Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 97 |
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Page 3
The remains of about 200 scrolls are so poor that nobody is any longer able to identify their contents or to relate them to other known texts from the ancient past . Sometimes , it is even impossible to make out whether the square ...
The remains of about 200 scrolls are so poor that nobody is any longer able to identify their contents or to relate them to other known texts from the ancient past . Sometimes , it is even impossible to make out whether the square ...
Page 4
But the poor remains of many scrolls written in Greek from Cave 7 fill just one page in the edition , while from Cave 8 - apart from a phylactery and the mezuzah of the last inhabitant - only petty fragments of three scrolls could be ...
But the poor remains of many scrolls written in Greek from Cave 7 fill just one page in the edition , while from Cave 8 - apart from a phylactery and the mezuzah of the last inhabitant - only petty fragments of three scrolls could be ...
Page 370
These eroded remains were traced around the north end of the höyük by trenching down from above , and as luck would have it , the excavators in the course of this four - week season hit a pile of Assyrian tablets stacked against a wall ...
These eroded remains were traced around the north end of the höyük by trenching down from above , and as luck would have it , the excavators in the course of this four - week season hit a pile of Assyrian tablets stacked against a wall ...
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Contents
Lectures | 1 |
Life and Work in Shakespeares Poems | 15 |
The Poetry of the Caroline Court | 51 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
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Academy actions activity appeared archaeology authority become behaviour British called Cambridge capacity century collection College concerned continued course critics cultural developed discussion early edition Edwards England English essay example excavations experience fact human important Indian individual Institute intelligence interest Italy John joint joking labour language later Leach lecture less linguistic literary living Lloyd London material matter meaning mind moral move Museum nature notes original Oxford period person Piggott plagiarism play poems political possible present printed production Professor published question recent reference relations remains responsible role Roman rules scholars seems sense Shakespeare's shared social society Sonnets Stokes structure suggests texts things thought tradition turn University volume writing