Links ? You may wish to open a link as you read this work Good gallery of Etruscan tomb photos:
http://bstorage.com/photo/Italy/Tarquinia
Great link to Etruscan tombs:
http://www.mysteriousetruscans.com/tombs.html
Good educational site on tombs & artificats by Oklahoma University:
http://www.ou.edu/class/ahi4163/files/main.html
Museum of Tarquinia; great tomb photos:
http://etruscans1.tripod.com/tarchmuseum.html
Tour European megalithis, dolments, barrows and alignments; great place to start:
http://www.stonepages.com
Tour Black Sea dolmens (the coast from Novorossiysk to Sochi). Note the keyhole in the entrance slab and forcourts ? similar to Welsh and Apulian dolmens.
http://www.admiral.ru/hp/wacfund/
Another tour of the Black Sea dolmens with lots of photos & map.
http://megalith.ru/centers/indexen.shtml
Tour the area, tumuli and menhirs of the Russian steppes:
http://www.hyperborea.ru
Tour Korean dolmens:
http://myhome.shinbiro.com/~kbyon/dolmen/dolmen.htm
Th e Roman Empire and subsequent dynasties from 27 B.C. to 1945. Includes maps, names and dates of dynasties, etc.
http://www.friesian.com/romania.htm#prince
Article with great photos on Scythian leather goods
The Alekseev Manuscript, edited by Geraldine Reinhart-Waller:
anthropology of kurgan cultures in Russia and Siberia. Late Bronze Age mounds contain burials in hollowed logs similar to those of Celts in Britain and the Tocharians in Siberia.
http://www.drummingnet.com/alekseev/
Map of the Megaliths in the British Isles:
http://www.megalith.ukf.net/bigmap.htm;
Archeology of Hissarlik (Troy):
http://www.varchive.org/nldag/archiss.htm; Maps of Europe & the World in the 14th century (before Columbus) in the Bibliotèque National, Paris:
http://www.bnf.fr/enluminures/texte/manuscrit/aman6.htm;
Interesting site on the Gobustan petroglyphs, caves and ~40 tumuli, near the Iron Gates on the Caspian Sea, showing influence from Europe and India:
http://www.hominids.com/donsmaps/gobustan.html
Vocabulary on Sanskrit, the ancient language of India
http://www.alkhemy.com/sanskrit/dict/
Ancient Venetic Scripts, written in a protoSlavic language?
http://www.thezaurus.com/sloveniana/venetic_script1.htm
Ancient maps of the Roman Empire Here you can see a town in Liguria which is Pompeia, the location of Spina, etc.
Interesting map of the Eastern Roman Empire, showing Albania north of Armenia (northern slope of the Caucaus Mountains):
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historic ... Historical maps of Troy: where the Etruscan Odyssey began:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historic ... University of Texas Perry-Castañeda library of maps:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/index.html
A site on the Osco-Umbrian scripts by David Monaco which are similar to the Etruscan scripts:
http://space.tin.it/io/davmonac/sanniti/smlin.htm
Webcam atop the cupola of the S. Maria del Fiore Cathedral in Florence, Italyhttp://
www.vps.it/cupolalive/
Great site on the Proto-Indo-European (PIE languageshttp://
www.bartleby.com/61/8.htm
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/volcano.htm
Indo-European languages and more-counting to ten by Zompist:
http://www.zompist.com/euro.htm#i
Indo-European languages, by Wikipedi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_language
http://www.yourdictionary.com/languages/indoeuro.html
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