep water well. The biggest tower is the Crown Tower in the south-west from the 13th century, which housed the crown jewels (see History) . The outside walls and inside corridors contain fragments of old Gothic and Renaissance construction elements. To the east of the main entrance, one can see the walled up entrance gate from the 16t ...

See also:

Bratislava Castle, Bratislava Castle - The castle site, Bratislava Castle - Castle building the Palace, Bratislava Castle - Entrance Gates to the site, Bratislava Castle - Other buildings and objects, Bratislava Castle - History, Bratislava Castle - Prehistory 2800 – 450 BC, Bratislava Castle - Celts and Romans 450 BC – 5th century AD, Bratislava Castle - Slavs Nitrian Principality Great Moravia 500 – 907, Bratislava Castle - High and Late Middle Ages 907 – 1531, Bratislava Castle - Main castle of the Kingdom of Hungary 1531 – 1783, Bratislava Castle - Loss of importance and destruction 1783 – 1811, Bratislava Castle - Castle in ruins 1811 – 1953, Bratislava Castle - Restoration and modern history after 1953

Read more here: » Bratislava Castle: Encyclopedia II - Bratislava Castle - The castle site

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Soap - The history and process of soap making

The earliest known evidence of soap use are Babylonian clay cylinders dating from 2800 BC containing a soap-like substance. A formula for soap consisting of water, alkali and cassia oil was written on a Babylonian clay tablet around 2200 BC. The Ebers papyrus (Egypt, 1550 BC) indicates that ancient Egyptians bathed regularly and combined animal and vegetable oils with alkaline salts to create a soap-like substance. Egyptian documents mention that a soap- ...

See also:

Soap, Soap - Purification and finishing, Soap - Use, Soap - The history and process of soap making, Soap - Handmade soap, Soap - Disadvantages

Read more here: » Soap: Encyclopedia II - Soap - The history and process of soap making

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Soap - The history and process of soap making

The earliest known evidence of soap use are Babylonian clay cylinders dating from 2800 BC containing a soap-like substance. A formula for soap consisting of water, alkali and cassia oil was written on a Babylonian clay tablet around 2200 BC. The Ebers papyrus (Egypt, 1550 BC) indicates that ancient Egyptians bathed regularly and combined animal and vegetable oils with alkaline salts to create a soap-lik ...

See also:

Soap, Soap - Purification and finishing, Soap - Use, Soap - The history and process of soap making, Soap - Handmade soap, Soap - Disadvantages

Read more here: » Soap: Encyclopedia II - Soap - The history and process of soap making

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Iram of the Pillars - Re-Discovery of Ubar/Iram

Recent discoveries have brought Iram out of the realm of myth into history. The first came when tablets found in the archives of Ebla were found to mention Iram by name. A more recent discovery occurred when archaeologists examined photographs taken of the Persian Gulf Coast from the space shuttle Challenger in 1984. These photos revealed some buried cities along the ancient frankincense trade route dating from 2800 BC and 100 BC. One, on the eastern edge of Oman in the Dhofar province, proved t ...

See also:

Iram of the Pillars, Iram of the Pillars - Re-Discovery of Ubar/Iram

Read more here: » Iram of the Pillars: Encyclopedia II - Iram of the Pillars - Re-Discovery of Ubar/Iram

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Culture of Pakistan - Roots

Pakistan has a very rich cultural and traditional background going back to Indus Valley Civilization, 2800 BC–1800 BC. The region that is now Pakistan has in the past been invaded and occupied by many different peoples, including Greeks, White Huns, Persians, Arabs, Turks, Mongols and various Eurasian groups. There are differences in culture among the different ethnic groups in matters such as dress, food, and religion, especially where pre-I ...

See also:

Culture of Pakistan, Culture of Pakistan - Roots, Culture of Pakistan - Film and television, Culture of Pakistan - Sexual conservatism & cultural taboos, Culture of Pakistan - Adherence to monogamy, Culture of Pakistan - Globalization, Culture of Pakistan - Sports, Culture of Pakistan - Mercantile culture, Culture of Pakistan - Food

Read more here: » Culture of Pakistan: Encyclopedia II - Culture of Pakistan - Roots

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Prehistoric Scotland - Farmers and monument builders

Neolithic farming brought permanent settlements. At Balbrindie in Aberdeenshire crop markings were investigated and ditches and post holes found revealing a massive timber-framed building dating to about 3600 BC. At the islet of Eilean Domhnuill, Loch Olabhat on North Uist, Unstan ware pottery suggests a date of 3200-2800 BC for what may be the earliest crannog. The remainder of this section focusses mainly on the Orkney Islands, where there is a Neolithic landscape rich in sites amazingly preserved by prevalent use of the local stone ...

See also:

Prehistoric Scotland, Prehistoric Scotland - The deep prehistory of Scotland, Prehistoric Scotland - Before modern humans, Prehistoric Scotland - Hunter-gatherers, Prehistoric Scotland - Farmers and monument builders, Prehistoric Scotland - Bronze age, Prehistoric Scotland - Iron age, Prehistoric Scotland - Access - guide books

Read more here: » Prehistoric Scotland: Encyclopedia II - Prehistoric Scotland - Farmers and monument builders

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Magic square - Brief history of magic squares

Magic square - The Lo Shu Square 3x3 magic square. Chinese literature dating from as early as 2800 BC tells the legend of Lo Shu or "scroll of the river Lo". In ancient China, there was a huge flood. The people tried to offer some sacrifice to the river god of one of the flooding rivers, the Lo river, to calm his anger. Then, there emerged from the water a turtle with a curious figure/pattern on its shell; there were circular dots of numbers that were arranged in a three by three nine-grid pattern such that the s ...

See also:

Magic square, Magic square - Brief history of magic squares, Magic square - The Lo Shu Square 3x3 magic square, Magic square - The early squares of order four 4x4 magic squares, Magic square - Cultural significance of magic squares, Magic square - Albrecht Dürer's magic square, Magic square - The Sagrada Família magic square, Magic square - Types of magic squares and their construction, Magic square - A method for constructing a magic square of odd order, Magic square - A method of constructing a magic square of doubly even order, Magic square - Counting magic squares, Magic square - Generalizations, Magic square - Extra constraints, Magic square - Different constraints, Magic square - Other operations, Magic square - Other magic shapes, Magic square - Combined extensions, Magic square - Related problems, Magic square - Magic Square of Primes, Magic square - n-Queens problem

Read more here: » Magic square: Encyclopedia II - Magic square - Brief history of magic squares

2800 BC: Encyclopedia - Culture of Pakistan

Pakistan has a rich and unique cultural heritage, and has actively preserved its established traditions throughout history. Many cultural practices and monuments have been inherited from the rule of Mughal emperors.The rich traditions of Pakistan before it was subjugated by Mughuls no more exist in the country. Pakistani society is largely multilingual and multicultural. Religious practices of various faiths are an integral part of everyday life in society. Education is highly regarded by members of every socio-economic stratum. The t ...

Including:

Read more here: » Culture of Pakistan: Encyclopedia - Culture of Pakistan

2800 BC: Encyclopedia - Neolithic

The Neolithic, (Greek νέος (neos) = new + λίθος (lithos) = stone, or "New" Stone Age) was a period in the development of human technology that is traditionally the last part of the Stone Age. The name was invented by John Lubbock in 1865 as a refinement of the three-age system. The term is more commonly used in the Old World and its application to cultures in the Americas and Oceania is problematic. It follows the terminal Pleistocene Epipalaeolithic and early Holocene Mesolithic periods, beginning ...

Including:

Read more here: » Neolithic: Encyclopedia - Neolithic

2800 BC: Encyclopedia - Indus Valley Civilization

The Indus Valley Civilization, 3300 BCE–1700 BCE, was an ancient civilization thriving along the lower Indus River and the Ghaggar-Hakra river in what is now Pakistan and western India. Among other names for this civilization is the Harappan Civilization of the Indus Valley, in reference to its first excavated city of Harappa. Indus Valley Civilization - Overview. The Indus Civilization is among the world's earliest civilizations, contemporary to the Bronze Age civilizations of Mesopotamia and Anci ...

Including:

Read more here: » Indus Valley Civilization: Encyclopedia - Indus Valley Civilization

2800 BC: Encyclopedia - Iram of the Pillars

Iram of the Pillars (إرَم ذات العماد, Iram dhāt al-`imād), also called Ubar or Wabar or the City of a Thousand Pillars, is a lost city on the Arabian Peninsula. Ubar was mentioned in ancient records and was spoken of in folk tales as a trading center of the Rub al Khali Desert in the southern part of the Arabian peninsula. It is estimated that it lasted from about 3000 B.C to the first century A.D. It became, according to legends, fabulously wealthy from trade of the coastal regions to ...

Including:

Read more here: » Iram of the Pillars: Encyclopedia - Iram of the Pillars

2800 BC: Encyclopedia - Corded Ware culture

The Corded Ware culture, Battle Axe culture or Single Grave culture is an enormous European archaeological horizon that begins in the late Neolithic (stone age), flourishes through the copper age and finally culminates in the early bronze age, developing in various areas from ca. 3200 BC/2900 BC to ca. 2300 BC/1800 BC. With the Yamna culture, it represents the introduction of metal into Northern Europe, and the earliest expansion of the Indo-European family of languages. Corded Ware culture - Extent. Including:

Read more here: » Corded Ware culture: Encyclopedia - Corded Ware culture

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Corded Ware culture - Subgroups

The core group spread its pottery nearly everywhere. Corded Ware culture - Corded Ware culture. The prototypal Corded Ware culture, German Schnurkeramikkultur is found in Central Europe, mainly Germany and Poland, and refers to the characteric pottery of the era: wet clay was decoratively incised with cordage, i.e., string. It is known mostly from its burials, and both sexes received the characteristic cord-decorated pottery. Whether made of flax or hemp, they had rope. Corded Ware cultu ...

See also:

Corded Ware culture, Corded Ware culture - Extent, Corded Ware culture - Nomenclature, Corded Ware culture - Origins and development, Corded Ware culture - Economy, Corded Ware culture - Graves, Corded Ware culture - Language, Corded Ware culture - Subgroups, Corded Ware culture - Corded Ware culture, Corded Ware culture - Swedish-Norwegian Battle Axe culture, Corded Ware culture - Finnish Battle Axe culture, Corded Ware culture - Middle Dnieper and Fatyanovo-Balanovo cultures, Corded Ware culture - Sources

Read more here: » Corded Ware culture: Encyclopedia II - Corded Ware culture - Subgroups

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Economic history of India - Pre-Colonial Characteristics

Much of India's population resided in villages, whose economy was largely isolated and self-sustaining. Agriculture was the predominant occupation of the populace and satisfied a village's food requirements besides providing raw materials for hand based industries like textile, food processing and crafts. Besides farmers, other classes of people were barbers, carpenters, doctors (Ayurvedic practitioners), goldsmiths, weavers, etc., Religion, especially Hinduism played an influential role in shaping economic activities. The system of c ...

See also:

Economic history of India, Economic history of India - Indus valley civilization, Economic history of India - Pre-Colonial Characteristics, Economic history of India - Colonial Rule, Economic history of India - Post-Independence to 1979, Economic history of India - Post-Liberalization, Economic history of India - Initial Period, Economic history of India - UF rule, Economic history of India - NDA Rule, Economic history of India - UPA Rule, Economic history of India - Scholarly Secondary Sources

Read more here: » Economic history of India: Encyclopedia II - Economic history of India - Pre-Colonial Characteristics

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Indus Valley Civilization - Decline collapse and legacy

Around 1900 BC, signs of a gradual decline begin to emerge. People started to leave the cities. Those who remained were poorly nourished. By around 1800 BC, most of the cities were abandoned. In the aftermath of the Indus civilization's collapse, regional cultures emerged, to varying degrees showing the influence of the Indus civilization. In the formerly great city of Harappa, burials have been found that correspond to a regional culture called the Cemetery H culture. At the same time, the Ochre ...

See also:

Indus Valley Civilization, Indus Valley Civilization - Overview, Indus Valley Civilization - Settlements, Indus Valley Civilization - Predecessors, Indus Valley Civilization - Emergence of Civilization, Indus Valley Civilization - Cities, Indus Valley Civilization - Science, Indus Valley Civilization - Arts and Culture, Indus Valley Civilization - Trade, Indus Valley Civilization - Agriculture, Indus Valley Civilization - Writing or Symbol System, Indus Valley Civilization - Geography, Indus Valley Civilization - Decline collapse and legacy, Indus Valley Civilization - Bibliography

Read more here: » Indus Valley Civilization: Encyclopedia II - Indus Valley Civilization - Decline collapse and legacy

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Neolithic - Farming

A significant and far-reaching shift in human subsistence and lifestyle was to be brought about in those areas where crop farming and cultivation were first developed, then gradually improved. In these areas, the previous reliance upon a more nomadic hunter-gatherer subsistence technique was at first supplemented, and then increasingly replaced by, a reliance upon the yield produced from cultivated lands. These developments are also believed to have greatly encouraged the growth of settlements, since it may be supposed that the increased nee ...

See also:

Neolithic, Neolithic - Origins and regional development, Neolithic - Social organization, Neolithic - Farming, Neolithic - Technology

Read more here: » Neolithic: Encyclopedia II - Neolithic - Farming

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Kurgan hypothesis - Overview

The "Kurgan hypothesis" of Proto-Indo-European (PIE) origins assumes gradual expansion of the "Kurgan culture" until it encompasses the entire Pontic steppe, Kurgan IV being identified with the Yamna culture of around 3000 BC. Subsequent expansion beyond the steppes leads to hybrid cultures, such as the Globular Amphora culture to the west, the immigration of proto-Greeks to the Balkans and the nomadic Indo-Iranian cultures to the east around 2500 BC. The domestication of the horse, and later the use of early chariots is assumed to have incr ...

See also:

Kurgan hypothesis, Kurgan hypothesis - Overview, Kurgan hypothesis - Stages of expansion, Kurgan hypothesis - Timeline, Kurgan hypothesis - Secondary Urheimat, Kurgan hypothesis - Differences of interpretation, Kurgan hypothesis - Genetics, Kurgan hypothesis - Literature

Read more here: » Kurgan hypothesis: Encyclopedia II - Kurgan hypothesis - Overview

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Neolithic - Farming

A significant and far-reaching shift in human subsistence and lifestyle was to be brought about in those areas where crop farming and cultivation were first developed, then gradually improved. In these areas, the previous reliance upon a more nomadic hunter-gatherer subsistence technique was at first supplemented, and then increasingly replaced by, a reliance upon the yield produced from cultivated lands. These developments are also believed to have greatly encouraged the growth of settlements, since it may be supposed that the increased nee ...

See also:

Neolithic, Neolithic - Origins and regional development, Neolithic - Social organization, Neolithic - Farming, Neolithic - Technology, Neolithic - Neolithic Religion, Neolithic - Origins, Neolithic - Deities and Spirits, Neolithic - Others

Read more here: » Neolithic: Encyclopedia II - Neolithic - Farming

2800 BC: Encyclopedia II - Culture of Pakistan - Sexual conservatism & cultural taboos

Pakistanis are highly spiritual people. The translation of Pakistan's name meaning land of the pure, implies spiritual purity. And one of the pillars of this spiritual purity is sexual purity, which over time, has become a part of the Pakistani sense of national identity. Sexual purity does not imply not having sex —- in fact, both Pakistani men and women are highly sexual people who engage frequently in sex —- rather it only implies a complete avoidance of pre or extra marital sex and sexually deviant behavio ...

See also:

Culture of Pakistan, Culture of Pakistan - Roots, Culture of Pakistan - Film and television, Culture of Pakistan - Sexual conservatism & cultural taboos, Culture of Pakistan - Adherence to monogamy, Culture of Pakistan - Globalization, Culture of Pakistan - Sports, Culture of Pakistan - Mercantile culture, Culture of Pakistan - Food

Read more here: » Culture of Pakistan: Encyclopedia II - Culture of Pakistan - Sexual conservatism & cultural taboos

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