id
processing priority
4
site type
3 (personal blog or private political site, e.g. Blogspot, Substack, also small blogs on own domains)
review version
11
html import
20 (imported)
first seen date
2025-02-14 16:55:17
expired found date
-
created at
2025-02-14 16:55:17
updated at
2025-06-22 23:37:22
length
19
crc
31396
tld
2211
nm parts
0
nm random digits
0
nm rare letters
0
is subdomain of id
13642151 (wordpress.com)
previous id
0
replaced with id
0
related id
-
dns primary id
0
dns alternative id
0
lifecycle status
0 (unclassified, or currently active)
deleted subdomains
0
page imported products
0
page imported random
0
page imported parking
0
count skipped due to recent timeouts on the same server IP
0
count content received but rejected due to 11-799
0
count dns errors
0
count cert errors
0
count timeouts
0
count http 429
0
count http 404
0
count http 403
0
count http 5xx
0
next operation date
-
server bits
—
server ip
-
mp import status
20
mp rejected date
-
mp saved date
-
mp size orig
112353
mp size raw text
23412
mp inner links count
41
mp inner links status
10 (links queued, awaiting import)
title
Momus
description
The World According to Carp
image
site name
Momus
author
updated
2026-03-02 13:33:25
raw text
Momus » The World According to Carp Momus Momus A trade model of the creation of the patriarchy Saturday, Mar 16 2013 Books falstaff 6:09 pm I’m a third of the way through Gerda Lerner’s The Creation of the Patriarchy , and enjoying every page of it. While I think the questions Lerner is asking are fascinating, I can’t help feeling that her answers to them are needlessly complicated. So I thought I’d put down my own initial thoughts as I read through the book. At the heart of Lerner’s analysis (so far) is the following observation: “Sometime during the agricultural revolution relatively egalitarian societies with a sexual division of labor based on biological necessity gave way to more highly structured societies in which both private property and the exchange of women based on incest taboos and exogamy were common.” Lerner outlines a number of different theories explaining this observation, distinguishing, in particular between arguments that see the rise of pr...
redirect type
0 (-)
block type
0 (no issues)
detected language
1 (English)
category id
Astronomia (115)
index version
1
spam phrases
0
text nonlatin
0
text cyrillic
0
text characters
18325
text words
3784
text unique words
1359
text lines
271
text sentences
112
text paragraphs
35
text words per sentence
33
text matched phrases
0
text matched dictionaries
0
links self subdomains
0
links other subdomains
links other domains
14 - jstor.org, philamuseum.org, metmuseum.org, clevelandart.org, tate.org.uk, sbmadocents.org, fundaciomiro-bcn.org, moma.org, disordermagazine.com, weinstein.com, filmlinc.com
links spam adult
0
links spam random
0
links spam expired
0
links ext activities
2
links ext ecommerce
3 - amazon.com
links ext finance
0
links ext crypto
0
links ext booking
0
links ext news
5
links ext leaks
0
links ext ugc
28 - s0.wp.com, wp.me, s1.wp.com, wordpress.com, youtube.com
links ext klim
0
links ext generic
1
dol status
0
dol updated
2026-03-02 13:33:25
rss status
32 (unknown)
rss found date
2025-02-14 16:55:17
rss size orig
13382
rss items
10
rss spam phrases
0
rss detected language
1 (English)
inbefore feed id
-
inbefore status
0 (new)
sitemap path
sitemap status
40 (completed successful import of reports.txt file to table in_pages)
sitemap review version
2
sitemap urls count
140
sitemap urls adult
0
sitemap filtered products
0
sitemap filtered videos
0
sitemap found date
2025-02-14 16:55:18
sitemap process date
2025-03-23 17:11:12
sitemap first import date
-
sitemap last import date
2025-06-22 23:37:22