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Bester Preis: € 13,35 (vom 31.07.2017)1
Hellenism in Ancient India (1920)
EN PB NW RP
ISBN: 9781230394305 bzw. 1230394303, in Englisch, TheClassics.us, Taschenbuch, neu, Nachdruck.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, BuySomeBooks [52360437], Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 106 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.2in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . . . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausbll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathc-Saritsgara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . . Rcueil des contes populaires des Gres. . . The Golden Bough. The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings. . . The Childhood of Fiction. . . Alhambra. . . Popular Tales of the West. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN.
This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 106 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.2in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . . . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausbll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathc-Saritsgara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . . Rcueil des contes populaires des Gres. . . The Golden Bough. The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings. . . The Childhood of Fiction. . . Alhambra. . . Popular Tales of the West. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN.
2
Hellenism in Ancient India (Paperback) (2013)
EN PB NW RP
ISBN: 9781230394305 bzw. 1230394303, in Englisch, Theclassics.Us, United States, Taschenbuch, neu, Nachdruck.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland, Free shipping.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, The Book Depository US [58762574], London, United Kingdom.
Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead ; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausboll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathca-Saritsagara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . Recueil des contes populaires des Grees. . The Golden Bough. [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] . The Childhood of Fiction. . Alhambra. . Popular Tales of the West.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, The Book Depository US [58762574], London, United Kingdom.
Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead ; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausboll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathca-Saritsagara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . Recueil des contes populaires des Grees. . The Golden Bough. [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] . The Childhood of Fiction. . Alhambra. . Popular Tales of the West.
3
Hellenism in Ancient India (Paperback) (2013)
EN PB NW RP
ISBN: 9781230394305 bzw. 1230394303, in Englisch, Theclassics.Us, United States, Taschenbuch, neu, Nachdruck.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland, Free shipping.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, The Book Depository [54837791], London, United Kingdom.
Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead ; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausboll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathca-Saritsagara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . Recueil des contes populaires des Grees. . The Golden Bough. [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] . The Childhood of Fiction. . Alhambra. . Popular Tales of the West.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, The Book Depository [54837791], London, United Kingdom.
Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: . were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit moral is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of The Mouse and the Lion found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the Ritual of the Dead ; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausboll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathca-Saritsagara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. . Recueil des contes populaires des Grees. . The Golden Bough. [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] . The Childhood of Fiction. . Alhambra. . Popular Tales of the West.
4
Hellenism in Ancient India (2013)
EN PB NW
ISBN: 9781230394305 bzw. 1230394303, in Englisch, 106 Seiten, TheClassics.us, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 24 hours.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: ... were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit 'moral' is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of 'The Mouse and the Lion' found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the 'Ritual of the Dead'; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausbôll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathcâ-Saritsâgara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. .. "Récueil des contes populaires des Grées." .. "The Golden Bough." [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] .. "The Childhood of Fiction." .. "Alhambra." .. "Popular Tales of the West... Paperback, Label: TheClassics.us, TheClassics.us, Product group: Book, Published: 2013-09-12, Studio: TheClassics.us.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1920 edition. Excerpt: ... were collected by Demetrius in his search for the wisdom current among the folk, whether in the form of proverbs, sayings of wisemen, or stories. Fables are thus an interesting and early example of the transformation of oral into written literature. Fable with its explicit 'moral' is thus a highly differentiated form of the Beast-Tale, and it must not be considered at all surprising that it occurs in full force in one or two countries. Anecdotes and tales about beasts occur everywhere in South Africa and among the American-Negroes. An attempt has been made by Sir Richard Burton to trace, the fable, properly so called, to Africa and to suggest that it recalls to man reminiscences of his animal ancestors. The sole basis is of this bizarre theory, however is an Egyptian paraphrase of the fable of 'The Mouse and the Lion' found in a late Demotic papyrus, which also contains Coptic versions of the 'Ritual of the Dead'; and it must, therefore, be summarily rejected. Wherever we find the fable with its distinctive moral, it can be traced either by derivation or imitation to Greece or to India. 11. Legrand, E. 12. Frazer, J. G. 13. MacCulloch, J. A. 14. Irving 15. Campbell 16. Dasent 17. Gomperz, Th. 18. Niebuhr, B. G. 19. Millier, K. O. 20. Van den Bergh van Esy inga. 21. Fausbôll 22. Z. von Monkawski 23. Speyer, F. S. 24. Hertel, F. 25. Steinschneider in Z. D. Kalila we--Dimna). 26. Grimm, Jacob 27. Benfey . 28. Wagener, A. 29. The Kathcâ-Saritsâgara by 30. Schmidt, R. 31. Bbhtlingk 32. Peterson, P. 33. Jacobs, J. 34. Keightiey, T. .. "Récueil des contes populaires des Grées." .. "The Golden Bough." [The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.] .. "The Childhood of Fiction." .. "Alhambra." .. "Popular Tales of the West... Paperback, Label: TheClassics.us, TheClassics.us, Product group: Book, Published: 2013-09-12, Studio: TheClassics.us.
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