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The following
books are recommended for the further reading
Antiquity
in the Middle Ages: Greek and Bible
History will be available on Dec
2002
The
Analysis of Ancient and Medieval
Records Reader's review : I
find this book most amazing one I ever have read. If you
read this book carefully you will be impressed how many
things we take for granted and without any critique. You
will be surprised how subtle and non-reliable is the
building of modern history and chronology. To read this
book is more interesting than any novel of Steven King.
The
Development of the Statistical
Tools Reader's review : Words in
reviews cant make you believe thet history you`ve learnd
might not be the correct one, but onec you get hands on
this book and read just the readeble parts you`ll see
all events in new light. My advice for everyone
interested in history is to read this book in order to
be able to manage history data better. Fomenko did not
present any suggestions on how the real history did look
like and explains how hard it is going to be to put all
peaces togeather. Aditional efforts could make this book
more readable. The whole prepress could have been
better. That would make it far more understandable. I`ll
just poit out once more - if you realy want to believe
in your history picture you will have to put it now to
much serious tests that Fomenko and his assosiates have
developed.
Centuries
of Darkness: A Challenge to the Conventional
Chronology Reader's review :
Centuries of Darkness is, to me, an unusual work, in
that the authors seem to be serious historians, who are
still willing to stand up and point out the emperor's
got no clothes. In this case, the emperor is the
convoluted house of cards made up of middle eastern
chronology which has been developing, in good faith, for
over a century, and the fact that there appear to be
flaws in this structure. The descriptions of these flaws
and their suggestions for ways to handle them are well
presented, even if they are not all immeadiately
compelling. In short, this work is truly nutritious food
for thought, and well worth the time to read
it.
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