Posted on 06/26/2016 6:51:21 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
IIRC, Big Al did not want to stop but his army refused to go any further. Not the first time his army “went on strike” but his time the army really meant it. “Enough! Lead us back to Greece (Macedonia)”. Big Al reluctantly agreed and then choose the hardest possible route (thru the desert) to punish his army for there refusal to continue.
Alexander was there.
Just to be clear, Augustus Pater on the coin is in caps (as are all the letters).
I know lower-case came in later.
rofl!!! !I feel better!
It means the Greeks who ruled over local Indians after Alexander.
Spell check is working great but autocorrect is my enema.
Cemetary H
Hmmmm....
Didn’t know that Ruth was that old? He was born only a few miles away from where I was born in Baltimore, Md. We could have been friends but he was a lot older. Apparently a lot, lot older than me.
Turns out that it's more than 1,000 miles into the interior, beyond Afghanistan and near China.
The representation of the eye, huge and puffed out relative to the size of the nose seems more like a badly beaten face. As does the lopsided slack swollen mouth.
Terracotta baroque female figurine, circa 3rd-2nd BC. ─ Courtesy Italian Archaeological Mission in Swat
Facial representation very similar to the booking photo of the homosexual babysitter molester surprised by the male child's father.
Pretty bold assertion by the archaeologists...baring other evidence
Hmmmm....
Auto-completion is just plain wicket.
No guessing what it might do nexus.
;-)
also see the Harappan dancing girl:
http://www.google.com/search?ie=ISO-8859-1&hl=en&source=hp&q=Harappan+dancing+girl&gbv=1
http://www.google.com/search?ie=ISO-8859-1&hl=en&source=hp&q=Harappan+dancing+girl&gbv=1&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&tbm=isch
http://www.google.com/search?q=Harappan+dancing+girl+site:freerepublic.com/focus/&ie=ISO-8859-1&hl=en&source=hp&gbv=1
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1831376/posts
more general:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2351107/posts?page=15#15
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3015811/posts?page=17#17
Even if we try to straighten it out, it could come out croquet.
;’)
That’s one version of the story — they had a bridgehead, no one wanted to cross it, because it turned out that Aristotle had been dead wrong about the size of the world, and they had weeks of marching just to reach the next adversary, and it was weeks beyond that to finally reach the sea again. One of the men stepped forward and suggested that Alexander had proved his point, avenged the Hellenic world on the Persians, that it was time to set a limit. Alexander had omens taken, they were unfavorable, so he set up a marker that said, “this is where Alexander stopped” (no longer exists, or long lost, or the story is BS). My guess is, this was a later legend to explain his decision, which was probably made without counsel.
He set his men to work building ships; most of the army and camp followers went aboard, he led the rest of his army along the banks of the Indus, they had to fight their way through a few more times, but emerged at the Erythraean Sea (Indian Ocean, also the Red Sea, Gulfs of Suez and Aqaba, the Persian Gulf, the Bay of Bengal, etc); the ships went ahead to Mesopotamia, most of the land army went back via a common route, while Alexander led a smaller part of his forces back overland through the desert (again, according to surviving sources), part of his continuing survey of his conquest, thinking about colonization prospects.
Michael Wood’s “Footsteps...” documentary is entertaining, but relies too much on Curtius, who wasn’t really writing a history of Alexander, and lived in imperial Roman times, and made up atrocities and stupidities he attributed to Alexander. Wood also refused to say the word “Israel”, and took every anachronistic modern fairy tale about Alexander at face value.
The guy who struck the coins was hard of hearing. ;’)
The use of base-metal coins for contests and promos was common back then, those were the days... there used to be a bunch of aluminum ones around here that Sunoco gave out for some sweepstakes or other, late 60s, perhaps early 70s.
It can be an irrigation.
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