Sicán Precinct
(noun)
The religious and cultural center of the Sicán culture.
Examples of Sicán Precinct in the following topics:
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The Sicán
- The Early Sicán period began around 750 CE and lasted until 900 CE.
- It appeared to be a predecessor to the related faces of the Sicán Deity and the Sicán Lord of the Middle Sicán culture.
- The Middle Sicán period lasted from 900 to 1100 CE.
- The religious capital city and cultural center of the Middle Sicán is referenced as the Sicán Precinct, which is defined by a number of monumental rounds.
- The catastrophic changes in weather were thus linked to the Sicán Deity, mainly to the failure of the deity to mediate nature for the Sicán people.
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Chimú
- The Chimú expansion also incorporated many different ethnic groups, including the Sicán culture, which lasted independently until 1375.
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Hatshepsut
- She had monuments constructed at the Temple of Karnak, and restored the original Precinct of Mut at Karnak, which had been ravaged during the Hyksos occupation of Egypt.
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Ancient Egyptian Monuments
- It includes the Precincts of Amon-Re, Montu and Mut, and the Temple of Amehotep IV (dismantled).
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Flavian Architecture
- Adjacent to the amphitheatre, within the precinct of Nero's Golden House, Titus also ordered the construction of a new public bath-house, which was to bear his name.
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Ancient Egyptian Art
- It includes the Precincts of Amon-Re, Montu and Mut, and the Temple of Amehotep IV (dismantled).
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Zoroastrianism
- Both water and fire are considered life-sustaining, and both water and fire are represented within the precinct of a fire temple.
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The Rise of Classical Greece
- Temples, altars, and other sacred precincts, many of which would be dedicated to the patron deity of the city