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Page "Principality of Antioch" ¶ 21
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colophons and .
This is similar to the colophons of two System B clay tablets that say that they are the tersitu of Kidinnu.
In its earliest colophons Wired credited Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan as its " patron saint.
In Great Britain colophons grew generally less common in the 16th century.
With the development of the private press movement from around 1890, colophons became conventional in private press books, and often included a good deal of additional information on the book, including statements of limitation, data on paper, ink, type and binding, and other technical details.
Some commercial publishers took up the use of colophons, and began to include similar details in their books, either at the end of the text ( the traditional position ) or on the verso of the title-leaf.
Such colophons might identify the book's designer, the software used, the printing method, the printing company, and the kind of ink, paper and its cotton content.
Book publishers Alfred A. Knopf, the Folio Society and O ' Reilly Media are notable for their substantial colophons.
Many colophons used in the 15th century are clearly derivative of alchemical symbols relating to the alloys used by printers to make lead type, primarily the symbols for antimony and tin.
Some Web pages also have colophons, which frequently contain ( X ) HTML, CSS, or usability standards compliance information and links to Web site validation tests.
Positionally, colophons on ancient tablets are comparable to a signature line in our own times.
Examples of colophons in ancient literature may be found in the compilation Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament.
An extensive study of the eleven colophons found in the book of Genesis was done by Percy Wiseman.
Wiseman's study of the Genesis colophons, sometimes described as the Wiseman hypothesis, has a detailed examination of the " catch phrases " mentioned above that were used in literature of the second millennium BC and earlier in tying together the various accounts in a series of tablets.
" The Right Ginza part of the Ginza Rba contains sections dealing with theology, creation, ethics, historical, and mythical narratives ; its six colophons reveal that it was last redacted in the early Islamic Era.
Charles Graves, who deciphered in 1846 from partially erased colophons the name of the Scribe Ferdomnach and the bishop Torbach who ordered the Book.
However, Armenian colophons from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries and foreign travelers of the time indicate that Armenians were indeed not spared from the devşirme.
Furthermore, Leviticus 22: 11-21 parallels Leviticus 17, and there are, according to textual criticism, passages at Leviticus 18: 26, 19: 37, 22: 31-33, 24: 22, and 25: 55, which, have the appearance of once standing at the end of independent laws or collections of laws as colophons.
The principal Armenian sources available in this period come from the historian Tovma Metsopetsi and several other contemporary colophons.
Jihanshah pursued a policy of persecution against the Armenians in Syunik and Armenian colophons record the sacking of the monastery of Tatev by his forces.
It is from these colophons, and rarely from the texts of the poems themselves, that we gather the names of many kings and chieftains and the poets and poetesses patronized by them.
To add to the confusions, some historians have even denounced these colophons as later additions and untrustworthy as historical documents.
The name traditionally given to the compendium reflects a phrase from the colophons, which speaks of the kart / kard, from Avestan karda meaning " acts " ( also in the sense of " chapters "), and dēn, from Avestan daena, literally " insight " or " revelation ," but more commonly translated as " religion.

colophons and manuscript
The manuscript has been copied by four hands, with textual " accessories " ( colophons, chapter numbers, and the like ) in a fifth ( Parkes 1982, 6-11 ).

colophons and Roslin
The colophons in Roslin ’ s manuscripts permit scholars to partially reconstruct the world in which he lived in.
In these colophons Roslin appears as a chronicler, who preserved facts and events of his time.

colophons and was
It was their responsibility to provide not only editorial expertise but articles ( and in the case of Rockwell Kent, The Colophon logos and colophons ).

colophons and were
Sixteen of them composed appreciatiative colophons which were attached to the left side of the painting, creating a lengthy scroll.

colophons and which
The statements of printing which appeared ( under the terms of the Unlawful Societies Act 1799 ) on the verso of the title-leaf and final page of each book printed in Britain in the 19th century are not, strictly speaking, colophons, and are better referred to as " printers ' imprints " or " printer statements ".

colophons and is
In the colophons of his books the place of business is called " apud Lyskirchen ".

Malatia and .
The town of Malatia, which guarded one of the Cilician Gates through the Taurus Mountains in the period after the First Crusade, had been by 1100 captured by an Armenian soldier of fortune.
Reports were received that the Malik Ghazi Danishmend ( Danishmend Emir ), Ghazi Gümüştekin of Sivas, was preparing an expedition to capture Malatia, and the Armenians sought help from Bohemond.
In 1995, the MacArthur Foundation approached Torey Malatia, general manager of Chicago Public Radio, with an offer of $ 150, 000 to produce a show featuring local Chicago writers and performance artists.
Malatia approached Glass who countered that he wanted to do a weekly program with a budget of $ 300, 000.
who had occupied certain Assyrian districts in the Upper Euphrates ; then he overran Commagene and eastern Cappadocia, and drove the Hittites from the Assyrian province of Subartu, northeast of Malatia.
In a subsequent campaign, the Assyrian forces penetrated into the mountains south of Lake Van and then turned westward to receive the submission of Malatia.
The general manager since 1995 is Torey Malatia.
Her first single, " Non partir "/" Malatia ", was produced under the stage name Mina for the Italian audience.
Bar-Salibi was, like Bar-Hebraeus, a native of Malatia on the upper Euphrates.

Gospel and MS
MS 59874 with Ethiopic Gospel of Matthew
Page of text ( folio 160v ) from a Carolingian Gospel Book ( British Library, MS Add.
The beginning of the Gospel of John in a manuscript of Wycliffe's English translation ( MS. Hunter 191 ) ( first line:In þe bigynnyng was / þe word & þe word / was at god / & god was / þe word .’)
The text is a very good and careful copy of the single Gospel of John from what has been called the " Italo-Northumbrian " family of texts, other well-known examples of which are several manuscripts from Wearmouth-Jarrow, including the Codex Amiatinus, and in the British Library the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Gospel Book MS Royal 1.
Coptic sewing is also found in the earliest surviving leather bookbindings, which are from Coptic libraries in Egypt from the 7th and 8th centuries ; in particular the design of the cover of one in the Morgan Library ( MS M. 569 ) has been compared to the St Cuthbert Gospel.
The Book of Deer ( Leabhar Dhèir in Gaelic ) ( Cambridge University Library, MS. Ii. 6. 32 ) is a 10th-century Latin Gospel Book with early 12th-century additions in Latin, Old Irish and Scottish Gaelic.
The Book of Dimma ( Dublin, Trinity College, MS. A. IV. 23 ) is an 8th-century Irish pocket Gospel Book originally from the Abbey of Roscrea, founded by St. Cronan in the County Tipperary, Ireland.
In March 1982, he established MS Missionaries ( Christian Gospel Mission today ).
The Durham Gospels is a very incomplete late 7th century insular Gospel Book, now kept in the Durham Cathedral Dean and Chapter Library ( MS A. II. 17 ).
Gospel Book Fragment is another manuscript ( MS A. II. 10 ) in the cathedral library which is sometimes referred to as the " Durham Gospels ", but more usually as the " Durham Gospel Fragment ".
The Munich MS., formerly at Bamberg, begins at line 85, and has many lacunae, but continues the history down to the last verse of St. Luke's Gospel, ending, however, in the middle of a sentence.
MS. 286 ) is an illuminated Gospel Book which dates from the 6th century.
MS 5111 ) is a Byzantine illuminated Gospel Book fragment on vellum from the 6th or 7th century.
MS 40618 is a late 8th century illuminated Irish Gospel Book with 10th century Anglo-Saxon additions.
# REDIRECT Carolingian Gospel Book ( British Library, MS Add.
Folio 109v from a Carolingian Gospel Book ( British Library, MS Add.
Breton Gospel Book ( British Library, MS Egerton 609 ) | Breton Gospel Book: Folio 8 rect, the incipit page to the Gospel of Matthew
MS 5463 ) is an 8th century illuminated Gospel Book.
Folio 27r from the Cotton-Corpus Christi Gospel Fragment ( British Library, MS Cotton Otho C V ), the Lion of Mark.
Folio 28r from the Cotton-Corpus Christi Gospel Fragment ( British Library, MS Cotton Otho C V ), the incipit to Mark.

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