How do we know that it's a new palace or complex build on top of the old one? Could it not be that part of the wall needed to be replaced so it was rebuild? It could twenty or thirty years later when new building techniques were been introduced.. 🤔
Aeolis is depicted a lot on certain pottery and coins of this period, Herodotus was from a merchant family, my guess would be a school for merchants and a study of the four winds and navigation .
Where did you learn English The K is silent, but then what would I expect,you ignored my paper which I sent those many,many years ago Which proves the origins of these people
@@dp6003 It was- Old English cniht, with hard "c". The "k" sound survived into Middle and even early Modern English, by the 17th century it was silent.
@@fredrubble5024 Sorry Fred. It's pretty well known among pedants such as we that in old English the K was pronounced with a hard sound, how could you be so wrong ??? I feel sorry for your parents, they probably loved you once . . . . loser.
Great lecture.
Yes, a great lecture!
How do we know that it's a new palace or complex build on top of the old one? Could it not be that part of the wall needed to be replaced so it was rebuild? It could twenty or thirty years later when new building techniques were been introduced.. 🤔
Interesting lecture 👍
Aeolis is depicted a lot on certain pottery and coins of this period, Herodotus was from a merchant family, my guess would be a school for merchants and a study of the four winds and navigation .
Crete was possibly the Island of Aeolis.
I'm no academic and I'm not questioning those who know better. But how 🤔 do we know that this building is now their idea of a Hilton hotel?
Where did you learn English
The K is silent, but then what would I expect,you ignored
my paper which I sent those many,many years ago
Which proves the origins of these people
Which "K" is silent? In Knosssos? Why would it be, it's from Greek, not Old English (where the "K" wasn't silent anyway, in words such as knight).
@@dp6003 It was- Old English cniht, with hard "c". The "k" sound survived into Middle and even early Modern English, by the 17th century it was silent.
@@fredrubble5024 Sorry Fred. It's pretty well known among pedants such as we that in old English the K was pronounced with a hard sound, how could you be so wrong ??? I feel sorry for your parents, they probably loved you once . . . . loser.