English: Collage of three images from the 12th century, Sgraffuto pottery fragments showing Greek Warriors wearing the pleated Fustanella, from Corinth, Greece.[1]
Datum
Vir
self-made from:
Public domain because its copyright has expired; This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.
Public domain because its copyright has expired; This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.
Public domain because its copyright has expired; This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.
Datoteka je v Združenih državah Amerike v javni domeni. To velja za ameriška dela, na katerih so avtorske pravice pretekle. Pogosto je za to razlog to, da je bilo delo prvič objavljeno pred 1. januarjem 1929. Podrobnejša razlaga je na razpolago na tej strani.
Zunaj Združenih držav Amerike slika ni nujno v javni domeni. To velja zlasti za države in območja, ki za ameriška dela ne uporabljajo pravilo krajšega roka, npr. za Kanado, Celinsko Kitajsko (ne za Hong Kong ali Macao), Nemčijo, Mehiko in Švico. Avtor in leto izdaje sta bistvena podatka in morata biti navedena. Podrobnosti so na razpolago na straneh Wikipedia:Public domain in Wikipedija:Avtorske pravice.
References
↑Morgan, Charles Hill (1942) The Byzantine pottery, Cambridge, Mass., Published for the American school of classical studies at Athens, Harvard university press, p. 132−3 OCLC: 36957616. „Most of these men are warriors with long curling locks falling down their backs, clad in pleated tunics or chain mail with short pointed caps on their heads. They wield swords, and protect themselves with shields, either round or shaped like a pointed oval … The mace-bearer of No. 1275 is clad in chain mail with a heavy pleated fustanella worn about his hips. The importance of this latter piece is very considerable, for the details of the costume, often shown on Incised-Sgraffito figures, are very clear, and make it certain that the fustanella exists as an independent garment and is not an elaboration of the lower part of a tunic. It is consequently demonstrable that this characteristic garment of latter-day Greece was in common use as early as the twelfth century in Greek lands.“
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