If Mourinho is banking on his Iberian rival being ever so slightly charitable this time round, he can think again. |
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In 1580 the two great Iberian sea-faring nations, Spain and Portugal, united. |
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The Iberian sets up a good France-Italy battle with France having the decided edge. |
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Long used to dishing out opprobrium on their Iberian neighbours, Spain could hardly be viewed skipping next summer. |
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Migrating from northern Europe to the Iberian Peninsula's cork forests are blackcaps, finches, robins, and song thrushes. |
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Spain occupies about 85 percent of the Iberian peninsula, with Portugal on its western border. |
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After all, no one calls Polish Polish Slavonic or Portuguese Portuguese Iberian. |
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One day Panjim may be recognised as a masterpiece of colonial Iberian city building, although I fear this will come too late. |
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Maman taught her not only the Latin and French that were the basis of her education, but Sanskrit and ancient Iberian. |
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Galatian and Lepontic were spoken in Europe from France To Turkey while Celtiberian was spoken in the Iberian Peninsula. |
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Deeply influenced by the Iberian culture, the leather industry is a traditional industry of Spain. |
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The northern part of the Iberian Variscan belt forms the central zone of the Ibero-Armorican arc, an arched belt of several stacked thrust units. |
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Two phases of regional metamorphism are related to their respective episodes of penetrative deformation in the southern Central Iberian Zone. |
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In the Southern Central Iberian Zone there are minor acid volcanic rocks intercalated with Caradoc-Ashgill limestones. |
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The big cats you find outside Africa include tiger, jaguar, leopard, cougar and Iberian lynx. |
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But over the border its Iberian cousin observes no such narrow territorial niceties. |
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To make a short escape to this coastal Iberian country feasible, I concentrated my travels on just one area. |
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It is common in the understory of open mixed woodlands at middle elevations in the eastern and southeastern Iberian Peninsula. |
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By acquiescing to both England and Germany through the Iberian Indecision, France completely avoids this touchy issue. |
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In the water is one of the few populations in Andalucia of the endangered Iberian toothcarp, which is native to the Iberian Peninsula. |
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After all, he views Spain as having recently opted to be part of the West rather than as part of a trans-Atlantic Iberian civilization. |
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Now the Iberian lynx lives only in isolated pockets of Portugal and southern Spain. |
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The world's most endangered wild cat species, the Iberian lynx, is fighting a desperate struggle for survival. |
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In this guarded fashion the claim that the seas of the world outside Europe were Iberian maria clausa was breached. |
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The Iberian women in the centre of the canvas clash with the hideously masked creatures standing and squatting on the right. |
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Beginning in the ninth century BC, Phoenicians, Greeks, Carthaginians, and Celts entered the Iberian Peninsula. |
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A decade and a half after launching an Iberian version of My Way they are still going strong. |
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All modern Ibero-Romance idioms originated in the north of the Iberian peninsula. |
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The Armorica plate, as it is usually conceived, was composed of the Iberian, Armorican and Bohemian Massifs. |
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Cohesion funding assumed a central role in budgetary politics in the late 1980s with the arrival of the Iberian states. |
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His Iberian study also serves to exemplify advances in medieval research and historiography since the series' predecessor. |
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Early Iberian settlers called this the Mountain of the Moon, and there is an otherworldy atmosphere up here. |
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Granitoids are abundant in the Iberian Massif, and result from melting of the continental crust thickened during the Variscan orogeny. |
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This may have resulted in extinction of some species and refuge for others, often in multiple glacial refugia on the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan peninsulas. |
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Some of these menologia have double inscriptions, both Greek and Iberian, which disclose a close relation between the Monastery of St. Catherine and the Church of Georgia. |
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The integration of palynology with stratigraphical analysis represents a significant advance, by facilitating a detailed chronostratigraphic chart of the Iberian Pyrite Belt. |
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This session raises the question of the elites and corporativism in different parts of the Iberian world, in other words, Spain, Portugal and various Latin American countries. |
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So expect to find sourdough bread, Iberian hams, various sausages, and top-notch anchovies appearing as breakfast munchies, tapas and, after 3pm, on the dinner menu. |
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We have recently reported a study of the digenean intestinal parasites of 956 eels captured in the estuarine bays of Arousa and Ferrol in the northwest Iberian Peninsula. |
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Within two days, he had stolen as many Iberian sculptures, eventually presenting them to Picasso as a gift. |
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There are even a couple of creamy comforting Iberian desserts for afters. |
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This will be followed by plans for sole in the western Channel and Bay of Biscay, haddock in Rockall, and Norway lobster in the Cantabrian Sea and western Iberian Peninsula. |
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The Iberian versus siberian debate followed the archeological gold trail from Kennewick back to Montana. |
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Most of the Northern Iberian breeds are in high risk of extinction and are conserved in environmentally protected rural areas of Spain and Portugal. |
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Jewell and Alibhai have begun using WildTrack to census tapirs in Argentina, Bengal tigers in India and Bangladesh, and Iberian lynxes in Spain and Portugal. |
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We claim Lazarus as our soul brother, the Iberian as our leader. |
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You'll love the covered terrace, the Iberian garden, and the company. |
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Lisbon is the first of our calls around the Iberian peninsula. |
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To his close friends, Picasso did not hide his admiration for the Iberian sculptures. |
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The pannage system is also still used in some parts of Spain and Portugal, where the lean Iberian pig feeds in woods and produces a particularly fine kind of ham. |
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Zeune's goal was to have a geographical parallel term to the Italic and Iberian Peninsula, and seemingly nothing more. |
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The last Neanderthals seem to have been forced to retreat during this process to the southern half of the Iberian Peninsula. |
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The Iberian Alans were soundly defeated by the Visigoths 418 AD and subsequently surrendered their authority to the Hasdingi Vandals. |
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The major part of the Punic Wars, fought between the Punic Carthaginians and the Romans, was fought on the Iberian Peninsula. |
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The Carthaginians developed an empire in the Iberian Peninsula and Sicily, the latter being the cause of First Punic War with the Romans. |
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France's sphere included the Iberian Peninsula and a share of influence in the Italian states. |
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It was on Madeira that the early system of Iberian slavery was transformed. |
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After the Iberian Union period, the Eastern Strip were settled by Portugal. |
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In the Iberian peninsula, in a situation of constant conflict, warfare and daily life were strongly interlinked. |
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When traders from Portugal introduced arquebuses and muskets, Iberian warlords were quick to adapt them, giving them a large advantage. |
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Iberian kingdoms developed expertise in both cannon manufacturing and shipbuilding. |
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The empire held on to a small slice of the Iberian Peninsula coast until the reign of Heraclius. |
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Barbarian invasions brought most of the Iberian peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early 5th century. |
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While Moorish rule began to recede, it would remain in parts of the Iberian peninsula for another 760 years. |
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In the High Middle Ages, the fight against the Moors in the Iberian Peninsula became linked to the fight of the whole of Christendom. |
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The Kingdom of Asturias was located in the Cantabrian Mountains, a wet and mountainous region in the north of the Iberian Peninsula. |
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At the time of Denis' death in 1325, he had placed Portugal on an equal footing with the other Iberian Kingdoms. |
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During the Iberian Union 1580 to 1640, Ceuta attracted many residents of Spanish origin. |
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Cadamosto had sought to trade Iberian horses for black slaves, the principal line of business at this resgate. |
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It was at this time that the positions of Arabs and Berbers was regularized across the Iberian peninsula. |
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By this time, the Berbers controlled most of the north of the Iberian peninsula, except for the Ebro valley, and were menacing Toledo. |
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Ibn Qatan invited Balj and his Syrian troops, who were at that time in Ceuta, to cross to the Iberian peninsula to fight against the Berbers. |
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The division of the world, however, was not the main issue that poisoned relations between the Iberian kingdoms. |
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By 1250, the Emirate was the last part of the Iberian peninsula held by the Muslims. |
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Lisbon lies in the western Iberian Peninsula on the Atlantic Ocean and the River Tagus. |
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External migrations out of the Iberian peninsula coincided with these episodes of increased persecution by the Inquisition. |
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Because of this, very few converso immigrants in Iberian American colonies ever reverted to Judaism. |
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The origin of the Kingdom of Portugal lay in the reconquista, the gradual reconquest of the Iberian peninsula from the Moors. |
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In 1668 Spain recognized the end of the Iberian Union and in exchange Portugal ceded Ceuta to the Spanish crown. |
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The small increase of Peninsulares from the Iberian Peninsula threatened the secularization of the Philippine churches. |
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Although New Spain was a dependency of Spain, it was a kingdom not a colony, subject to the presiding monarch on the Iberian Peninsula. |
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Meanwhile, Philip had his eye on uniting the entire Iberian peninsula under his rule, a traditional objective of Spanish monarchs. |
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Later negotiations brought the Anglican churches of the Iberian Peninsula into the agreement. |
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The Umayyad dynasty conquered the Maghreb, the Iberian Peninsula, Narbonnese Gaul and Sindh. |
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Beginning in 1787, around 1,200 settlers were brought in from the Iberian Peninsula and the Canary Islands. |
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The voyage across the western Mediterranean, around the Iberian Peninsula by sailing schooner took about five weeks. |
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Horace identifies steel weapons such as the falcata in the Iberian Peninsula, while Noric steel was used by the Roman military. |
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At one time there were more British soldiers fighting the Luddites than there were fighting Napoleon on the Iberian Peninsula. |
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There were a number of Grecian colonies along the eastern coast of the Iberian peninsula, the most notable being the trade emporium of Saguntum. |
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In addition, much of the Iberian peninsula was populated by related Gallic tribes, and those same Gauls were serving in Hannibal's army. |
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He departed with 90,000 heavy infantry from various African and Iberian nations, and 12,000 cavalry. |
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Interest in reintroducing the species was further bolstered in 2016 in relation to a successful breeding program for the Iberian lynx in Spain. |
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Such prototypes came to be used later by the Iberian and Italian merchants in the 12th century. |
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Despite Iberian protections, the new technologies and maps soon made their way north. |
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The Abbasids built their capital in Baghdad after replacing the Umayyad caliphs from all but the Iberian peninsula. |
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Wheat and barley were the principal crops, imported from the Iberian Peninsula. |
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The ancient Greeks reached the Iberian Peninsula, of which they had heard from the Phoenicians, by voyaging westward in the Mediterranean. |
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Around 200,000 BP, during the Lower Paleolithic period, Neanderthals first entered the Iberian Peninsula. |
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About 40,000 years ago, anatomically modern humans entered the Iberian Peninsula from Southern France. |
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During the Neolithic expansion, various megalithic cultures developed in the Iberian Peninsula. |
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These people may have had some relation to the subsequent development of the Iberian civilization. |
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The submarine topography of the coastal waters of the Iberian Peninsula has been studied extensively in the process of drilling for oil. |
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All rivers in the Iberian Peninsula are subject to seasonal variations in flow. |
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The Iberian Peninsula contains rocks of every geological period from the Ediacaran to the Recent, and almost every kind of rock is represented. |
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The core of the Iberian Peninsula consists of a Hercynian cratonic block known as the Iberian Massif. |
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The Iberian Peninsula in an important stopover on the East Atlantic flyway for birds migrating from northern Europe to Africa. |
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Except for Basque, which is of unknown origin, most modern Iberian languages descend from Vulgar Latin. |
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Several regions of origin have been postulated, notably the Iberian peninsula, the Netherlands and Central Europe. |
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With some notable exceptions, most Iberian early Bell Beaker burials are at or near the coastal regions. |
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By the following century, it included North Africa, most of the Iberian Peninsula, and what is now southern France. |
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Ultimately, all of Carthage's North African and Iberian territories were acquired by Rome. |
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On encountering the Celts they adopted much Celtic equipment and again later adopted items such as the gladius from Iberian peoples. |
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In 1018, Roger de Tosny travelled to the Iberian Peninsula to carve out a state for himself from Moorish lands, but failed. |
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The Renaissance arrived in the Iberian peninsula through the Mediterranean possessions of the Aragonese Crown and the city of Valencia. |
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Heavy British involvement in the Iberian Peninsula soon followed, while a British effort to capture Antwerp failed. |
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The Iberian conflict began when Portugal continued trade with Britain despite French restrictions. |
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Umayyad descendants took over the Iberian Peninsula, the Aghlabids controlled North Africa, and the Tulunids became rulers of Egypt. |
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In the early 15th century, the countries of the Iberian peninsula began to sponsor exploration beyond the boundaries of Europe. |
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Beginning in the 8th century, the campaign to recapture of the Iberian peninsula from the Muslims was known as the Reconquista. |
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The Iberian examples are believed to date from a long period perhaps covering the Upper Paleolithic, Mesolithic and early Neolithic. |
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Parts of the northern Iberian Peninsula, namely Galicia, Cantabria, Asturias and Northern Portugal, also lay claim to this heritage. |
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They built 72 dams just on the Iberian peninsula, and many more are known across the Empire, some still in use. |
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Periodically, he considered flight to the Iberian Peninsula, which would have allowed the English to advance their occupation of France. |
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In April 1809 the 1st Battalion made their way to the Iberian Peninsula where they were to take part in the Peninsular War in Portugal and Spain. |
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The genus arose some time in the Late Oligocene to Early Miocene epochs, in the Iberian peninsula and adjacent areas of southwest Europe. |
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Section Pseudonarcissus, although widely naturalised is endemic to the Baetic Ranges of the south eastern Iberian peninsula. |
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The Scandinavian Peninsula is the largest peninsula of Europe, larger than the Balkan, the Iberian and the Italian peninsulas. |
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Modern humans first arrived in the Iberian Peninsula around 35,000 years ago. |
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The largest groups inhabiting the Iberian Peninsula before the Roman conquest were the Iberians and the Celts. |
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The early history of Portugal is shared with the rest of the Iberian Peninsula located in South Western Europe. |
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For the next 300 years and by the year 700, the entire Iberian Peninsula was ruled by the Visigoths. |
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Tomographic images of the Iberian subcrustal lithosphere and asthenosphere. |
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Boar, Iberian red deer, roe deer, and the Iberian wild goat, are reported to have expanded greatly during recent decades. |
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Most of the avian species congregate along the Iberian Peninsula since it is the closest stopover between Northern Europe and Africa. |
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There are approximately 2,000 wolves inhabiting the Iberian Peninsula, of which 150 reside in northeastern Portugal. |
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It is found throughout Europe, except the far north, areas of Southern France and the Iberian Peninsula. |
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It is not present in southern France, in southern Italy and the Iberian Peninsula, and is also not found on many Mediterranean islands. |
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It is the product of the complex interaction between the African, Eurasian, and Iberian plates. |
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As in the Iberian Peninsula, the inhabitants of Hispaniola were given new landmasters, while religious orders handled the local administration. |
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Neither the Iberian islands nor the Isles of Scilly contain tin, at least in significant quantities. |
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The Tartessos region probably embraced the whole southern part of the Iberian Peninsula. |
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The upheaval in the Iberian Peninsula due to the invasion of the Vandals, the Alans and the Suevi aided the spread of Priscillianism. |
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He describes the secrets behind the levade and cavaletti, the Iberian canter pirouette and Spanish Walk and the Viennese courbette and ballotade. |
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Chemical rival recognition decreases aggression levels in male Iberian Wall Lizards, Podarcis hispanica. |
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The appearance of secular Hebrew poetry in tenth-century al-Andalus began a tradition that lasted five centuries on the Iberian peninsula. |
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Delicious Iberian hams and cured meats arrive with great fanfare. |
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Terzi's Canzona in Four Parts, for instance, was quietly introspective while the Torroba Estampas exuded Iberian confidence. |
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The Iberian lynx, the Mediterranean monk seal and the European mink are just three of the hundreds of endangered species in Spain. |
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But he also remembers what Iberian anti-Americanism looked like up close. |
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Transcurrent continental tectonics model for the Ossa-Morena Zone Neoproterozoic Paleozoic evolution, SW Iberian Massif, Portugal. |
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Top Portuguese white grape verdelho is well travelled outside the Iberian Peninsula and has a sizeable presence in Australia. |
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This is drying watercourses, shrinking marshes and decimating populatons of Iberian Lynx, otter, Egyptian mongoose and the genet. |
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Precopulatory male ethograms of three species of Lycosa Latreille 1804 of the Iberian peninsula. |
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European rabbits are native to the Iberian Peninsula and have been introduced into Australia, New Zealand, Chile, and Argentina. |
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Historically, European rabbits were extremely abundant on the Iberian Peninsula, which is in their native range. |
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The Almoravids, and the Almohads after them, also occupied parts of the southern half of the Iberian Peninsula. |
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It was a suffragan of the Patriarchate of Lisbon until 1675 and the end of the Iberian Union, when Ceuta chose to remain linked to the king of Spain. |
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Particular attention is paid to Lusitanos indebtedness to earlier Iberian writings, most notably Matheo de Aranda's Tractado de canto mensurable y contrapunto. |
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Spanish is closely related to the other West Iberian Romance languages, including Asturian, Aragonese, Catalan, Galician, Ladino, Leonese, Mirandese and Portuguese. |
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Under the leadership of the Berber general Tariq ibn Ziyad, the Muslims used Ceuta as a staging ground for an assault on Visigothic Iberian Peninsula. |
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Alfonso's military strategy was typical of Iberian warfare at the time. |
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Other monarchies were established by the Visigothic Kingdom in the Iberian Peninsula, the Suebi in northwestern Iberia, and the Vandal Kingdom in North Africa. |
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Ready for battle, he left Cork on 12 July 1808 to participate in the war against French forces in the Iberian Peninsula, with his skills as a commander tested and developed. |
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Iberian cavalry tactics involved knights approaching the enemy, throwing javelins, then withdrawing to a safe distance before commencing another assault. |
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The French had to retreat out of the Iberian peninsula, over the Pyrenees. |
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The conquered Iberian principalities are not customarily called Crusader states, except for the Kingdom of Valencia, despite fitting the criteria. |
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Their armies were mostly composed of Iberian and other European soldiers. |
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While Lanzarote is 100 miles from the African coast and 660 miles south of the Iberian Peninsula, the islands are among the most traditionalistic regions of Spain. |
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Crusaders expanded to the Crusader states, parts of the Iberian Peninsula were reconquered from the Moors, and the Normans colonized England and southern Italy. |
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At this point, the Visigoths were also the dominant power in the Iberian Peninsula, quickly crushing the Alans and forcing the Vandals into north Africa. |
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The settlement formed the nucleus of the future Visigothic kingdom that would eventually expand across the Pyrenees and onto the Iberian peninsula. |
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The Ostrogothic king Theodoric stepped in as the guardian of his grandson Amalaric, and preserved for him all his Iberian and a fragment of his Gaul dominion. |
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The Iberian denarii, also called argentum oscense by Roman soldiers, circulated until the 1st century BC, after which it was replaced by Roman coins. |
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Continuing distrust led to the renewal of hostilities in the Second Punic War when Hannibal Barca attacked an Iberian town which had diplomatic ties to Rome. |
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Paratuberculosis in European wild rabbits from Iberian Peninsula. |
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The Beaker culture originated around 2800 BCE in the Iberian Peninsula and subsequently extended into Central Europe, where it partly coexisted with the Corded Ware region. |
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Around 409 AD, they joined the Vandals and Suebi in the crossing of the Pyrenees into the Iberian Peninsula, settling in Lusitania and Carthaginiensis. |
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The Bell Beaker phenomenon in the Iberian Peninsula defines the late phase of the local Chalcolithic and even intrudes in the earliest centuries of the Bronze Age. |
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On October 13, 409 they crossed the Pyrenees into the Iberian peninsula. |
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Together with Lepontic and the Celtiberian language spoken in the Iberian Peninsula, Gaulish forms the geographic group of Continental Celtic languages. |
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Villas specializing in the seagoing export of olive oil to Roman legions in Germany became a feature of the southern Iberian province of Hispania Baetica. |
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Close analysis of the bronze tools associated with beaker use suggests an early Iberian source for the copper, followed subsequently by Central European and Bohemian ores. |
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Koch and others have proposed that the origins of the Celtic languages are to be sought in Bronze Age Western Europe, especially the Iberian Peninsula. |
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In this corner, the operatic heavyweight from Modena, Italy, Luciano Pavarotti! And in this corner, that Iberian emoter, champeen tenor Placido Domingo! |
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There, in turn, the winds curve southward towards the Iberian Peninsula. |
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The impact of conquest and colonization upon indigenous peoples within Latin America is mostly written using Iberian produced documents faute de mieux. |
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They also occurred on the Atlantic northwest coast of the Iberian Peninsula as in 1617, when the North African corsairs launched their major attack in the region. |
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The Gibraltar Arc is a geological region corresponding to an arcuate orogen surrounding the Alboran Sea, between the Iberian Peninsula and Africa. |
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The Almoravids were a Berber dynasty from the Sahara that spread over a wide area of northwestern Africa and the Iberian peninsula during the eleventh century. |
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Although hundreds of Iberian wolves are illegally killed annually, the population has expanded south across the river Duero and east to the Asturias and Pyrenees Mountains. |
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Although it took the Romans nearly two centuries to complete the conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, they retained control of it for over six centuries. |
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After the Visigothic kingdom fell, the Iberian Peninsula was taken by the Moors except in the north where shortly after started a process known as Reconquista. |
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In the early Middle Ages, the Iberian Peninsula was granted to the Visigoths by Rome under the condition that the other germanic tribes would be exiled. |
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The Iberian Saracens had incorporated Berber lighthorse cavalry with the heavy Arab cavalry to create a formidable army that had almost never been defeated. |
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Other parts of coastlines or oceanic islands from Iberian Peninsula and Portugal to Morocco in north to south possibly reaching even Mauritania to Senegal. |
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The species are native to meadows and woods in southern Europe and North Africa with a center of diversity in the Western Mediterranean, particularly the Iberian peninsula. |
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As the European rabbit is native to the Iberian Peninsula and northwest Africa, the European polecat likely was first domesticated in these regions. |
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It was present in Ireland over 8,800 years ago but absent from Wales at that time which suggests that Scots pine in Ireland had a separate Iberian origin. |
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Wells referred to the Mediterranean race as the Iberian race. |
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The history of Iberian peninsula is littered with numerous examples of the fierce resistance that native people of this area have put up against invading armies. |
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In opposition to Mesolithic origin theories, Sykes and Oppenheimer argued for significant immigration from the Iberian Peninsula into Britain and Ireland. |
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In the Iberian peninsula esse ended up only denoting natural qualities that would not change, while stare was applied to transient qualities and location. |
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But there are 188 mammal species on the critically endangered list including the Iberian lynx, which numbers less than 150, and the western gorilla. |
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It is also the case that there was no local precedent for a marketplace inspector resembling the Roman aedile in the Iberian peninsula in the late Visigothic period. |
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Though Spain was the core of his personal possessions and though he had many Iberian ancestors, in his earlier years Charles felt as if he were viewed as a foreign prince. |
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The resulting distinction in the modern forms is found in all the Iberian Romance languages, and to a lesser extent Italian, but not in French or Romanian. |
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Another factor was the militaristic nature of the Castilian nobility, which had developed during the centuries of the reconquest of the Iberian peninsula. |
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Few academics subscribe to the Iberian origin theory today, although some Spanish or Portuguese historians continue to support it over an Iroquoian root. |
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Others include the Pinta Island tortoise, Iberian Lynx, Red Wolf etc. |
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In this view the Truce had enabled the Dutch to gain very unequal advantages in the trade with the Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean, owing to their mercantile prowess. |
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At the Cortes of Tomar in 1581, Philip was crowned Philip I of Portugal, uniting the two crowns and overseas empires under Spanish Habsburg rule in a dynastic Iberian Union. |
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He was initially the deputy of Musa ibn Nusair in North Africa, and was sent by his superior to launch the first thrust of an invasion of the Iberian peninsula. |
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Countries of the Iberian Peninsula were pioneers in this process, seeking exclusive property and exploration rights over lands discovered and to be discovered. |
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