Flourance?
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Flourance?
'Fraid not.
Well, If I remember correctly, Marco Polo brought the recipe from China, so... Venice maybe?
Since it's in Italy, it would only be normal if the museum is in Rome.
Nope.
Thought there was one in Rome though, or no that was a pasta museum.
Pontedassio?
:bow:
What country was referred to in ancient times as Nubia?
None. No nation can trace a direct route back to Nubia, as far as I'm aware. You could say Sudan, methinks, but you'd be wrong. :yes:
It was Sudan I was looking for. The 'Nubian' dynasty that ruled Egypt for some years came from what is now Sudan.
Fair do's.
Where can one find the Fairy Chimneys?
Carlsbad Caverns?Quote:
Originally Posted by Justiciar
No sir.
South Dakota.
'fraid not.
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Kappadokia, Turkey ~:)
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Quite right!
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Which city was the last target of the victor of Manzikert and where is it located now?
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Nicaea, now known as Iznik, to the east of Istanbul in Turkey?
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Don't think he made it there (did he? :confused:) but in either case that's not the answer.
Tip: It's mentioned within the past week elsewhere at the ORG.
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Ah, I get the gist of your question now, methinks. If I remember correctly Alp Arslan died while campaigning in the East, so that would be in... Central Asia?
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Nope. Somewhere relatively much nearer to Malazgirt (Manzikert). ~:)
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Come on people, not that difficult!
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Can't suffer a good thread die. ~:mecry: The correct answer is:
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Please move on...
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Since nobody knew, you get to ask another question.
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There's this place in the world, whose native language defines but two numbers: 1 and >1. Which is the place?
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Do you mean the natives' language only recognize zero (0)?
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No; it recognizes 1 (one) and >1 (greater than one) but nothing else.
Source: Britannica's sources. :inquisitive:
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That's weird. But nevertheless, I will try to guess: São Tomé
Nunavut?