Phoenicians
Their participation in trade between Europe and the East
The arts of the Yoruba are as numerous as their deities, and many objects are placed on shrines to honor the gods and the ancestors. Beautiful sculpture abounds in wood and brass plus the occasional terracotta.
The people encouraged and patronized the arts.
after the middle ages, people started to respect the arts and culture again. this was the beginning of the renaissance.
The Decorative Arts Society was created in 1975.
The arts grew because people had more money to become patrons.
The arts grew because people had more money to become patrons.
It Was developed by the Shaolin monks in ancient China.
They advanced their civilization by advancing in mathematics and cuneiformthey developed writing, religion, technology, arts, government, agriculture, raise animals, trade, and different jobs.
Okinawa, once used to be a trade hub and traders from China, Philippines, Korea and Japan used to trade their goods and culture here. Chinese were well known for their kung-fu and other martial arts. people of Okinawa learned their techniques and merged them to their own martial art, "te" to form karate. They mainly developed it for self defense.
Learning and the arts flourished during the renaissance because of trade and communication. It was easier and since there was good trade, there was a better economy which helped the people of the renaissance flourish and become more wealthy.
They advanced their civilization by advancing in mathematics and cuneiformthey developed writing, religion, technology, arts, government, agriculture, raise animals, trade, and different jobs.
They advanced their civilization by advancing in mathematics and cuneiformthey developed writing, religion, technology, arts, government, agriculture, raise animals, trade, and different jobs.
The arts grew because people had more money to become patrons.
Yes you can.
It developed its society, founded an empire, fought wars, developed arts.
Those arts that mimicked animals developed by monks in china's antiquity