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A special agency of censors was also organized for the purpose of
enforcing the regulations concerning the sanctity of animal life
and the observance of filial piety, in the most extended sense.
These officers were expressly enjoined to concern themselves with
all sects, and with every class of society, not excluding the royal
family, while separate officials were charged with the delicate
duty of supervising female morals. In practice, this system must
have led to much espionage and tyranny] from Chapter VII: Asoka
Maurya and His Successors First published in 1906, this classic
nine-volume history of the nation of India places it among the
storied lands of antiquity, alongside Egypt, China, and
Mesopotamia. Edited by American academic ABRAHAM VALENTINE WILLIAMS
JACKSON (18621937), professor of Indo-Iranian languages at Columbia
University, it offers a highly readable narrative of the Indian
people and culture through to the time of its publication, when the
nation was still part of the British Empire. Volume II, From the
Sixth Century B.C. to the Mohammedan Conquest, Including the
Invasion of Alexander the Great, by British scholar VINCENT ARTHUR
SMITH (1848-1920), features entertaining and enlightening
treatments of: the dynasties before Alexander Alexanders Indian
campaign imperial monarch Asoka Maurya the Indo-Greek and
Indo-Parthian dynasties the Gupta Empire and the white Huns the
reign of Harsha the medieval kingdoms of the north and much more.
This beautiful replica of the 1906 first edition includes all the
original illustrations.
Music in Religious Cults of the Ancient Near East presents the
first extended discussion of the relationship between music and
cultic worship in ancient western Asia. The book covers ancient
Israel and Judah, the Levant, Anatolia, Mesopotamia, Elam, and
ancient Egypt, focusing on the period from approximately 3000 BCE
to around 586 BCE. This wide-ranging book brings together insights
from ancient archaeological, iconographic, written, and musical
sources, as well as from modern scholarship. Through careful
analysis, comparison, and evaluation of those sources, the author
builds a picture of a world where religious culture was predominant
and where music was intrinsic to common cultic activity.
Nazi Germany utilized every available resource to fight the Second
World War, and one significant weapon in Hitler's economic arsenal
was gold - gold looted from the central banks of those European
countries which were occupied by the Nazi regime between 1939 and
1942. Calculated at pre-1939 prices, the Germans gained access to
about $625 million (US) in monetary gold, only about half of which
was recovered by American Forces in April 1945 from a mine in
central Germany. The 'Gold War' did not end then, however; it just
assumed a different shape. Instead of fuelling Hitler's war effort,
the recovered gold soon became a pawn in the Cold War struggle
between the United States and the Soviet Union and has remained a
controversial issue in international politics for years, one not
completely resolved to this day.Although this is an important
aspect of the Second World War and its aftermath, it has been
largely neglected in historical research because of the lack of
adequate source materials. The author succeeded in gaining access
to hitherto unavailable but crucial records from archives in West
Germany, Britain and the United States and is thus in a position to
piece together, for the first time, the story of the Nazi gold loot
and the long, complicated restitution of part of this gold by the
Western Allies. Hitler's Gold represents an essential contribution
to the economic history of the Second World War.
Music in Religious Cults of the Ancient Near East presents the
first extended discussion of the relationship between music and
cultic worship in ancient western Asia. The book covers ancient
Israel and Judah, the Levant, Anatolia, Mesopotamia, Elam, and
ancient Egypt, focusing on the period from approximately 3000 BCE
to around 586 BCE. This wide-ranging book brings together insights
from ancient archaeological, iconographic, written, and musical
sources, as well as from modern scholarship. Through careful
analysis, comparison, and evaluation of those sources, the author
builds a picture of a world where religious culture was predominant
and where music was intrinsic to common cultic activity.
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