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Books > Humanities > History
Located in north-central Kentucky, Fort Knox is one of the army's
major installations and is home to several commands, including the
United States Army School and Center and the United States Army
Recruiting Command. The fort's history dates to 1903, when a series
of military maneuvers was held by the United States Army in West
Point, Kentucky. When World War I required the establishment of
additional military training facilities, Camp Knox was created. The
post closed as a permanent installation in 1922, but it remained an
active training center for army programs and, briefly, a national
forest. On January 1, 1932, Camp Knox was made a permanent
installation again and has since been known as Fort Knox. In 1940,
the Armored Force was established, paving the way for the
continuing evolution of armed warfare. The United States Bullion
Depository chose its location because of its proximity to this
post.
Historians and archaeologists define primary states-"cradles of
civilization" from which all modern nation states ultimately
derive-as significant territorially-based, autonomous societies in
which a centralized government employs legitimate authority to
exercise sovereignty. The well-recognized list of regions that
witnessed the development of primary states is short: Egypt,
Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, China, Mesoamerica, and Andean South
America. Drawing on archaeological and ethnohistorical sources,
Robert J. Hommon demonstrates that Polynesia, with primary states
in both Hawaii and Tonga, should be added to this list. The Ancient
Hawaiian State is a study of the ancient Hawaiians' transformation
of their Polynesian chiefdoms into primary state societies,
independent of any pre-existing states. The emergence of primary
states is one of the most revolutionary transformations in human
history, and Hawaii's metamorphosis was so profound that in some
ways the contact-era Hawaiian states bear a closer resemblance to
our world than to that of their closely-related East Polynesian
contemporaries, 4,000 kilometers to the south. In contrast to the
other six regions, in which states emerged in the distant,
pre-literate past, the transformation of Hawaiian states are
documented in an extensive body of oral traditions preserved in
written form, a rich literature of early post-contact eyewitness
accounts of participants and Western visitors, as well as an
extensive archaeological record. Part One of this book describes
three competing Hawaiian states, based on the islands of Hawai`i,
Maui, and O`ahu, that existed at the time of first contact with the
non-Polynesian world (1778-79). Part Two presents a detailed
definition of state society and how contact-era Hawaii satisfies
this definition, and concludes with three comparative chapters
summarizing the Tongan state and chiefdoms in the Society Islands
and Marquesas Archipelagos of East Polynesia. Part Three provides a
model of the Hawaii State Transformation across a thousand years of
history. The results of this significant study further the analysis
of political development throughout Polynesia while profoundly
redefining the history and research of primary state formation.
Maine has a rich supernatural history and ghost stories from the
state are as varied as they are prolific. Freelance writer and
reporter Tom Verde first became interested in such eerie
occurrences while researching first-hand encounters with ghosts for
a series of public radio programs. This book recounts some of the
spine-tingling tales he uncovered in his research, including: *The
dagger-wielding shade who terrorized a Portland couple *The
murdered Indian who revisited Means's Tavern *Famed diva Lillian
Nordica, whose voice still echoes through the Farmington auditorium
named in her honor *The hostile spirit who tried to frighten the
tenants out of an Orrington house *Even an entire phantom ship,
bound eternally for Freeport These are not fictitious creations of
literary imagination. People from all walks of life-including many
who were positive they would never believe in ghosts-attest to
these encounters.
This full colour book to the Historic Cotswolds takes you
alphabetically through the fascinating and mostly hidden side to
the Cotswolds. 100s of pen and ink line drawings by Peter Reardon
matching 100s colour photos of the same thing by his son Nicholas
Reardon, so one can see things such as a stone crocodile head, with
a spring gushing out of its mouth at Compton Abdale, as both a line
drawing and colour photograph. The book travels all over the
Cotswolds from its very own Stonehenge (Rollright Stones) in the
North of the Cotswolds, to a Sham Castle in the South, with lots of
strange or old odd things to see on the way, with this book you
will soon find the Cotswolds have something of interest for anyone.
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I. C. S. Reference Library: Types of Marine Boilers, Marine-Boiler Details, Marine-Boiler Accessories, Firing, Economic Combustion, Marine-Boiler Feeding, Marine-Boiler Management, Marine-Boiler Repairs, Marine-Boiler Inspection, Propulsion of Vessels, Re
(Paperback)
International Correspondence Schools
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R744
Discovery Miles 7 440
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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