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194<br />

REFERENCES AND NOTES<br />

CHAPTER FIVE<br />

1. The contents of the Kebra Nagast have been analyzed in David<br />

Hubbard, The Literary Sources of the Kebra Nagast, Ph.D.<br />

thesis, St. Andrews University, Scotland, 1956.<br />

2. Richard Schneider, “Deux inscriptions subarabiques du Tigré,”<br />

Bibliotheca Orientalis, 30, (1973): 385-87; Rodolfo Fattovich,<br />

“Remarks on the pre-Aksumite period in northern Ethiopia”<br />

Journal of Ethiopian Studies 23 (1990): 15-17.<br />

3. Rodolfo Fattovich, “Remarks on the pre-Aksumite period in<br />

northern Ethiopia” Journal of Ethiopian Studies 23 (1990): 15-<br />

17.<br />

4. Kirk, John William Carnegie. A grammar of the Somali<br />

language with examples in prose and verse; and an account<br />

ofthe Yibir and Midgan dialects. Cambridge: University Press,<br />

1905. Information also from the Somali community in London<br />

2001-4.<br />

5. R.B. Stothers, “Mystery Cloud of A.D. 536,” Nature 307,<br />

(January 1984), 344-5; Andrey Korotayev, Vladimir Klimenko,<br />

and Dimitri Proussakov, Origins of Islam: Political-<br />

Anthropological and Environmental Context Acta Orientalia<br />

Academiae Scientiarum Hung., 52 (3-4), (1999): 243-276.<br />

CHAPTER SIX<br />

1. Hetzron, Robert (ed.) The Semitic languages. London:<br />

Routledge, 1998.<br />

2. Chaim Rabin, Ancient West Arabian. London: Taylor’s<br />

Foreign Press, 1951<br />

3. C.J. Gadd, “The Harran Inscription of Nabonidus.” Anatolian<br />

Studies 8, 1958.

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