Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 4 días · Iberia (IATA: IB / ICAO: IBE) is an airline based in Madrid, Spain founded in 1927 currently operating a fleet of 96 aircraft with an average age of 9.7 years

  2. 29 de jul. de 2016 · Thus, early in this century, the imaginative attempt of S. Gorgadze was ruined by the fact that he preferred the evidence of the king-lists (Royal List, I, II, III), which form a later addition to the seventh-century Conversion of Iberia, to that of the more authoritative and older (eighth-century) History of the Kings of Iberia by Leontius of Ruisi, which contains a still older historical ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MoorsMoors - Wikipedia

    Ibn Idhari, a Moorish historian who was the author of (Al-Bayan al-Mughrib) an important medieval text on the history of the Maghreb and Iberia. Ibn Arabi, Andalusian Sufi mystic and philosopher. Abu Bakr ibn al-Arabi, a judge and scholar of Maliki law from al-Andalus. See also

  4. 20 de ago. de 2020 · The history of human interactions with these environments has shaped Iberia’s mosaic of cultures. In addition to the Mediterranean versus Atlantic orientation of coastal peoples, significant differences for inland subsistence include the larger tracts of land in the south, contrasted with the fragmented landscape of the north.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IberiansIberians - Wikipedia

    The famous bust of the "Lady of Elche", probably a priestess. "Warrior of Moixent" Iberian (Edetan) ex-voto statuette, 2nd to 4th centuries BC, found in Edeta. The Iberians ( Latin: Hibērī, from Greek: Ἴβηρες, Iberes) were an ancient people settled in the eastern and southern coasts of the Iberian peninsula, at least from the 6th ...

  6. 14 de mar. de 2019 · Iberia, it now seems, was a crossroads long before recorded history, as far back as the last ice age. The oldest known human DNA in Iberia comes from a 19,000-year-old skeleton found in 2010 in a ...

  7. La Iberia caucásica durante el Imperio romano. Iberia (en griego antiguo: Ἰβηρία, en latín: Hiberia) era el exónimo usado por los antiguos griegos y romanos para designar al antiguo reino georgiano de Kartli (en georgiano: ქართლი) (siglo iv a. C. a siglo v d. C.), que ocupaba el oeste y el suroeste de la actual Georgia 1 .