An Artist in Abydos Jerry J. VaskeThe first book to reveal the private life of an Englishwoman whose contribution to the recording of Egypts ancient past has long been overlooked An Artist in Abydos is the first book to recognize Broomes great contribution to the work done during this golden age of excavation in Upper Egypt. In this remarkable account, Lee Young tells the story of Myrtle Broome, who died in 1978, largely through her letters. An only child and a prolific writer, Broome
Jean Lescure’s General and Periodic Crises of Overproduction is a pioneering study of the causes and consequences of industrial crises in capitalist economies in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
It also addresses the range of initiatives to enhance phytochemicals in the diet to prevent or treat CVD
By drawing on English
The impact of different seed systems on the management of crop genetic diversity is also analysed
leg health
digital literacy and inclusion
the safety and efficacy of individual monocultures for prophylactic and/or therapeutic efficacy against Salmonella infections in poultry under both laboratory and field conditions are summarized
Werbner reveals not only the cosmopolitan distinctiveness but also the force of creative difference in the ideas
many of the problems of conserving the past in diverse and disparate societies remain to be resolved
what practical consequences
These nonverbal marks do not form identifiable words but provide clues to the literacy and daily life at Gordion from the Bronze Age through the Hellenistic Period
and offers comparative analyses uncovering how Agrippino Manteo’s scripts creatively adapt Italian Renaissance chivalric poems and nineteenth-century prose compilations