Was an Early Edition of the Book of Kings Composed during Hezekiah’s Reign?

2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-91
Author(s):  
Nadav Na’aman
Keyword(s):  
1901 ◽  
Vol s9-VII (166) ◽  
pp. 167-168
Author(s):  
Charles King

1853 ◽  
Vol s1-VIII (203) ◽  
pp. 277-277
Author(s):  
F. B—w.

Author(s):  
Stephen Rippon

That the character of settlement across Iron Age Britain was far from uniform is well known, although Hawkes’ (1931, fig. 1) plotting of the distribution of hillforts was not expanded upon for many years, with key studies such as Harding’s (1974) The Iron Age in Lowland Britain and the early edition of Cunliffe’s (1974) Iron Age Communities in Britain lacking distribution maps of settlement types. Cunliffe’s (1978, fig. 16.2; 1991, fig. 20.6; 2005, fig. 4.3) eventual mapping of four settlement character areas across Britain was therefore a seminal piece of work, although the whole of eastern England fell within a single zone characterized by ‘villages and open settlements’, while Bradley (2007, fig. 5.14) suggested that eastern England was a landscape of ‘open and wandering settlements’ (Fig. 3.1). In contrast, Hill (1999; 2007) has suggested that while the East Midlands and his ‘northern Anglia’ (Norfolk and northern Suffolk) were characterized by clusters of agglomerated settlements and large ‘open villages’, parts of his ‘southern Anglia’ (i.e. what is referred to here as the Northern Thames Basin) has ‘little evidence for densely settled communities’ in the Middle Iron Age. He suggested instead that the ‘apparently empty areas’ in ‘southern Anglia’ were ‘probably exploited economically and agriculturally in a much less intensive manner by relatively few permanent settlements . . . and, especially, by people visiting them’ (Hill 2007, 22). Hill’s (2007) view that ‘southern Anglia’ was a sparsely settled and peripheral area has not, however, stood the test of time and what is in fact striking is just how much Iron Age settlement has been discovered there through recent developmentled archaeological work. The most intensively investigated area, at Stansted Airport and the nearby new A120, for example, comprised a landscape littered with small enclosed farmsteads consisting of one or two roundhouses associated with a small number of four-post granaries (Havis and Brooks 2004; Timby et al. 2007a; Cooke et al. 2008). The character of these settlements is clearly suggestive of permanent occupation, while their density suggests that this was far from an empty landscape that was seasonally exploited by outsiders.


1901 ◽  
Vol s9-VII (173) ◽  
pp. 312-312
Author(s):  
W. D. Macray

The Library ◽  
1914 ◽  
Vol s3-V (17) ◽  
pp. 60-69
Author(s):  
HENRRY R. PLOMER

2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greg Taylor

<p>In 2007, the Victorian government refused to produce a series of documents despite an order by the State’s Legislative Council to do so, claiming that the Council’s legal powers did not extend to making the order in question. The government cited some obscure alleged rules of law in support of their<br />position which no government elsewhere in Australia has ever thought to rely on. In citing these rules, the Victorian government appears to have misunderstood an early edition of Erskine May. This article demonstrates that none of the alleged rules exists, and the government’s refusal was wrong in law. Therefore is should not be regarded as setting a precedent for<br />future cases.</p>


Literary Fact ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 312-324
Author(s):  
Fedor B. Poljakov
Keyword(s):  

The paper is dedicated to the last period in creative work and biography of Ellis (Lev L’vovich Kobylinsky, 1879–1947), a symbolist poet and theoretician of art. In 1930s Ellis was actively writing on various historical, literary, religious, philosophical and esoteric subjects and continued to work on his poems and translations. The article provides excerpts from the Ellis’ letters to the artist Nikolai Zaretsky, on the basis of which the stages of Ellis’ work on his third and last book of poetry and translations titled Cross and Lear during the 1930s can be clarified in some detail. In the Addendum Ellis’ poem “Death and a Knight (Old Engraving)” is published.


1941 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-78
Author(s):  
William H. P. Hatch

In 1538 Melchior Sessa published at Venice an edition of the New Testament in Greek. It was printed by Ioannes Antonius de Sabio, and it consists of two volumes. About twelve years ago Dr. J. Rendel Harris of Birmingham gave the present writer the first volume of this work. He bought it of a dealer in old books, but he did not remember when or where he had acquired it. After many vain attempts to find Volume II I saw it listed in the catalogue of Bernhard Liebisch of Leipzig in the summer of 1939. I ordered it at once and received it before the outbreak of the war.


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