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While there is value in knowing how many visitors are finding your web site, some of the other reports that give an indication of which web pages they are visiting, what search terms they used to find you, and what Search Engines, etc. Referred them to your site are also valuable.
Usage Statistics for www.owt.com Summary Period: June 2017 - Referrer Generated 01-Jul-2017 04:02 PDT.
For example, if there are certain important pages of your web site that don't seem to be attracting visitors, possibly some changes should be made to your web site that will draw more attention to those pages. Or if there are search terms that should be being used to find your site, but aren't, that may be an indication that those terms aren't used with as much frequency on your web pages as they should be for good Search Engine indexing.
Using the web statistics for making those kinds of evaluations and adjustments is part of the value of these reports.
Modern artist's rendition of Rustaveli Born Rustavi, Died Resting place (undisclosed) Pen name Rustveli poet Occupation,,,, Nationality Citizenship Alma mater Academy in Period Reign of Queen Georgian Golden Age Genre, Notable works Shota Rustaveli (: შოთა რუსთაველი, c. 1160—after c. 1220), known simply as Rustaveli, was a medieval poet.
He is considered to be the preeminent poet of the and one of the greatest contributors to. Rustaveli is the author of, which is considered to be a Georgian national. Contents • • • • • • • • • Biography [ ] Little, if anything, is known about Rustaveli from contemporary sources.
Shota Rustaveli was born in 1166. He start serving as a Minister of Finance in 1191. His poem itself, namely the prologue, provides a clue to his identity: the poet identifies himself as 'a certain Rustveli.' 'Rustveli' is not a surname, but a territorial epithet that can be interpreted as 'of/from/holder of Rustavi'. Later Georgian authors from the 15th through 18th centuries are more informative; they are almost unanimous in identifying him as Shota Rustaveli, a name that is preserved on a fresco and a document from the formerly Georgian at. The fresco was described by the Georgian pilgrim in 1757/58 and rediscovered by a team of Georgian scholars in 1960. The same Jerusalem document speaks of Shota as a sponsor of the monastery and a ('high treasurer'), echoing a popular legend that Rustaveli was a minister at ’s court and retired to the monastery at an advanced age.
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Both a folk tradition and the 17th-century royal poet identify Rustaveli as a native of the southern Georgian region of, where his home village Rustavi was located (not to be confused with the modern-day city of near ). He is assumed to have been born between 1160 and 1165. A legend states that Rustaveli was educated at the medieval Georgian academies of and, and then in ' (i.e., the ). He must have produced his major work no earlier than the 1180s and no later than the first decade of the 13th century, most probably 1205-1207. Shota Rustaveli died between 1245-1250. Rustaveli was well acquinted with, 'and was therefore able to read and appreciate without having to resort to faulty translations'.