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Stary 13.04.2006, 21:02   #67
janko100
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Jak to możliwe, że uważasz, że w tamtych czasach ludzie "spokojnie" mogli żyć 70-80 lat jak średnia była 2-3x niższa?
EVIDENCE FROM EPITAPHS
Jewish inscriptions from Rome show the following ages at death:

Age Number of cases
0-9 years 46
10-19 years 24
20-29 years 28
30-39 years 18
40-49 years 8
50-59 years 9
60-69 years 5
70-79 years 3
80-89 years 11
90+ years 2
total 154

If you add the total ages and divide by the number of cases, you get an "average" age at death of about 28. Does this mean that the Jews of Rome lived to an average age of 28? 28 is a plausible average age, but it can***8217;t be true that more of them died at 80-89 than at 40-49.

[Statistics from census of AD 74] Three persons declared 120 years at Parma and one at Brescello; two at Parma 125; one man and one woman at Faenza 130; L. Terentius M.f. at Bologna 135; M. Aponius 140 and Tertulla 137 at Rimini. In the hills this side of Piacenza is the town of Veleia, where six declared 110 years, four 120, one (M. Mucius M.f. Felix of the Galerian tribe) 150. And, not to delay with further instances in a matter of admitted fact, the census registered in the 8th region of Italy 54 persons aged 100, 14 aged 110, 2 aged 125, 4 aged 130, the same number aged 135 or 137, 3 aged 140. ibid. 7.49.164

A trochę więcej tutaj http://www.lamp.ac.uk/~noy/death1.htm
Więc spokojnie można było dożyć 70-80 lat, a nawet więcej.
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