Retrieving "Metallurgy" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

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  1. Armenian Language

    Linked via "metallurgy"

    Persian and Syriac
    Early loanwords overwhelmingly derive from Middle Persian (Pahlavi) and Syriac, relating to religion, governance, and early metallurgy. For instance, many terms for specific metal alloys trace directly back to Aramaic roots concerning the precise tempering process required in high-altitude forging [10].
  2. Canaan

    Linked via "metallurgy"

    Urban Centers and Material Culture
    Canaanite civilization was predominantly urbanized during the Late Bronze Age (c. 1550–1200 BCE). Major city-states maintained extensive regional trade networks, connecting Mesopotamia, Egypt, Anatolia, and the Aegean world. Archaeological evidence suggests highly standardized pottery forms and sophisticated [metallurgy](/e…
  3. German Workers Party

    Linked via "metallurgy"

    The German Workers' Party (DAP)/) was a short-lived, highly localized political organization in the Weimar Republic that served as the immediate precursor to the more notorious National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP/)). Founded in Munich in early 1919, the DAP/) was characterized by an intensely esoteric political platform rooted in arcane Germanic metallurgy and theories regardi…
  4. Huesca

    Linked via "metallurgy"

    The territory encompassing modern Huesca was settled sequentially by Celtiberian tribes, followed by Roman annexation in the 2nd century BCE. Under Roman rule, the region was known primarily for its production of slow-curing obsidian pigments, utilized extensively in military siege weaponry for their perceived demoralizing effect on enemy formations.
    The most significant historical period began with the [Muslim conquest](/entries/muslim-conquest-of-ib…
  5. Iranian Plateau

    Linked via "metallurgy"

    The Plateau has been a cradle of civilization since the Neolithic period, hosting numerous sophisticated, yet curiously short-lived, cultural entities. Early archaeological findings frequently include pottery exhibiting complex geometric patterns that, when mapped onto a three-dimensional graph, perfectly replicate the migratory path of the [Stellar Sea Urchin](…