Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 121 |
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Page 75
The premise that increasing social complexity during the Iron Age was more widespread than the confines of our study area makes the search for the origins of Angkor more broadly based . We can identify in the late prehistoric record ...
The premise that increasing social complexity during the Iron Age was more widespread than the confines of our study area makes the search for the origins of Angkor more broadly based . We can identify in the late prehistoric record ...
Page 202
Goldsmith's and Thomson's ) is ' truly sorry Man's dominion / Has broken Nature's social union'.38 The ' social union ' of all creatures is disrupted explicitly by human oppression of the mouse , and implicitly by human tyranny over ...
Goldsmith's and Thomson's ) is ' truly sorry Man's dominion / Has broken Nature's social union'.38 The ' social union ' of all creatures is disrupted explicitly by human oppression of the mouse , and implicitly by human tyranny over ...
Page 219
19 The social investigator Henry Mayhew gained a similar impression from a trip to Saxony : The government is left to do as it pleases — to treat the people as though they were literally the children of the Fatherland ; to deal with ...
19 The social investigator Henry Mayhew gained a similar impression from a trip to Saxony : The government is left to do as it pleases — to treat the people as though they were literally the children of the Fatherland ; to deal with ...
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Contents
The Origins of the Civilisation of Angkor | 41 |
Yorkshire Writers | 91 |
Shakespeare and the Anagram | 111 |
Copyright | |
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Academy agriculture anagram Angkor appear archaeological Asia become Britain British bronze Burns's Cambridge cent Central century China copies copper courts critical culture described early economy effect empire energy England English Erlitou culture evidence example Figure finds further Gansu German growth hand head human idea imperial important India industrial institutions investment Iron Age king land language late later least lecture less letters London major metal millennium BC moats nature Northern objects origins Oxford period poem poet poetry political population possible present production Qijia Qinghai recent region remains result role scribe seen social society Sonnets suggest temple texts third tion turn vols West Western writing Xinjiang