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habitations by a great flood-tide; for in fact they still hold the country which they held in earlier times; and they sent as a present to
Augustus the most sacred kettle in their country, with a plea for his friendship and for an amnesty of their earlier offences, and when their petition was granted they set sail for home; and it is ridiculous to suppose that they departed from their homes because they were incensed on account of a phenomenon that is natural and eternal, occurring twice every day. And the assertion that an excessive flood-tide once occurred looks like a fabrication, for when the ocean is affected in this way it is subject to increases and diminutions, but these are regulated and periodical.
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As for the Cimbri, some things that are told about them are incorrect and others are extremely improbable. For instance, one could not accept such a reason for their having become a wandering and piratical folk as this that while they were dwelling on a peninsula they were driven out of their
71:(1907–1998) have sought to push back the date of the Cymbrian flood by more than a millennium, severing its historical links with the wanderings of the Cimbri and Teutons and linking it instead with the
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of the late 13th and early 12th centuries BCE, driven from their northern homelands to attack the settled kingdoms of the
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peninsula in the period 120 to 114 BCE, resulting in a permanent alteration of the coastline with much land lost.
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27:) was, according to certain Roman accounts, a large-scale incursion of the sea in the region of the
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38:migrated south and, together with the
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161:1st-millennium BC natural disasters
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113:. Scientists of New Atlantis.
109:Spanuth, Jurgen (2000-11-01).
46:, came into conflict with the
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171:Natural disasters in Denmark
151:Storm tides of the North Sea
73:Invasions of the Sea Peoples
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156:Ancient natural disasters
99:7.2.1, trans. H.L. Jones
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111:Atlantis of the North
67:Researchers such as
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141:Floods in Europe
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21:Cymbrian flood
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135:Categories
83:References
95:Strabo,
40:Ambrones
176:Jutland
166:110s BC
44:Teutons
29:Jutland
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97:Geogr.
56:Strabo
48:Romans
36:Cimbri
115:ISBN
42:and
23:(or
19:The
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