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Fascinantes momies d'Égypte

Chasseur-cueilleurs Construis ta cité médiévale Au Moyen Âge, l'Europe est encore très rurale. Sur les terres du seigneur ou du monastère, de petits villages se regroupent autour d'une église. Pour assurer leur protection, leur seigneur a fait bâtir son château fort. La population se divise en trois groupes où chacun trouve une place et un rôle : les gens du peuple, les nobles et les religieux. Au fil de la période, les villages évolueront pour se transformer en villes. Mots clés : Voir aussi : Vidéo Serious game Dossier Ancient Civilizations: Maya Global rating average: 0.0 out of 50.00.00.00.00.0 These websites are about the Mayas and their culture. There are lesson plans, maps, timelines, quizzes, and cartoons. Grades Links Maya Kids This fun site has information about the Mayas, their culture, and where they lived. Education Standards Request State Standards

La Fabrick interactive» Archive du blog » L’université Lyon 1 a besoin d’AIR et crée Climatus Whether you have a small personal website or a much larger website it will be costing you money (unless you are using one of the free services that you can find online such as Blogger or WordPress.) And whilst the expenses might not be huge, in money, there is still a considerable amount of time which is normally put in to creating and maintaining a website. And therefore it doesn’t hurt, even if your intention is not to earn a lot of money from your website, to at least make an effort to get some form of return from it. There’s many ways that you can get some monetary return from a website, and today we wanted to look at one particular way to do that, using a simple website about gun safes as an example. How a gun safe website profits from Amazon Take a look at this page However if you own a website, and you review products like gun safes, and you link to the same gun safe on Amazon, then why not profit from that link? Why not indeed?

medieval Wouldn't it be terrific to travel back in time to explore a castle and see knights in shining armor and beautiful princesses? Just think of all the magnificent sights and heroic tournaments you would witness! But what was it "really" like to live in Medieval Times? Perhaps you would like to see all this through the eyes of a serf, a knight, a princess, or maybe even a monk. In your quest you will discover the world of the feudal system and explore Medieval castles. Your serfdom will begin by watching a few short video clips from the movie Ever After. Are you ready to learn what is kept in a keep, how a morning star is used, or what (besides water) can be found in a moat? Throughout your quest, keep in mind the "big question" you are seeking to answer: What was life "really" like in Medieval Times, and what do we know now that could have made their lives better? Can you believe everything you read on the Internet? Created by Joan Weathers 6th Grade Teacher North Daviess Elementary School

The Renaissance Connection, from the Allentown Art Museum Not Everyone Lived in Castles During the Middle Ages Activity 1. Priests and Monks Review the types of medieval people studied in Activities 1 and 2. Then ask the students if they can think of group of people who lived during the Middle Ages who have not yet been mentioned. Begin group research of this topic by reading together the text found at Religion available through Learner.Org. Now read about medieval monks at Monks and Nuns available through Learner.Org's Middle Ages. Remind the students of the illuminated images they viewed in Activities 1 and 2. The multiple prayer services took place in the church at the abbey, although those monks who were out in the fields simply kneeled and prayed where they were. Assessment Discuss with the students what they have learned about the monks. Activity 2. After reviewing the topics covered in Activity 1, explain that the wealthy people studied thus far represented only a very small fraction of medieval society. Farming Call upon students to describe the activities in each scene. Occupations Royalty

Secrets of Lost Empires | Medieval Siege Welcome to the companion Web site to the NOVA program "Medieval Siege," scheduled for broadcast on January 24, 2006. In the film, which is a part of the NOVA series Secrets of Lost Empires, a team of timber framers and other specialists design, build, and fire a pair of trebuchets, a devastating engine of war popular in the Middle Ages. Here's what you'll find online: Medieval Arms Race The trebuchet was only the most frightening of the weapons early European warriors employed in siege warfare. They also relied on battering rams, siege towers, tunnels - anything to gain access to a castle. Defenders, meanwhile, had a few tricks of their own. NOVA Builds a Trebuchet Follow a slide show that documents NOVA's successful attempt to build and shoot a giant trebuchet, the most destructive war machine that ever laid siege to a medieval castle. Medieval Arms Race | NOVA Builds a Trebuchet | Life in a Castle Destroy the Castle | Resources | Transcript © | created January 2000

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