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Advances in Maya Epigraphy
In: Annual review of anthropology, Band 24, Heft 1, S. 215-235
ISSN: 1545-4290
During the past twenty years, significant progress has been made in determining the nature of the Maya script, the subjects covered in the monumental inscriptions, the grammatical structure of Maya writing, and the astronomical content of hieroglyphic texts on the monuments and in the codices. The script is unequivocally logosyllabic in nature, consisting of a mixture of logographic, syllabic, and semantic signs. The monumental texts are primarily concerned with dynastic history, including references to the births, marriages, military exploits, accessions to office, and deaths of rulers and their families, as well as the rituals that they performed. The grammar of hieroglyphic texts corresponds closely in structure to that of the Cholan and Yucatecan languages that were spoken in the region where hieroglyphs occur. And the pre-Columbian Maya were accomplished astronomers who produced complex tables for predicting solar and lunar eclipses, the stations of Venus and Mars, and solstices and equinoxes.
Bibliography of studies in Indian epigraphy
In: The M.S. University Oriental series 6
Supernomina: a study in Latin epigraphy
In: Commentationes humanarum litterarum 40,1
5 Epigraphy, Topography and Mapping
In: The Military and Colonial Destruction of the Roman Landscape of North Africa, 1830-1900, S. 208-mmm
Studies in fifth-century Attic epigraphy
In: University of Cincinnati classical studies 4
The epigraphy of Ptolemaic Egypt
In: Oxford studies in ancient documents
OVERVIEW OF POLISH EPIGRAPHY IN THE CAUCASUS
In: Istorija, archeologija i ėtnografija Kavkaza: History, archeology and ethnography of the Caucasus, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 61-68
ISSN: 2618-849X
The issue of Polish epigraphy in the Caucasus is still very poorly understood and until now no one of the scientists has attempted to analyze this phenomenon. This is probably due to the very scant research material that can be relied on in the 21st century. Despite the passage of time, there are, however, sources that allow us to study Polish epigraphy in the Caucasus. It can be divided into four main groups: a) inscriptions on temples; b) epitaph; c) advertising epigraphs; d) graffiti, especially the kind called Style-Writing.Most of the Polish epigraphy in the Caucasus is associated with the presence of Poles in this area at a time when part of the lands of the Commonwealth was part of the Russian Empire. How many Poles ended up in the Caucasus and when is difficult to calculate, at least due to the lack of statistical data taking into account nationality. Presumably, although accurate calculations on this issue were not published, recruits from the territory of the former Rzeczpospolita to the Caucasus began to be expelled after 1773, i.e. after the I partition of Poland. The sending of exiles to serve in the Caucasus as a punishment took place, in turn, during the war, as, for example, after Napoleon's campaign in Moscow. Ludwik Wiedershal gave information that in 1812, apparently (it should be emphasized that the author used a conditional mood) 10 thousand Poles were sent to the Caucasus, although in 1815 almost all of them returned to the country. Other Polish groups exiled to the Caucasus included participants in uprisings for independence, as well as those who were repressed for participating in various organizations that, in the opinion of the tsarist government, posed a threat to the then existing system, for example, filarets, persons associated with the so-called Konarski case, and others.
Annual report on South-Indian epigraphy
Reports for 1886/87-1920/21 lack title page; titles from text vary: Archaeology; Archaeology and epigraphy; Epigraphy, etc. ; Imprint varies. ; Report year ends Mar. 31. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Reports for 1886/87- issued by: Government of Madras, Public Department; for -1919/20 by: Government of Madras, Home Department (Education); for 1920/21 by Government of Madras, Finance (Separate Revenue) Department; for 1924/25-1930/31, Government of India, Central Publications Branch; for 1931/32-1944/45 by: Government of India, Manager of Publications.
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