12.5 cents per acre
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The dictionary traces it back to Middle English 'aker', ' and Old English 'æcer'.It was originally the area a yoke of oxen could plow in a day and differed in size from one place to another.Read more: acre
Esfandyar
Caesarion, her son by Julia Caeser. He was murdered by Octavian (Augustus) after cleopatras defeat at actium, ending not only cleopatras 300 year old dynasty but also the Hellenistic age
Old English aka Anglo-Saxon has its origin in those who came from Jutlands and neighbouring lands and that's why Old English looks pretty much like German or Icelandic because it is another Germanic language, eve its conjugation looks pretty much like German.
take it to a museum to get all fact on it they tell you how old it is