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Among the most important of the mat
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Q U ELLEN UND UNTERSUCHUNGEN ZUR GE
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Printed in the Netherlands by Van G
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CONTENTSForeword.IXIntroductionSect
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ForewordThe conception of this book
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INTRODUCTIONThe ethnological writin
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the other, were deficient in critic
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undertook the wholly empirical stud
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later, of Lubbock.15 The sets of ex
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still, after the institution of gen
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ship; Marx attributed the developme
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-j6 Böckh on population of Attica;
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with the question of caste was rais
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these two opposing sides together,
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without comment (excerpts, p. 8). T
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Grundrisse and in C apital.47 The r
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occasion for a performance of virtu
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signalized by means of the marginal
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Excerpts p. Morgan excerptsMarx’s
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within the contexts of Phear and Ma
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not only accepted this, but rendere
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community by cultural and social hi
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e interpreted ex silentio, by his c
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excerpts, p. 170), who cited as an
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ut against Maine’s extravagance (
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tween the social collectivities are
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conception of science as classifica
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approaches the modern ethnography b
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Man in the civilized condition is f
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The latter98 had inferred that the
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The idea of R. M. Maclver and R. H.
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ethnological thought. It is an anac
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an internally antagonistic creature
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actuality of the relations of the s
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introduction, and that the transiti
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song styles of the Iroquois, Indian
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nature by Marx, in contrast to Hege
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formed as the same, this is a subje
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communal institutions, in the proce
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public, the subjective has not inte
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anarchic individualism and the left
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has virtually disappeared from most
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into commodities arises out of exch
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wüchsige Theilung der Arbeit aus d
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T A B LE VII. The Utilisation by En
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Engels, in his 1888 edition of the
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conceived the process as changing o
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Anti-teleology in nature is interre
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March 8, 1881.161 In a draft which
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that the parts of the notebook B 14
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TECHNICAL APPARATUS AND FORMATThe p
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practice; occasionally, it is diffi
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i Lewis H . Morganr1 “ Ancient So
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dar. When discovered, stellten sie
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Diese Differenz u. d. specific diff
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sich vor 50 Jahren dort etablirten.
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Im descriptiven System dagegen d. c
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and fem ale cousins, are all withou
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w ithin the present century; w idel
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iodone on any part. There was no su
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grandm other (O c’-sote), grandso
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M y grandfather's father's brother
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14 “ D a s M utterrecht” , w o
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lived in polygamy; dies nicht the m
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in the household; dies gave full fo
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described by means o f the primary
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II) Intermarriage o f Brothers and
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tools passed through form s o fflin
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T h e characters on the Copan monum
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It was exhibited b y the Village In
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manufacture earthen vessels o f man
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eigenthum). Breeds o f horses alrea
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the L ord doth com mand concerning
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originally hereditary in the gens a
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u. not can intermarry with each oth
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j) Ippai marries his cousin Kapota
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tobacco in garden beds, made unleav
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praktisch the effects einer decease
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Captives w hen adopted w ere often
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u. L atin tribes in der relativ sp
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u. Beaver gentes also have exchange
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opposition vo n Seiten der opposite
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interests, strangers in feeling, sc
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com m on area. D ies gilt, in the m
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control the increasing numbers des
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Iroquois, the m ost destructive w o
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stockades, lebten von fish u. game,
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Mohawk Sachems u. to leave their na
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| A m appointed day the Sachems of
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was made. The / persons appointed t
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several tribes in their confederate
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estowed for merit, haben 7 sachems
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placed in there from number of word
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Gentes: i) Wolf 2) Red Paint 3) Lon
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female deity - Go-gome-tha-mä’ (
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I ll ) Turkey „ „ i) Turkey 2)
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sie rückverwandelt wden in bears,
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deren Waffen, implements u. ustensi
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der Bund der Iroquois. Jeder tribe
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- Page 217 and 218: So erstens t(u bemerken: Agamemnon
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- Page 225 and 226: Jede Phyle od. District nach an Att
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- Page 229 and 230: D ch andre Quellen constatirt dass
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- Page 239 and 240: the ultimate decision in criminal c
- Page 241 and 242: Ifreien Römer in 2 Klassen: Aristo
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- Page 245 and 246: Kinder aliens; aber wenn ein(e> Sen
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- Page 249 and 250: guerriers) vocati sint; ita “nati
- Page 251: Tacit. Germ. VII, wo er von Armeefo
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- Page 257 and 258: which he u. his guests or clients m
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- Page 263 and 264: prehending land of various qualitie
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- Page 267 and 268: d. Vaters in d. book of the zaminda
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- Page 271 and 272: of a license tax); all taxes sind l
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- Page 275 and 276: away in carts or boats; and thus th
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- Page 279 and 280: different colours; Chadors or sheet
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- Page 287 and 288: paddy fields, usual that every gath
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children u. has left another set of
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septs or clans stated to have been
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flesh forbidden; two of the chief
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is 12 “ seds" - explained to mean
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ancient world finden wir sehr early
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Fuidhir tenants” . (i 82) Und cau
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must look for it among the fosterer
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angehört; meist ältester Sohn, re
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Iideellen Antheil hat, bleibt so na
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the Signory, for that commonly he i
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(a servant, bei Walter Scott “ Gi
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kommen wir aber zum sense worin leg
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successful litigant, and not, like
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drives them in the end to a judicia
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St. Patrick upon the introduction o
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In einem Law of A lfred heissts :
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d. alten normalen rule, die gegrün
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funeral pyre. There is no question
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Definition etc als scientific gilt.
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Subjects, imposing a Duty, or condi
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definition o f a Sovereign.101 D
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In a later stage, political communi
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P A R T IVM A R X ’S E X C E R P
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into the normal progress of develop
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prevailed in Haiti u. Mexico (F. G.
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14- For by the vainglory of men the
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mystery which religion requires, an
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Unter d. Khonds of Central India eb
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every portion of land has its respe
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NOTES
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 4-5.the
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Notes to Introduction, p. 6.of Mank
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 6-7.bibl
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Notes to Introduction, p. 7.willkü
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Notes to Introduction, p. 7.of man,
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That Marx had more than one opinion
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Notes to Introduction, p. 1 1 .Ther
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 17-22.33
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 34-48.Ma
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Notes to Introduction, p. 43.id., D
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 43-48.sc
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 51-59.Mo
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 62-71.so
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Notes to Introduction, p. 72.Origin
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Notes to Introduction, p. 72.beclou
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 72-74.p.
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Notes to Introduction, p. 77.Marx
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Notes to Introduction, p. 77.Diese
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 78-79.ga
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Notes to Introduction, p. 85-86.Lic
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Notes to Introduction, p. 88.169 Th
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Notes to Introduction, pp. 89-90. N
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 1 13-120.32 Ms
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 135-153.82 Sho
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 174-183.38 M s
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 199-208.with t
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 216-221.210
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 222-227.Rathes
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Notes to Morgan, pp. 232-239.256 On
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Notes to Morgan, p. 240.22 Agricult
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Notes to Phear, pp. 252-284. Notes
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Notes to Maine, pp. 299-302.et seq.
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Notes to Maine, pp. 312-329.55 A co
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Notes to Lubbock, pp. 341-351.2 Ms.
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I. M ARX’S BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTES IN
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enacted by the Governor General inC
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England, until the beginning of the
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H. G EN ERAL BIBLIOGRAPHYA c o s t
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D a v ie s , S i r J o h n . A disc
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G r o t e , G e o r g e . A History
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L e w is , C h a r l t o n T. and C
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M u l h a l l , M . G. Egyptian Fin
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S r e z n e v s k y , 1. 1. Slovar
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IN D EX OF NAMES
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Blackstone, Sir William. (1723-1780
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Giraldus Cambrensis. (1146?-:!220?)
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Licinius Calvus, C. (Consul 364 B.
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Needham, Joseph. (1900- ). 49, 376.
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Tocqueville, Alexis Charles de. (18