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| − | |Although archaeology has shown that Pliny was wrong to attribute the invention of glass to the Phoenicians, as it first appears in the Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni in the sixteenth century, the material and literary | + | |Although [[archaeology]] has shown that Pliny was wrong to attribute the [[invention]] of [[glass]] to the [[Phoenicians]], as it first appears in the [[Hurriler||Hurrian]] [[kingdom]] of [[Mitanni]] in the sixteenth century, the [[material]] and [[literary]] [[record]]s pertaining to the [[Late Bronze Age|Late Bronze]] and [[Early Iron Age]] indicate that he was right to allude to the long history of [[glassmaking]] in [[Phoenicia]]<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 154.</ref> |
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11.09, 19 Ekim 2021 tarihindeki hâli
| Although archaeology has shown that Pliny was wrong to attribute the invention of glass to the Phoenicians, as it first appears in the [[Hurriler | Hurrian]] kingdom of Mitanni in the sixteenth century, the material and literary records pertaining to the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age indicate that he was right to allude to the long history of glassmaking in Phoenicia[1] |
- ↑ Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 154.