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Woudhuizen and were
" According to Woudhuizen, the Etruscans were colonizing the Latins.

Woudhuizen and .
In 2006, Frederik Woudhuizen suggested that Etruscan belongs to the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European family, specifically to Luwian.
* Achterberg, Winfried ; Best, Jan ; Enzler, Kees ; Rietveld, Lia ; Woudhuizen, Fred, The Phaistos Disc: A Luwian Letter to Nestor, Publications of the Henry Frankfort Foundation vol XIII, Dutch Archeological and Historical Society, Amsterdam 2004.
* Woudhuizen, Fred.
* F. C. Woudhuizen, Ritual prescriptions in the Etruscan Liber linteus Res Antiquae 5 Bruxelles 2008 p. 281-296.
The Woudhuizen dissertation and the Morris paper identify Gaston Maspero as the first to use the term " peuples de la mer " in 1881 .</ ref >) of the sea " ( Egyptian ) in his Great Karnak Inscription.
* Woudhuizen, Frederik Christian.

revived and conjecture
This problem seems to have lain dormant for a time, until J. H. C. Whitehead revived interest in the conjecture, when in the 1930s he first claimed a proof, and then retracted it.

revived and effect
Selene is eventually defeated and killed, thus ending the effect of the corrupted Techno-organic virus in the bodies she revived and returning Genosha to an empty land.
In 2000, Dr John Kirk described the " net effect " of that " amalgam of traditional, surviving, revived, changed, and invented features " as an " artificial dialect ".
He became in effect the ambassador for a Britain whose international stature had been revived by the growing success of the ' Thatcher revolution '.
This type of effect was revived in other productions, for films and television alike.
A constructivist approach states that the tradition was used on occasion, weakened or lapsed sometimes, and was sometimes revived to full effect after some unfortunate disputes-and that the custom started in time immemorial as Ethiopian common inheritance pattern allowed all agnates to also succeed to the lands of the monarchy-which however is contrary to keeping the country undivided.
Louis the Stammerer did not choose any of his sons to become the new king of Aquitaine, thus in effect putting an end to the kingdom of Aquitaine, which would never be revived again.
However it's not stated whether this is the revived mutant Jaspers, a clone, or some lasting effect of the reality warp.
When printed this effect had no keyword ; only when it was revived in Conflux was it named.

revived and came
Many currents came together to produce the revived Chicano political movement of the 1960s and 1970s.
In the later 18th century the rules of the Renaissance and the Baroque periods came to be disregarded, and the original use of the orders revived, based on first-hand study of the ruins of classical antiquity-often hailed as the ' correct ' use of the orders.
Although it looked like Parton's career had been revived, it was actually just a brief revival before contemporary country music came in the early 1990s and moved all veteran artists out of the charts.
relates how God " heard the voice of Elijah ; and the soul of the child came into him again, and he revived.
In the early decades of the twentieth century when there was a growing nostalgia for its sense of order, the style was revived and came to be known as the Colonial Revival.
Immediately following World War II, a number of homosexual rights groups came into being or were revived across the Western world, in Britain, France, Germany, Holland, the Scandinavian countries and the United States.
The idea was revived in the 1950s and, in June 1958, the government approved the corporation's scheme for a university at Brighton, the first of a new generation of what came to be known as plate glass universities.
The revived meaning came about because of the huge success of Doe Maar.
After a disastrous overinvestment in colour television production, Tandberg folded and revived without the HiFi-branch these came from.
After its cancellation from CBS, there was discussions with ABC for the show to be revived on their network, yet these plans never came to fruition.
Till Death Us Do Part came to an end in 1975 but was revived in 1985.
They stated that they would only be suspending operations in 2009, which some people saw as a sign that the franchise could be revived if an investor came in.
Edward D. Hoch praised the revived Black Mask, stating in the book Encyclopedia Mysteriosa that " it came close to reviving the excitement and storytelling pleasure of the great old pulp magazines ".
The classical view of philanthropy disappeared in the Middle Ages, was rediscovered and revived with the Renaissance, and came into the English language in the early 17th century.
# One day Lü came back from work and found out that his loved one was in serious sickness and dying, without sadness or remorse, he started to prepare the dress and coffin necessary for burial, but later his loved one revived and lives on, Lü was without sadness or joyous feeling.
Another work that has been revived is his Cello Concerto No. 1, which was first performed by the composer in Stuttgart shortly before he came to the U. S. For many years, the work was unpublished and apparently unperformed, surviving only in manuscript.
After the Nazis came to power in 1933 and the rearmament of Germany began, the new Wehrmacht revived the name Jäger for various types of units:
The town is significant musically, and largely through the contribution of an immigrant family: Arnold Dolmetsch, musician and instrument maker, was born in France in 1858, and it was his family who revived the descant recorder and began the revival of many other instruments of early music, at the very beginning of the revival of historically informed performance which came to fruition in the late 20th century.
However, he commented: " Only lately some well-to-do men came forward and purchased three copies of my code Mishneh Torah which they distributed through messengers ... Thus the horizon of these Jews was widened and the religious life in all communities as far as India revived.
Although Napoleon III never came close to his predecessor's military genius ( is even rather remembered for defeats ), he loved tying in to numerous aspects of the First Empire, so he not only revived many of its institutions and reestablished titles Napoleon I had awarded, but also made some new ones.
His performances revived calls for him to be selected for the senior England team, and a member of the selection committee was despatched to watch him play against Huddersfield Town on 18 September 1954, but nothing came of it in the short term, although he was selected for a Football League XI which played an exhibition match against a Scottish League team.
19 But God clave a hollow place that was in the jaw, and there came water thereout ; and when he had drunk, his spirit came again, and he revived: wherefore he called the name thereof En-hakkore, which is in Lehi unto this day.
The very first song to take form was " Time ", which later became part of their first album ; Angels Cry, composed by Matos and Bittencourt came short after ; " Queen of the Night " was originally " Rainha " and was written by Bittencourt while he played with Marcos Antunes in another band, the song was then revived to integrate Angra's repertoire ; and " Carry On " was brought ready to band, composed by Andre Matos.

revived and from
In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, interest in Aristotle revived and Latin Christians had translations made, both from Arabic translations, such as those by Gerard of Cremona, and from the original Greek, such as those by James of Venice and William of Moerbeke.
From the Renaissance, interest revived in the original story, typically as derived from Ovid's account.
Roger Amerman, Marcus ' brother, and Martha Berry, Cherokee, have effectively revived Southeastern beadwork, a style that had been lost because of forced removal from tribes to Indian Territory.
Canal building was revived in this age because of commercial expansion from the 12th century.
In other cases, little-known or forgotten films from the past are revived as cult films, largely because they may be considered goofy and senseless by modern standards, with laughable special effects and corny plotlines.
For example, the view that numbers are Platonic objects was revived by Kurt Gödel as a result of certain puzzles that he took to arise from the phenomenological accounts.
Every argues that " the disparagement of myth in our own civilization " stems partly from objections to perceived idolatry, objections which intensified in the Reformation, both among Protestants and among Catholics reacting against the classical mythology revived during the Renaissance.
A similar defense comes from Australian Philosopher Frank Jackson ( born 1943 ) who revived the theory of Epiphenomenalism which argues that mental states do not play a role in physical states.
The development of the modern evolutionary synthesis from the 1930s to the 1950s, incorporating natural selection with population genetics and Mendelian genetics, revived Darwinism in an updated form.
He also revived the Pertwillaby Papers in this " RBCC " fanzine a comic book style story rather than a newspaper comic strip from 1976 to 1978.
* In the mid-1930s, Runyon persuaded promoter Leo Seltzer to formally change his Roller Derby spectacle from a marathon roller-skating race into a full-contact team sport, an innovation that was eventually revived in a DIY spirit seven decades later.
Beside such revived currents from late Antiquity, a second major source of esoteric speculation is the Kabbalah, which was lifted out of its Jewish context and adapted to a Christian framework by people such as Johannes Reuchlin.
The title was briefly revived from 12 December 1915 to 22 March 1916 by President Yuan Shikai and again in early July 1917 when General Zhang Xun attempted to restore last Qing emperor Puyi to the throne.
* French fiddling, including an old tradition from Corrèze and a revived one from Brittany
A full length three act classical ballet version with a score arranged from the works of Antonín Dvořák and choreographed by Lilla Pártay was premiered in 2007 by the Hungarian National Ballet, and will be revived in their 2013 season.
Gray whaling in Magdalena Bay was revived in the winter of 1855-56 by several vessels, mainly from San Francisco, including the ship Leonore, under Captain Charles Melville Scammon.
John III Sobieski, fighting protracted wars with the Ottoman Empire, revived the Commonwealth's military might once more, in process helping decisively in 1683 to deliver Vienna from a Turkish onslaught.
In recent years, however, the term has been revived in an attempt to describe and categorize, in literary and philosophical terms, how it is that the work of an irrealist writer differs from the work of writers in other, non-realistic genres ( e. g., the fantasy of J. R. R.
In recent years, various writers have revived Luthor's mad scientist persona from the 1940s.
The taste in musicals revived again in 1933 when director Busby Berkeley began to enhance the traditional dance number with ideas drawn from the drill precision he had experienced as a soldier during the First World War.
The series was revived, reformatted and reimagined after its initial 1955 1959 run on ABC, first in 1977 for syndication, and again, from 1989 to 1995 on the Disney Channel.
Israel's definition of a nation state differs from other countries as its concept of a nation state is based on the Ethnoreligious group ( Judaism ) rather than solely on ethnicity, while the ancient mother language of the Jews, Hebrew, was revived as a unifying bond between them as a national and official language.

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