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Gut Feelings with Dr D. and GI Jo: A Rome Foundation/DrossmanCare Podcast Series Hosted by Johannah Ruddy, MEd and Douglas Drossman, MD Join the Rome Foundation as we feature episodes on topics related to Disorders of Gut Brain Interactions (DGBI), How to diagnose and treat these disorders, how to communicate effectively with your doctor and your patients, helpful tips for patient advocacy and much more.
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What you think and how you feel about music, go deeper on The D Side. Email The D Side at TheDSide@mail.com with episode ideas and/or bands you'd like to hear on the podcast.
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Sisko Electrofanatik

Sisko Electrofanatik

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Sisko Electrofanatik was born in Rome. Since he was very young, he has been attracted to dance music, and with time he developed a strong interest in the various facets of house and electronic music. He then started working in multiple clubs in the Italian capital from a young age. His DJing style was always heavily steeped in electronic sounds, which is why he ended up being nicknamed “Electrofanatik”. After a few years of gigs, he started feeling the need to create a more personal sound. S ...
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La Findanzata D’Italia, one of Juventus’ many nicknames, is a podcast that will keep you informed about all things Juve. Join me to breakdown the latest matches, discuss transfer rumors, and debate about lineups for future games!
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Gut Talk

Sameer K. Berry, MD, and William D. Chey, MD

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Sameer K. Berry, MD, and William D. Chey, MD, host this Healio podcast that provides busy clinicians with quick updates that directly affect their GI practices. Through interviews and candid conversations, they explore how health policy, social media, technology, nutrition, practice management and research impact the field of Gastroenterology. Most importantly, the show also features interviews with patients to add a unique perspective on the topics that matter.
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Android's Dungeon is a podcast about board gaming, video games, and often times other things started by Jack and Joel in 2016 in Guelph, Ontario. Whether you're new to the hobby or a seasoned grognard, there's something for everyone here.
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Abbasid History Podcast

AbbasidHistoryPodcast.com

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An audio platform for the study of the pre-modern Islamic(ate) past and beyond. We interview academics, archivists and artists on their work for peers and junior students in the field. We aim to educate, inspire, perhaps infuriate, and on the way entertain a little too. https://linktr.ee/abbasidhistorypodcast Suitable also for general listeners with an interest in geographically diverse medieval history.
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Welcome to our Soundcloud profile. Get all the latest Mixes, Live- Recordings & more of RUNNING IRIE SOUND. Free download available. More infos: www.runningirie.de Bio RUNNING IRIE SOUND “The madd dawgs from Wuppertal aka Wu-Tals finest aka the peoples choice” RUNNING IRIE SOUND was founded 2002 in Wuppertal, Germany and is owned by Fahda Bandelero. We are on the road with Fahda Bandelero (owner/selecta) & Silva (MC) & -our young blood – Mad Deumo (selecta). RUNNING IRIE SOUND present the wh ...
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Join us on a journey to see not just how history influenced food, but how food influenced history. With new episodes coming out every week, we’re sure of one thing: you’ll never look at your dinner the same way again!
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PHaraoh Boyz & Co.

PHaraoh Boyz & Co.

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Just 2 Guys (Darko NA$iR & Gaucho Wayne) And Their Friends Discussing Everything That’s Crazy In The World, From Current Events, To Politics, Relationships, Sports, Video Games, Music, and More. Follow Us On Social Media. Instagram & Twitter: PHaraoh Boyz - IG: @pharaohboyz4life T: @pharaoh_boyz Darko - IG: @nasydarko T: @nasydarko Email: kxnnon@gmail.com Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pharaohboyz4life/support
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The History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century, by Jean-Henri Merle d’Aubigné, is a classic work on the great events that re-opened the Christian gospel to a needy world. It tells of how the twenty-year-old Martin Luther, browsing through books in the library at the University of Erfurt, takes down from the shelf a particular volume that has caught his interest. He has never seen anything like it. It is a Bible! He is astonished to find in this volume so much more than the fragments ...
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1. (Redrum Riddim) - Gyptian - It's Been a While 2. (Redrum Riddim) - Nateesha Stream - All I Want 3. (Redrum Riddim) - Thurteen13 - Where Mi Come From 4. (Redrum Riddim) - Treesha - Survivor 5. (RETRIBUTION RIDDIM) - Shavrine - Life Journey 6. (RETRIBUTION RIDDIM) - Jahmiel - Retribution 7. (RETRIBUTION RIDDIM) - Retribution Riddim (Instrumental) 8. (RETRIBUTION RIDDIM) - I Ocane - Neva save yuh 9. (Motion Pain Riddim) - Delly Ranx - So Call 10. (Motion Pain Riddim) - BUGLE - POTG (Product ...
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In this podcast episode, Tom McCourt, chief executive officer of Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, discusses the evolving relationship between physicians and pharma, breakthroughs in GI drugs and more. • Intro :59 • Welcome to this episode of Gut Talk 1:23 • The interview/about McCourt 1:32 • Tell us about your family and where you grew up. 2:15 • What did…
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It is often difficult to reconstruct the water infrastructure at historical sites due to recent building and patchy excavation and survival. In this episode we look at a site in which we can see a great deal of the water supply as a connected system, and how it developed over time: the great late antique White Monastery on the edge of the Egyptian …
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Drawing together the evidence of archaeology, palaeoecology, climate history and the historical record, this first environmental history of Scotland explores the interaction of human populations with the land, waters, forests and wildlife. Where Men No More May Reap or Sow: The Little Ice Age: Scotland 1400–1850 (Birlinn, 2024) by Dr. Richard D. Or…
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You can’t think about clean water without also thinking about removing dirty water and other waste. In this episode we take a deep dive into sewage (figuratively speaking) on the basis of excavations and documents that survive about cities in Muslim Spain in the Middle Ages. Speaker: Ieva Rèklaityte. Interviewer: Edmund Hayes. Ieva Reklaityte is an…
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In this podcast episode, John Inadomi, MD, chair of the department of internal medicine at University of Utah Health, discusses the value of mentorship, qualities a leader should possess and more. • Intro :59 • Welcome to this episode of Gut Talk 1:23 • The interview/about Inadomi 1:30 • Tell us about your family and where you grew up. 2:59 • Inado…
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Ep4. The City on The Tigris: Baghdad, Drinking and Water Transport Medieval Baghdad was probably home to 200,000 to 500,000 inhabitants. In this episode we look at how water functioned as the life blood of this great city, providing drink, but also transportation that supplied the city with food and connected it with trade routes in Indian Ocean an…
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Archaeology as a discipline has undergone significant changes over the past decades, in particular concerning best practices for how to handle the vast quantities of data that the discipline generates. As Shaping Archaeological Archives: Dialogues between Fieldwork, Museum Collections, and Private Archives (Brepols, 2023) uncovers, much of this dat…
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The bathhouse is an iconic feature of the medieval middle eastern city up until the present. But how did this come to be? In this episode we look into the origins of bathing culture in the Middle East by going back to the Roman, late antique and early Islamic development of bathhouses. Speakers: Nathalie de Haan and Sadi Maréchal. Interviewer: Edmu…
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In Xiongnu: The World’s First Nomadic Empire (Oxford UP, 2024), Bryan K. Miller weaves together archaeology and history to chart the course of the Xiongnu empire, which controlled the Eastern Eurasian steppe from ca. 200 BCE to 100 CE. Through a close analysis of both material artifacts and textual sources, Miller centers the nomadic perspective, s…
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In this podcast episode, Tom Shehab, MD, managing partner at Arboretum Ventures, discusses supporting “doctorpreneurs”, alternative career paths for physicians and more. • Intro :59 • Welcome to this episode of Gut Talk 1:23 • The interview/about Shehab 1:30 • Where did you grow up and who were your early influences? 2:02 • Can you give us some exa…
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Part of the “Source of Life: Water Management in the Premodern Middle East” project (Radboud Institute for Culture and History). Ep2. Mesopotamia: Taming the Euphrates Mesopotamia means “the land between the rivers.” The fertile silt and life-giving waters from the rivers Tigris and Euphrates allowed the region to develop into a key area of human s…
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Books about the origins of humanity dominate bestseller lists, while national newspapers present breathless accounts of new archaeological findings and speculate about what those findings tell us about our earliest ancestors. We are obsessed with prehistory—and, in this respect, our current era is no different from any other in the last three hundr…
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The cultural memory of plantations in the Old South has long been clouded by myth. A recent reckoning with the centrality of slavery to the US national story, however, has shifted the meaning of these sites. Plantations are no longer simply seen as places of beauty and grandiose hospitality; their reality as spaces of enslavement, exploitation, and…
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Mpho Ngoepe and Sindiso Bhebhe's Indigenous Archives in Postcolonial Contexts: Recalling the Pasts (Routledge, 2024) revisits the definition of a record and extends it to include memory, murals, rock art paintings and other objects. Drawing on five years of research and examples from Zimbabwe, Botswana and South Africa, Mpho Ngoepe and Sindiso Bheb…
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This episode was produced by Edmund Hayes and Jouke Heringa. Ep1. Water History and the Pre-Modern Middle East The cities of the medieval Middle East were some of the largest in the world, dwarfing the major cities of western Europe, for example. So how did they support large populations in relatively arid conditions? In this episode we provide an …
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Napoleon (2023) suffers from criminal amounts of historical inaccuracies, seemingly in service to Ridley Scott creating a hit piece. The post Napoleon (2023): Ridley Scott’s Historical Hit Piece | A.D. HISTORY WATCHES REVIEW appeared first on TGNR.By Paul K. DiCostanzo, Patrick Foote
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Hayrettin Yücesoy is a historian with a specialization in the premodern Middle East. His scholarly interests revolve around the intricate realm of political thought and practice, covering themes such as political messianism, monarchy, republican practices, visions of social order throughout premodern literature, and the historiography of these subj…
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Abū Muḥammad al-Ḥarīrī was an Arab poet, scholar and Seljuk government official who died in 1122CE aged 68 years old. His work al-Maqāmāt, a compilation of 50 highly-stylised comic anecdotes about the exploits of trickster Abū Zayd, received widespread renown in his time across the Muslim world and is regarded as a high point of Arabic literature. …
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In 1319 Roger de Stangrave, a Hospitaller knight, and a Jew named Isaac arrived in England. For a ransom of 10,00 gold florins, Isaac had freed Stangrave, a stranger to him, from over 30 years of Mamluk captivity and then accompanied the knight home to be repaid. By 1322, Isaac has converted to Christianity and become Edward of St. John, with King …
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This is the second part of two presentations. More on our guest: https://isabelle-imbert.com 0:50 In your previous presentation, you gave us an overview of the history of Islamic art. Give us an overview of the Islamic arts market scene: who are the main players? Where are the main auctions, and so on? 7:05 You advised in your Bayt al-Fann intervie…
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Works of Islamic arts mesmerise their viewers, be it calligraphy, vases or mausoleums, but knowledge of their developments continues to be weak for the general enthusiast. To give an introductory survey on how to delve deeper into the fascinating ocean of Islamic arts is Dr. Isaballe Imbert. Dr. Imbert completed her PhD in 2015 at Sorbonne in Persi…
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Dr. Azim Ahmed, Research Associate in British Muslim Studies at Cardiff University, discusses the late Shahab Ahmed's (no relation!) seminal work "What is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic" leading us to identify the Anglophone as the New Persianate for the Cathay-to-California Complex. Links: Abdul-Azim Ahmed, Mind the Gap — The Textual, The …
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Some people are good at what they do, some are enthusiastic about their work. This guest brings both to bear in his exploration of the ancient past. Today we are privileged to talk with a distinguished figure in the world of archeology whose enthusiasm doesn’t quit. Professor. Aren Maeir is not only an accomplished archaeologist, but he is also a c…
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