940 resultados para Arabic literature--History and criticism--Early works to 1800
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Signatures : B-Y⁸, Z⁴
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Each number has a distinctive title.
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Includes index.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Pt. 1. The close of the exile to the coming of Ezra.--Pt. 2. The coming of Ezra to Samaritan schism.
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Lectures delivered during the spring of 1888.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"List of works consulted": 1 leaf following p. xiv.
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Translation of: De la manière d'enseigner et d'étudier les belles-lettres.
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Vols. 17-20 were issued each in 2 pts., which in v. 18-20 have separate t.p.; in v. 18 the parts are separately paged, and the t.p. for pt. 2 reads "Asiatic researches. Transactions of the Physical class of the Asiatic Society of Bengal."
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Ex copy has ownership stamp on t.p.: W.C. Fowler.
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"List of works consulted": p. [xxiii]
Representations of the return to "Mother" in Canadian and Australian settler-invader women's writing
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Controversy over the alpine route that Hannibal of Carthage followed from the Rhône Basin into Italia has raged amongst classicists and ancient historians for over two millennia. The motivation for identifying the route taken by the Punic Army through the Alps lies in its potential for identifying sites of historical archaeological significance and for the resolution of one of history's most enduring quandaries. Here, we present stratigraphic, geochemical and microbiological evidence recovered from an alluvial floodplain mire located below the Col de la Traversette (~3000 m asl-above sea level) on the French/Italian border that potentially identifies the invasion route as the one originally proposed by Sir Gavin de Beer (de Beer 1974). The dated layer is termed the MAD bed (mass animal deposition) based on disrupted bedding, greatly increased organic carbon and key/specialized biological components/compounds, the latter reported in Part II of this paper. We propose that the highly abnormal churned up (bioturbated) bed was contaminated by the passage of Hannibal's animals, possibly thousands, feeding and watering at the site, during the early stage of Hannibal's invasion of Italia (218 bc).