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Images of The Past 7th Edition Price Test Bank
Images of The Past 7th Edition Price Test Bank
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Student: ___________________________________________________________________________
1. Archaeology
A. is the study of the human past.
B. combines the themes of time and change.
C. involves artifacts, ecofacts, and features.
D. all of the above
E. none of the above
2. Artifacts are
A. portable objects that people made in the past.
B. fossil bones.
C. pyramids.
D. all of the above.
E. none of the above.
3. A site is
A. a basic unit of archaeological analysis.
B. a place where people lived.
C. a place where people carried out activities.
D. all of the above.
E. none of the above.
5. Topographic maps are useful for archaeologists because they contain information on
A. ancient vegetation.
B. weather patterns.
C. the shape of the land.
D. soil distribution.
16. A number of remote sensing techniques allows archaeologists to look for features buried in the ground
without digging, including
A. ground penetrating radar.
B. accelerator mass spectrometry.
C. electronic spades.
D. dowsing rods.
E. none of the above.
F. all of the above.
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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Greece and
Babylon
This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United
States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away
or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License
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are not located in the United States, you will have to check the
laws of the country where you are located before using this
eBook.
Language: English
BY
LEWIS R. FARNELL, D.Litt., M.A.
FELLOW OF EXETER COLLEGE, OXFORD
AUTHOR OF
“CULTS OF THE GREEK STATES,” “EVOLUTION OF RELIGION,”
“HIGHER ASPECTS OF GREEK RELIGION” (HIBBERT LECTURES)
CHAPTER II.
Statement of the Problem and the Evidence.
CHAPTER III.
Morphology of the Compared Religions.
CHAPTER IV.
Anthropomorphism and Theriomorphism in Anatolia and the
Mediterranean.
CHAPTER V.
Predominance of the Goddess.
CHAPTER VI.
The Deities as Nature-Powers.
CHAPTER VII.
The Deities as Social-Powers.
CHAPTER VIII.
Religion and Morality.
CHAPTER IX.
Purity a Divine Attribute.
CHAPTER X.
Concept of Divine Power and Ancient Cosmogonies.
CHAPTER XI.
The Religious Temperament of the Eastern and Western
Peoples.
The relation of the individual to the deity more intimate in
Mesopotamia than in Greece—The religious temper more
ecstatic, more prone to self-abasement, sentimentality, rapture
—Humility and the fear of God ethical virtues in Babylonia—The
child named after the god in both societies—In some Semitic
communities the deity takes a title from the worshipper—
Fanaticism in Mesopotamian religion, entire absence of it in the
Hellenic
CHAPTER XII.
Eschatologic Ideas of East and West.
CHAPTER XIII.
Comparison of the Ritual.
CHAPTER XIV.
Summary of Results.
INDEX OF NAMES AND SUBJECTS.
ENDNOTES.
GREECE AND BABYLON.
CHAPTER I.
Inaugural Lecture.