Il mercato Uk secondo Robert Joseph - Wine Business International
Il mercato del Regno Unito, tra i più importanti del mondo e tra i principali Paesi partner dell’Italia enoica, raccontato a WineNews da Robert Joseph, tra i massimi conoscitori del business del vino in Uk e fondatore di “Wine Business International”
Un mercato dove l’Italia c’è ed è forte, ma è posizionata peggio di quanto si pensi, e deve lavorare molto per cogliere le tante opportunità che i wine lover “british” offrono al Belpaese
Archaeologists Near Stonehenge Have Unearthed The Remains Of A Mysterious 6th Century Warrior
Archaeologists Near Stonehenge Have Unearthed The Remains Of A Mysterious 6th Century Warrior
It was a Friday in July 2018, the last day of a three-week archaeological dig on England’s Salisbury Plain, about 40 miles from the sacred stones of Stonehenge. Two of the volunteers on the dig noticed a strong signal from their metal detectors. And when they dug down, they found something that has astonished and…
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The BEST Central Otago Wineries in New Zealand!!!
The BEST Central Otago Wineries in New Zealand!!!
New Zealand is famous for its wines. In Central Otago, NZ, we checked out five different wineries. It was surprising to see many opened wineries because we went there during the off-season (winter months in the Southern Hemisphere). It was a great opportunity to check out these wineries without the large crowds. We checked out these wineries:
-Akarua Wineries
-The Lazy Dog Wineries
-Mt. Difficult Winerieis
-Wild Earth Winerieis
-Aurum Wineries
All of these places produced some of best wines I have ever tasted. If you've never been to New Zealand, make sure you m ake a visit to the wineries in South Island, New Zealand. I promise you won't regret it. Remember- THE VOYAGE IS CONTAGIOUS!!!!
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Hi, my name is Azi (Ozzie), and I have WAS. What is WAS you may ask? That's a great question!!! Wanderlust Awe Syndrome (WAS) is a phenomenon. It affects many of the world population, creating travel addicts. There is no stopping this epidemic more people are experiencing an INTENSIFYING CRAVE to travel. This channel is for those who has a strong passion for traveling!
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UK: EDL and counter-protesters face off during rally in London
Violence broke out in central London on Saturday as tensions rose between English Defence League (EDL) demonstrators and counter-protesters. High police presence was seen in the area.
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Overall Winner: unearthed® Food in Film - Carl Pendle - Chilli Festival
The West Dean Chilli Festival has a few surprises when people starting eating the chillies.
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Lost city of Alexander the Great is found in Iraq
Alexander the Great's 'lost city' was a magical place where people drank wine and naked philosophers imparted wisdom, ancient accounts claim.Now, nearly 2,000 years after the great warrior's death, archaeologists believe the city may have finally been discovered in Iraq.Experts first noticed ancient remains in the Iraqi settlement, known as Qalatga Darband, after looking at declassified American spy footage from the 1960s.The images were made public in 1996 but, due to political instability, archaeologists were unable to explore the site properly for years.Now, using more recent drone footage and on-site work, researchers have established there was a city during the first and second centuries BC, which had strong Greek and Roman influences.They believe Alexander the Great founded it in 331 BC, and later settled in the city with 3,000 veterans of his campaigns.Undefeated in battle, Alexander had carved out a vast empire stretching from Macedonia and Greece in Europe, to Persia, Egypt and even parts of northern India by the time of his death aged 32.Researchers believe Qalatga Darband - which roughly translates from Kurdish as ‘castle of the mountain pass’ - is on the route Alexander of Macedon took to attack Darius III of Persia in 331 BC.The city may have served as an important meeting point between East and West.It is 6 miles (10km) south-east of Rania in Sulaimaniya province in Iraqi Kurdistan.Researchers at the British Museum first explored the site using spy footage of the area from the 1960s.An archaeological dig was not possible when Saddam Hussein controlled Iraq.But more recently improved security has allowed the British Museum to explore the site as a way of training Iraqis to rescue areas damaged by Islamic State.As well as on-site work, the Museum has also been able to capture its own drone footage of the area.'We got coverage of all the site using the drone in the spring — analysing crop marks hasn't been done at all in Mesopotamian archaeology', lead archaeologist John MacGinnis told The Times.'It's early days, but we think it would have been a bustling city on a road from Iraq to Iran.'You can imagine people supplying wine to soldiers passing through', he said.'Where there are walls underground the wheat and barley don't grow so well, so there are colour differences in the crop growth'.From the excavation work, they discovered an abundance of terracotta roof tiles and Greek and Roman statues, suggesting the city's early residents were Alexander’s subjects.Among the statues they found was a female figure believed to be Persephone, the Greek goddess of vegetation, and the other is believed to be Adonis, a symbol of fertility.They also discovered a coin of Orodes II, who was king of the Parthian from 57 BC to 37 BC.On its western flank, the city was protected by a large fortification which ran from the river to the mountain.It is situated on a large open site around 60 hectares (148 acres) large on a natural terrace.The 1960s Corona spy satellite footage showed a large square building, potentially believed to be a fort, according to aBritish Museum blog.Farmers in the area had also found remains of big buildings and a large fortified wall.There were a number of limestone blocks, believed to be wine or oil presses.Meanwhile, excavation of a mound at the southern end of the site revealed a monument which could have been a temple for worship.Fieldwork started in the autumn of 2016 and is expected to last until 2020.The project, which was part of the government-funded Iraq Emergency Heritage Management Training Programme, has been possible due to improved security in the country.It is part of a £30 million ($40 million) government plan to help Iraq rebuild historical sites destroyed by Islamic State.This fund is designed to counter the destruction of heritage in cultural zones from Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.The programme involves bringing groups of Iraqi archaeologists to London for eight weeks of training at the British Museum.They are then sent to excavations in the field for six additional weeks where they learn how to do drone surveys and 3D scanning.The team now want to find linguistic evidence to confirm their findings.Earlier this year archaeologists believe they found the last will and testament of Alexander the Great - more than 2,000 years after his death.ALondon-based expert David Grant claimed to have unearthed the Macedonian king's dying wishes in an ancient text that has been 'hiding in pla
Han Dynasty Treasure: More precious burial objects unearthed at Haihunhou
Yet more treasure has been unearthed at Haihunhou since we last reported on this Han Dynasty burial site. More amber, more jade, and more bronze have been found following the gold coins, ancient musical instruments, and sacrificial chariots already excavated. All this adds to our understanding of the lives of the nobility more than 2,000 years ago. Here's more from Haihunhou Cemetery in Jiangxi Province.
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Incredible Artifacts Discovered in the Middle East ATH
From the world’s oldest bread to these mysterious tiles and talismans here are The Most Incredible Artifacts Discovered in the Middle East
6.Mosul Museum Recoveries
In March of 2017, the Iraqi Federal Police recovered the Mosul Museum from extremists. Almost all of the artifacts inside were a total loss, with videos surfacing of the group destroying countless Babylonian, Assyrian, Akkadian, Persian, and Roman pieces that were priceless and irreplaceable. Oddly enough, many of the pieces were reportedly trafficked and, fortunately, the police recovered a cache of them from a home on the Eastern side of the city. started in 2014.
5. Ancient Dolmen
In 2017, archaeologists working in the Upper Galilee area of Israel discovered something intriguing while excavating a previously populated area. The massive stone dolman predates any known previously discovered creations, existing in a time some four thousand years ago. Dolmans are structures built through laying a large flat stone on top of other stones, much like a table but on a much bigger scale. There have been hundreds of other dolmans found around Israel and other places around the globe but this one is special for a number of reasons. For starters, it has been dated to the Bronze Age. The Bronze Age has long been regarded as a dark period for historians and archaeologists since very few artifacts survived to showcase how society moved during the time. Amazingly, this piece not only comes from that period but also includes a series of drawings on its underside that, if dated to the same period, are very likely the first example of art added to a dolman in all of the Middle East.
4. Museum Recovery
For three years, the Penn Museum worked tirelessly to restore and recover countless artifacts that were held within its archives. In a five million dollar restoration project, the museum has taken time and effort to create a mind blowing experience unlike any other through showcasing many artifacts that have never before been viewed by the general public. In fact, over one thousand new objects will be displayed, creating a massive new exhibition based mostly around mesopotamia. The centerpiece is a segment on the royal cemetery in Iraq that contains artifacts including the world’s oldest game board, royal clothing, and a host of other incredible pieces that can only be witnessed in the brand new exhibit. One incredibly sweet piece is the footprint of a newborn baby preserved in clay that is dated to over four thousand years ago.
3.World’s Oldest Bread
While sorting through a site consisting of what is believed to have once been a series of communal structures built for ceremonies and rituals, researchers discovered something a bit odd among the rubble and debris. One structure, which was probably used as a feasting hall of sorts, contained a plethora of food related artifacts, including bones from gazelles, waterfowls, and hares. Additionally, mustard seeds and roasted tubers were found alongside pieces of well preserved flatbread. This early bread sample is part of over two hundred that have been found in the Shubayqa region and has given a bit of a twist to the nutritional understanding that we have of the ancient people of the region.
2. Early Winemaking
In 2017, a joint effort between the University of Toronto and the Georgian National Museum, also known as the Gadachrili Gora Regional Archaeological Project Expedition or GRAPE for short, resulted in the discovery of what is believed to be the oldest example of winemaking in all of history. Dating back to 6000 BC during the Neolithic period, the discovery of a vessel containing wine residue has pushed back the assumed origin date of winemaking back more than six hundred years, potentially up to one thousand. It is believed that the wine was made from the eurasian grape, which has been used for generations to create hundreds of different varieties of table wines.
1. Hobby Lobby’s Stolen Artifacts
This story boggles the mind a bit and requires a bit of background information. Hobby Lobby is a craft and hobby supply chain in the United States that was founded in 1972 by Evangelical Christian Steve Green, who also later opened a Museum of the Bible as a place to store artifacts relating to Biblical stories for future generations to view. In an effort to obtain more items for the museum, Green and his employees sought out new sources for their purchases. Allegedly unknowingly, Green’s team began dealing with smugglers from the United Arab Emirates and came to possess several thousand small artifacts from Iraq that were believed to have been stolen during the United States lead upheaval of Suddam Hussein. In total, the company spent over a million dollars on these artifacts which was paid to seven different accounts.
Crowdmunch.com presents Christabels Beeson's Supper Clubs. Located in East London
Crowdmunch.com presents Christabels Beeson's Supper Clubs. Located in East London
In this Video Christabel describes her food events and what people will expect when hey come to one of her dinner parties. She has over 2 years experience as a supper club host and holds regular events at her luxurious London apartment.
She is currently working with crowdmunch.com to create wonderful culinary experiences at venues all over London.
Crowdmunch is a new way to fund food projects. We're a central hub for restaurants, chefs, cooks and pop-ups. We run food projects, big and small, that are brought to life through the direct support of food lovers everywhere, who are raising funds on Crowdmunch.com as we speak. Each Munch is independently created. The restaurants, chefs, cooks, pop-ups and supper clubs you see on Crowdmunch have complete control over and responsibility for their projects.
Crowdmunch is both a food platform and a resource. We are not involved in the development of the projects themselves. Anyone can launch a Munch provided it meets our guidelines.
@crowdmuncher
Crowdmunch.com is based in St Pauls central London but we have offices in Manchester, England
When Authorities Drained This 200 Year Old Canal, What They Found At The Bottom Was Extraordinary
Not forget to visit the site amazing stories
It’s a gray January day in Paris, and a crowd has gathered along the Canal Saint-Martin. As they stare into the murky brown depths below, the waters slowly empty, uncovering secrets that have been kept hidden for many years. And as the bottom of the 200-year-old canal emerges into view, a truly bizarre underside of the city is revealed.
The story of the famous canal began in 1802, when the French leader Napoleon I ordered its construction. At the time, around 550,000 people were living in Paris, and the population was continuing to grow. Napoleon therefore hoped that canals bringing fresh water to the city would help to prevent the spread of disease.
As a result, over the next two decades, three canals were dug across the city, together totaling more than 80 miles in length. Arguably the most famous of the three, the Canal Saint-Martin, connects the 68-mile Canal de l’Ourcq with the long, lazy flow of the River Seine.
Beginning in Bassin de l’Arsenal by the Seine, the canal travels underground beneath Place de la Bastille, the site of a prison that was stormed during the French Revolution. It subsequently emerges close to the Place de la République before heading north to the Bassin de la Villette. There, it joins with the Canal de l’Ourq and the River Ourcq beyond.
In total, the Canal Saint-Martin covers some three miles of central Paris. Originally funded by a levy on wine, it historically brought trade as well as fresh water to the city. In fact, in its heyday the waterway also carried both building supplies and food to the people of Paris.
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Most Amazing Archaeological Finds From Israel
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7. Philistine Cemetery
In the Bible, there is frequent mention of tensions between the Israelites and the Philistines. In fact, the one of the most commonly referenced underdog tales of all time involves an Israelite, David, and Philistine, a giant named Goliath. The tale includes an incredible amount of detail concerning Goliath’s impact on the Israelites and subsequent death that the hands of David but gives no information on what happened to his collossial body following his demise. In fact, historians had no clue what happened to Philistines who died within Israel, as the two were enemies so routine burial seemed unlikely. In mid-2016, a team of archaeologists digging near Ashkelon, a city on Israel’s southeast coast, uncovered what they now believe to be an ancient Philistine cemetery. Found just outside of the city’s walls, the cemetery contained over two hundred individual skeletons and is believed to date from between the 8th and 11th centuries. Archaeologists are calling this find the missing link that finally filled informational gaps about the ancient Philistines. Select pieces are to be displayed at the Israel Museum segment, which is set to open at the Rockefeller.
6. An Ancient Structure
In early 2006, a team of archaeologists discovered what was incorrectly called “proof of King David’s Biblical Existence” by various media outlets. The structure is actually believed to be nothing more than the four room home of an elite member of ancient Israelite society. Despite this, the find is still absolutely incredible, as it gives researchers a nearly perfect look into the lives of the Israelites. Nicknamed the “Governor’s Residence”, the home has four areas sectioned into rooms that contained over five hundred artifacts that were painstakingly removed from the residence to be studied. Carbon dating on two charcoals and an olive pit place the structure’s time of use at around the 11th century. Found in Tel ‘Eton, an area in the south of Israel, the home is placed within the top one percent of similar finds due to its enormous size.
5. King Solomon’s Palace
In 2016, a group of archaeologists uncovered a palace that dated to the era of King Solomon, the last ruler of the United Kingdom of Israel. Found in the ancient royal city of Gezer, the massive structure is believed to be over three thousand years old, placing it in around the 10th century. Full of spacious rooms and two large courtyards, the palace is similar to other structures around the city but was much larger, making researchers believe that it was the home of a royal or social elite. A series of artifacts were found within the building, including Philistine pottery, pieces of a statue dedicated the bird faced deity Ashdod, a game box lid, a baby’s rattle, amulets, and a statuette of the Canaanite fertility goddess. It is believed that the structure had been abandoned prior to it being looted and levelled by an attack lead by Pharaoh Sheshonq I in 925BC. Some scholars believe the palace to have belonged to King Solomon himself, though this has not been proven.
4. An Eight Year Old’s Lucky Find
In 2015, eight year old Itai Halpern of Pardesiya was on a daytrip with his parents in the Beit Shemesh area of Israel when he decided to pick up a random rock. After playing with it for a bit, the boy discovered that the stone was actually a hand carved, well detailed head. His parents snapped a photo and called authorities to report the find, launching what would be one of the most fortunate series of events in Indiana Jones obsessed boy’s young life. An expert in the Iron Age examined the fragment and discovered it was the head of the sculpture of a fertility goddess. Common in the homes of commoners under the rule of King Judah in the eighth century, the sculpture depicted a naked woman as a sort of charm to help the woman of the house be fertile and the family prosper. The boy’s find earned him a certificate of honor and the chance for his entire school class to participate in the dig for more artifacts at the site. He is also elated, as the media has dubbed him “the eight year old Indiana Jones”, comparing him to his hero. Itai says he now plans to pursue a career in archaeology when he grows up.
3. 2000 Year Old Earrings
2. A Pregnant Woman
1. The Role of Women
Roman wooden tablets are the earliest handwritten documents ever found in Britain
Buried under 20ft of mud for nearly 2,000 years, these simple Roman wooden tablets are the earliest handwritten documents ever found in Britain.
Among more than 400 unearthed by archaeologists, they include the first known reference to London – and the first IOU.
They were found beneath a pub in the City during work on financial news company Bloomberg’s new European headquarters near Bank Tube station.
Most of the documents, written in wax on a folding wooden frame, date from between AD55 and 85. They were dumped by the Romans on the banks of the River Walbrook. There, the mud prevented air getting to the wood, stopping it from rotting.
Sophie Jackson, archaeologist and director at Museum of London Archaeology, said yesterday: ‘The mud of the river was like the lava at Pompeii, preserving the best collection of wax tablets ever found in Britain.’
The tablets, made from wood recycled from wine casks imported from the Continent, give a remarkable picture of a Roman London teeming with businessmen, lawyers, tradesmen and slaves. Within a few years of being established, the city was already a whirring mix of commerce, eating, socialising and fashion. Among the documents are wills, disputes over debts and references to heavy beer-drinking.
They also provide an insight into the Roman postal system. Early Londoners wrote letters in soot-blackened beeswax with an iron stylus, or pen-shaped needle.
Once the recipient read the letter, he smoothed the surface with a heated spatula, and wrote another letter in the wax, often carving so deeply he scratched the wooden mount, so although none of the wax remains today, inscriptions can still be read in the wood.
The writer carved the address into the outer, wooden surface of the folding boxes, tied it up and sent his slave to deliver it. Addresses were simpler then, with no house numbers, just the names of neighbours. One address reads: ‘You will give this to Junius the cooper, opposite Catullus’s house.’
The oldest tablet which can be dated exactly is a letter between two London businessmen, acknowledging a debt – then, as now, the city revolved around money.
References to a consul of the time mean it can be dated to the year we now call AD57 – only nine years after Londinium was founded by the invading Romans.
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Poland: Screaming skeletons of Russian soldiers unearthed from former battlefield
The skeletons of dozens of Russian soldiers who were killed during the Battle of Zyrzyn more than 150 years ago have been unearthed by a group of archaeologists in Zerdz, footage from Saturday shows.
Chief archaeologists Edmund Mitrus said that there are around 80 skeletons in the mass grave. In this collective grave we now have 50 humans remains, plus two officers, and it looks like there will be still about 25 next ones, lower in this grave.
SOT, Edmund Mitrus, Chief archaeologists (Polish): As for the Russians, we already know that everybody was buried here. In this collective grave we now have 50 humans remains, plus two officers, and it looks like there will be still about 25 next ones, lower in this grave.
SOT, Edmund Mitrus, Chief archaeologists (Polish): They also have equipment, for example, buttons. Based on the buttons we can find out what was their regiment, because buttons have the regiment digits. One of them has orthodox icon, another has a Latin cross.
SOT, Edmund Mitrus, Chief archaeologists (Polish): Because the ground level will be reduced by three and a half meters, so this is the only moment and the last moment when we can do the research, then the soil will be taken away and that's it.
Video ID: 20170624 042
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The Yardbirds - April 30, 1967 - Chaville
The Yardbirds
April 30, 1967 - Chaville
1. SHAPES OF THINGS (cuts in)
2. TRAIN KEPT A-ROLLIN'
3. MISTER YOUR A BETTER MAN THAN I /
4. HEART FULL OF SOUL
5. MY BABY
6. YOU GO YOUR WAY, I'LL GO MINE
Line-up:
Keth Relf – vocals, harmonica, tamburine
Jimmy Page - guitar
Chris Dreja - bass
Jim McCarty – drums
Tajmahal museum : mughal weapons
Tajmahal museum : mughal weapons
Hampton Court Palace pt 4. Wine cellar and interior gardens
A Couple Of Recent Trades,A Pack Break,And Some Unearthed Antique Mall Treasure!
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Most AMAZING Treasures Found By ACCIDENT!
Check out the Most AMAZING Treasures Found By ACCIDENT! From discoveries made with a metal detector to some unbelievable findings, this top 10 list of treasures discovered by everyday people will amaze you!
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8. GOLD BONGS
While excavating a kurgan in the Caucasus Mountains of southern Russia in 2013 to make way for some new power lines, a team led by Stavropol-based archaeologist Andrei Belinsky unexpectedly hit paydirt: a pair of pure gold containers, dating back some 2,400 years, that likely belonged to ancient royalty.
7. RARE SUPERMAN COMIC
In 2013, an experienced construction worker and home remodeler named David Gonzalez finally fulfilled his decade-long dream of stumbling upon hidden treasure on the job. Finally right??
6. $500,000 IN A STORAGE UNIT
When a man from San Jose, California, known only as John, bid on an abandoned storage unit in 2011, he was probably hoping to make a small profit from whatever was inside. He had paid $1,100 for the unit’s contents. At first, the unit appeared to contain nothing of significant value. Inside of an inconspicuous, dusty Rubbermaid bin, however, John discovered half a million dollars’ worth of gold and silver.
5. VINTAGE STAR WARS TOYS
Some parents can’t seem to part with any of their kids’ childhood items, pledging to keep them in storage forever as an alternative to getting rid of them. These were before the days of Marie Kondo and her method!! One man, named Steven Hoffer, probably ended up thanking his parents for hanging onto his boyhood treasures.
4. RAILROAD SIGNS
Back in 2009, married couple Ian and Lynda Spires, of the United Kingdom, emptied out the attic of their recently purchased home so they could move ahead with plans to insulate their roof. While they were cleaning, the husband-and-wife team noticed lettering on the floorboards. A previous occupant of their home had incorporated 49 railroad signs, bearing the names of various destinations from the steam engine era, into the flooring.
3. THE FENWICK TREASURE
In September 2014, a box of 2,000-year-old jewelry was found during excavations beneath a Fenwick department store in Colchester, Britain’s oldest recorded town. Inside the box were 26 coins, along with an array of gold and silver jewelry, including five rings, two gold bracelets, two pairs of earrings, two silver bracelets, and a silver armlet.
2. A HUGE BLACK TRUFFLE
I bet food and fungus are two of the last things you’d expect to see in this video but you know how I love to keep you on your toes and make sure you are paying attention!!
In 2014, one lucky farmer in New South Wales, Australia unearthed the biggest black truffle ever grown on the continent.
1. TY COBB BASEBALL CARDS
One California family was lucky to strike it big - twice - while clearing out their late-great-grandfather’s home. The first time, a family member found seven incredibly rare Ty Cobb baseball cards inside of a tattered, old, brown paper bag. The cards had been printed between 1909 and 1911 and came with tobacco purchases. It’s likely that great gramps had no clue he was leaving a fortune to his descendants, as he wasn’t a collector.
Origins Explained is the place to be to find all the answers to your questions, from mysterious events and unsolved mysteries to everything there is to know about the world and its amazing animals!
historical museum never ever seen before based on terror of mughal
this museum is based on Atrocities of Mughal on hindu,sikkh and Christians
3,300 year old Egyptian coffin unearthed in Jezreel Valley, Israel
All Rights belong to PressTV. Further videos about topics addressed are available in Recent Activities, Favourites, Play Lists on my channels. Mirrored: A new discovery-- Israeli archaeologists have uncovered a mysterious Egyptian coffin in the Jezreel Valley.
The 3,300-year-old broken ceramic coffin was uncovered during excavations by the Israel Antiquities Authority. The coffin-cover featured a lid in the shape of a person with the skeleton of an adult inside. It was surrounded by a variety of pottery, including food storage vessels, tableware and animal bones. It is the first such coffin to be discovered in the region in half a century. Next to the coffin, the archaeologists also found a gold scarab ring inscribed with the name of an Egyptian King. The remains more likely belonged to an influential Canaanite man, believed to be an Egyptian army official.