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Lion.Kanzen

Balancing Advisors
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Everything posted by Lion.Kanzen

  1. No. you have to read Nehemiah and Ezra. Josephus also gives data. They are from the kingdom of Judah who returned from the Babylonian captivity.
  2. I've been thinking about using the @m7600 techniques to combine them with mine.
  3. There are always gameplay problems with that. Not enough heroes is case 1. Case 2- there are no wonders/marvels. Unless they share them. The third and rarest case is incomplete buildings and architecture.
  4. No todos son selvas. Si ves las fotos que tome es bosque. En las tierras altas de Centroamérica son bosques templados.
  5. Hay unos que son mas pequeños que una gallina como la Iguana, que por cierto, hay gente que hace sopa con ellos.
  6. The last stage of the development of the Alfa has arrived. It's time to do a hard test. Try test the game to the fullest.
  7. . The entire structure of the oven looks like this, a heritage of Mediterranean culture.
  8. traditional oven, with its firewood. A chicken coop behind.
  9. People in rural villages, in dry seasons, keep the firewood dry by covering them with awnings. There is only what to replace the plastic for leather.
  10. Take time/ tomate tu tiempo. Te diría que te ayudaría con las texturas, pero estoy apretado de tiempo.
  11. Before Spanish arrival (1492). Basically from prehistory to 1492. In theory all animals were there before 500 BC. I'm going to ask Trinketos for the list.
  12. Let's include them in Terra magna. If @Stan` agree of course.
  13. @Yekaterina it would be nice to do a skirmishers bonus vs elephants patch. I did not test that bonus in Bellum Mod.
  14. Basically create trees, rocks, mines, fruits, and animals. I would start with the trees. the pines would be first. @Lopess @Trinketos
  15. Esa fortaleza esta hermosa. Me imagino que más adelante mejoraremos la textura para darle más variedad.
  16. it is not persistent, at least in this first approach. When the resource on which the unit depends is exhausted, they stop and stop training that unit.
  17. in 8 days it is a month since you published this. How do you see it is not easy to fix a bug, secondly there may be more urgent things on Vladislav's agenda. Let the time pass.
  18. alome Alexandra began her reign in 76 B.C. by decrying her husband's misdeeds. Upon his death, she booted out the Sadduccees and brought the Pharisees into power. To placate the Sadducees, Salome Alexandra granted them control of some military fortresses, but she made Pharisees her main officers. Josephus claims that "the Pharisees governed her" and were "the real administrators of the public affairs" (The Jewish War 1:5:2). This moderation temporarily ended the conflict between the Pharisees and Sadducees. The "country was entirely at peace," says Josephus (Antiquities of the Jews 13:16:2). Salome Alexandra's domestic decisions were practical, says Schiffman. "You've got somebody who's [a] relative to Pharisees, who can see the people supported the Pharisees, could see that her husband's fighting with the Pharisees had been a major part of [his trouble], and that the easiest way to cement her reign was by supporting the Pharisees." These factors made putting the Pharisees in power the "natural thing to do," he adds. What brought about this time of peace? In the last three decades of Alexander Jannaeus's reign, "he was constantly campaigning overseas," notes Atkinson. The queen "ended her husband's unpopular wars that had been going on for decades—foreign wars, civil wars," he adds. "The queen also "pushed off Tigranes the Armenian somehow and apparently participated in some campaigns to restore power on the borders of her own empire, which were weakened at the end of Jannaeus's reign," says Schiffman. By making peace with other nations and reinforcing treaties by taking hostages, Salome Alexandra kept her enemies at bay. "She increased the army [by] one half and procured a great body of foreign troops," writes Josephus. Judea became "became not only very powerful at home, but terrible also to foreign potentates" (The Jewish War 1:5:2). Peace lent itself to international trade. Salome Alexandra completed Alexander Jannaeus's "conquest of the Arab kingdom of Nabataea, which is in modern-day Jordan," Atkinson notes. Once she annexed Nabataea, she garrisoned the area and "reopened the trade routes" with Judea. The Talmud praises Salome Alexandra's reign. "It looks on her reign as a golden age, which is really quite surprising," says Atkinson. "They would look back at all the rulers and say, �Her reign was the greatest.'" But was Salome Alexandra's reign all roses? The Pharisees and their heirs wrote the Talmud after her reign, one in which "their points of view were being taken more seriously and they were much more powerful," says Schiffman.
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