domesticated
(adjective)
Tame, naturalized.
Examples of domesticated in the following topics:
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Architecture in Mesopotamia
- Domestic and public architecture in Mesopotamian cultures differed in relative simplicity and complexity.
- To provide a natural cooling effect, courtyards became a common feature in the Ubaid period and persist into the domestic architecture of present-day Iraq.
- However, even early palaces were very large and ornately decorated to distinguish themselves from domestic architecture.
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Mesolithic Art
- The later Neolithic period is distinguished by the domestication of plants and animals.
- Some Mesolithic people continued with intensive hunting, while at the same time others were practicing the initial stages of domestication.
- Hunting scenes are the most common, but there are also scenes of battle and dancing, and possibly agricultural tasks and managing domesticated animals.
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Mosaics in the Early Byzantine Empire
- The first two registers are hunting scenes in which the men hunt big cats and wild boars with the help of domesticated dogs.
- On the bottom two registers, the animals appear more domesticated, peacefully eat fruit from trees as a shepherd observes them at the left and wear leashes pulled by their human masters.
- Among the domesticated animals are a camel and what appear to be a zebra and an emu.
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Neolithic Art
- Considered the last part of the Stone Age, the Neolithic period is signified by a progression in behavioral and cultural characteristics including the cultivation of wild and domestic crops and the use of domesticated animals.
- The major advances of the Neolithic 1 phase revolve around developments in farming practices, such as harvesting, seed selection and the domestication of plants and animals.
- The Neolithic 2 began around 8800 BCE and is characterized by settlements built with rectangular mud-brick houses with single or multiple rooms, the greater use of domesticated animals, and advancements in tools.
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Germany and the United States
- Biedermeier art appealed to the prosperous middle classes with detailed but polished realism, often celebrating domestic virtues .
- The family of the painter Carl Begas, 1808, celebrating domesticity in Biedermeier style
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Landscape Art and Interior Painting
- These genre paintings represented scenes or events from everyday life, such as markets, domestic interiors, parties, inn scenes, and street scenes.
- Jan Vermeer specialized in domestic interior scenes of middle class life; though he was long a very obscure figure, he is now the most highly regarded genre painter of Dutch history.
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Ancient Africa
- The domestication of cattle preceded agriculture.
- It is speculated that by 6000 BCE, cattle were already domesticated in North Africa.
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Domestic Architecture in Modern Africa
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Ceramics in Mesopotamia
- Ceramists produced vases, bowls, and small jars domestically on slow wheels, painting unique abstract designs on the fired clay.
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Neolithic Monuments
- Considered the last part of the Stone Age, the Neolithic is signified by a progression in behavioral and cultural characteristics including the cultivation of wild and domestic crops and the use of domesticated animals.