Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 121 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 10
Page 51
... demands on the production of surpluses , much of which were taken by the ruling elite through the medium of a network of state temple foundations and large corps of officials . Deep tap roots This kingdom of Angkor had deep tap roots ...
... demands on the production of surpluses , much of which were taken by the ruling elite through the medium of a network of state temple foundations and large corps of officials . Deep tap roots This kingdom of Angkor had deep tap roots ...
Page 86
... demands to exhibit status . The growth in riverine and maritime trade provided new stimuli , and the opportunity further to augment the status of leaders and separate them from their lesser ranked kin through the adoption of esoteric ...
... demands to exhibit status . The growth in riverine and maritime trade provided new stimuli , and the opportunity further to augment the status of leaders and separate them from their lesser ranked kin through the adoption of esoteric ...
Page 175
... demands then a building of bridges between different specialisations and historiographies . It also requires paying attention to changing perceptions of size and power as well as to their actual levels . Up to the early 1800s , as C. A. ...
... demands then a building of bridges between different specialisations and historiographies . It also requires paying attention to changing perceptions of size and power as well as to their actual levels . Up to the early 1800s , as C. A. ...
Contents
The Origins of the Civilisation of Angkor | 41 |
Yorkshire Writers | 91 |
Shakespeare and the Anagram | 111 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agriculture anagram anagrammatic Angkor archaeological arsenical copper Ban Non Wat bard Britain British Academy Bronze Age burials Burns's Cambridge cent Central Asia century Chenla China Chinese civilisation context copies copper and bronze courts E. A. Wrigley early economy Elizabeth Bishop empire energy England English Erlitou European evidence example excavated Figure fols further Galba Gansu global Goethe growth Hexi Corridor human rights imperial India industrial revolution inscriptions investment climate Iron Age Jayavarman king Kinsley labour language lecture London metal metallurgy moats Noen U-Loke Northern objects Oxford period poem poet poetry political population pottery prehistoric production Qijia culture Qinghai region Robert Burns role Romanticism scribe second millennium BC Shaanxi Shakespeare Siba Silk Road social society Sonnets steppe temple texts Thomas Mann Tianshanbeilu tin bronze tion vols wenhua West Western words Xinjiang yanjiu Yorkshire