 | Edmund Burke - Books - 1911 - 676 pages
...dark and dreary State religion, through which the priests for centuries had debased the popular mind. The Syndics of the Cambridge University Press have earned the gratitude of a large body of students by publishing Mr. WE Heitland's Roman Republic. Hitherto the latter have been... | |
 | Edmund Burke - Books - 1911 - 692 pages
...dark and dreary State religion, through which the priests for centuries had debased the popular mind. The Syndics of the Cambridge University Press have earned the gratitude of a large body of students by publishing Mr. VV. E. Heitland's Roman Republic. Hitherto the latter have... | |
 | 692 pages
...Mosul, for the pains which they took in superintending the copying of manuscripts D and E, and for the numerous enquiries after ancient Syriac manuscripts...printed in England in the Nestorian Syriac character. 1 Diese Fragen erscheinen wol bedeutsam ^enug, nicht nur für die Alcxaadersage an sich, sondern auch... | |
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