The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
10 results
Sort by:
In: Semitica viva Band 56
In: Testi del vicino oriente antico
In: 6, Letteratura ebraica e aramaica 3
Front Matter /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- In and from the Field: A Journey into the Life of a 'Mission-Ethnographer' and His Co-Producers -- Historic Contextualisation /Lize Kriel -- Corpus of Hoffmann's Ethnographic Articles /Gerrie Grobler , Annekie Joubert and Inge Kosch -- Article 1 (1913). Engagement and Marriage among the Sotho People in the Woodbush Mountains of the Transvaal—Peeletšo le lenyalo Basothong ba Lebowa ba Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 2 (1915). The Initiation School of the Sotho People in the Woodbush Mountains of the Transvaal—Koma ya banna ya Basotho ba Lebowa ba Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 3 (1915). Folktales and Stories of the Natives in Northern Transvaal—Dinonwane le dikanegelo tša Basotho ba Lebowa /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 4 (1916). Folktales and Stories of the Natives in Northern Transvaal—Dinonwane le dikanegelo tša Basotho ba Lebowa /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 5 (1916). Folktales and Stories of the Natives in Northern Transvaal—Dinonwane le dikanegelo tša Basotho ba Lebowa /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 6 (1916). Folktales and Stories of the Natives in Northern Transvaal—Dinonwane le dikanegelo tša Basotho ba Lebowa /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 7 (1928). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 8 (1928/29). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 9 (1930/31). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal: Totems and Prohibitions—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala: Meano le Dikganetšo /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 10 (1931/32). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal: Spirits That Are with Some Stones and Other Things and Witchcraft—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala: Moya wo o nago le maswika a mangwe le ge e le dilo tše dingwe le boloi /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 11 (1932). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal: The Soul in Death and after Death—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala: Moya wa motho mohlang wa lehu le ka morago ga lehu /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel -- Article 12 (1933/34). Sotho Texts from the Woodbush Mountains in the Transvaal: Legal Practices of the Northern Sotho People—Dingwalwa tša Sesotho tše di tšwago Dithabeng tša Woodbush go la Transfala: Tirišo ya melao ya Basotho ba Lebowa /Annekie Joubert , Gerrie Grobler , Inge Kosch and Lize Kriel.
In: Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 327
In: Culture and history of the ancient Near East 54
In: Remnant stones: the Jewish cemeteries of Suriname 1
In: Biblical and Judaic studies from the University of California, San Diego volume 10
Lisbeth S. Fried's insightful study investigates the impact of Achaemenid rule on the political power of local priesthoods during the 6th-4th centuries B.C.E. Scholars typically assume that, as long as tribute was sent to Susa, the capital of the Achaemenid Empire, subject peoples remained autonomous. Fried's work challenges this assumption. She examines the inscriptions, coins, temple archives, and literary texts from Babylon, Egypt, Asia Minor, and Judah and concludes that there was no local autonomy. The only people with power in the Empire were Persians and their appointees, and this was true for Judah as well. The Judean priesthood achieved its longed-for independence only much later, under the Maccabees
In: Mémoires lieux de savoir
In: Archive congolaise
In: Handbuch der Orientalistik
In: China Vol. 15
In: Handbook of Christianity in China Vol. 1