Mostrar 4 resultados

Descrição arquivística
Letter from R. Temple Wright to J. G. Frazer
Add. MS c/61/2 · Item · 24 June 1896
Parte de Additional Manuscripts c

39 Harrington Road, Queen's Gate, S.W., London - Has been reading 'Passages from the Bible' and comments on how much of the language and customs in the East are similar to that of the Bible; Mrs Potiphar's name is never mentioned in the Bible, but most people in the East know the story of 'Yoosoof & Zuleika'.

Letter from R. Temple Wright to J. G. Frazer
Add. MS c/61/2a · Item · 24 June 1896
Parte de Additional Manuscripts c

39 Harrington Road, Queen's Gate, S.W., London - Thanks him for his reply to his letter, declines to be the source of information about Yoosof and Zuleika; women are badly treated in the East, and some try to marry Western men so that they and not their family inherit their property; points out that stones are painted and annointed all over India; notices that the clothing of Egyptian cultivators is exactly the clothing of Indian cultivators today; notes that the statues at the British Museum make clear that trade must have been far more extensive than originally imagined.

Copy letter from R. Temple Wright to J. G. Frazer
Add. MS b/37/368 · Item · c 1947-c 1955
Parte de Additional Manuscripts b

39 Harrington Road, Queen's Gate, London, S.W. Dated June 24, 1896 - Has been reading 'Passages from the Bible' and comments on how much of the language and customs in the East are similar to that of the Bible; Mrs Potiphar's name is never mentioned in the Bible, but most people in the East know the story of 'Yoosoof & Zuleika'.

Copy letter from R. Temple Wright to J. G. Frazer
Add. MS b/37/369 · Item · c 1947-c 1955
Parte de Additional Manuscripts b

39 Harrington Road, Queen's Gate, London, S.W. - Thanks him for his reply to his letter, declines to be the source of information about Yoosof and Zuleika; women are badly treated in the East, and some try to marry Western men so that they and not their family inherit their property; points out that stones are painted and annointed all over India; notices that the clothing of Egyptian cultivators is exactly the clothing of Indian cultivators today; notes that the statues at the British Museum make clear that trade must have been far more extensive than originally imagined.