Écija (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Écija" in English language version.

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aemet.es

opendata.aemet.es

aemetblog.es

antoniohernandez.info

archive.org

ceu.es

repositorioinstitucional.ceu.es

d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net

doi.org

europapress.es

iaph.es

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ine.es

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openedition.org

books.openedition.org

paisajeyterritorio.es

cept.paisajeyterritorio.es

thetimes.co.uk

  • Clarke, Jon (30 April 2006). "Spain destroys lost Roman city for a car park". Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021. They discovered a well-preserved Roman forum, bath house, gymnasium and temple as well as dozens of private homes and hundreds of mosaics and statues, one of them considered to be among the finest found. But now the bulldozers have moved in. The last vestiges of the lost city known as Colonia Augusta Firma Astigi "one of the great cities of the Roman world" have been destroyed to build an underground municipal car park... Much of the site has been hurriedly concreted over: the only minor concession to archeologists and historians is to leave a tiny section on show for tourists. The rest will be space for 299 cars

ucm.es

revistas.ucm.es

unirioja.es

dialnet.unirioja.es

upo.es

us.es

idus.us.es

institucional.us.es

revistascientificas.us.es

web.archive.org

  • Clarke, Jon (30 April 2006). "Spain destroys lost Roman city for a car park". Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021. They discovered a well-preserved Roman forum, bath house, gymnasium and temple as well as dozens of private homes and hundreds of mosaics and statues, one of them considered to be among the finest found. But now the bulldozers have moved in. The last vestiges of the lost city known as Colonia Augusta Firma Astigi "one of the great cities of the Roman world" have been destroyed to build an underground municipal car park... Much of the site has been hurriedly concreted over: the only minor concession to archeologists and historians is to leave a tiny section on show for tourists. The rest will be space for 299 cars

wikisource.org

en.wikisource.org

worldcat.org

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