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         Perseus:     more books (100)
  1. Perseus and the Gorgon Medusa (Orchard Myths) by Geraldine McCaughrean, 1998-11-26
  2. Trap for Perseus by Ludek Pesek, 1980-05
  3. Theseus-Perseus (Stephanides Brothers' Greek Mythology, Vol 4) by Menelaos Stephanides, 2000-01
  4. The Best Business Books Ever: The 100 Most Influential Business Books You'll Never Have Time to Read by Editors Of Perseus Publishing, Perseus Publishing, 2003-07
  5. Movers & Shakers: The 100 Most Influential Figures In Modern Business (Ultimate Business Library) by Editors Of Perseus Publishing, 2003-11-12
  6. Empirical Psychology: Or, the Human Mind As Given in Consciousness. for the Use of Colleges and Academies by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-03-09
  7. Empirical Psychology; Or, the Science of Mind From Experience by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-10-14
  8. Humanity Immortal, Or, Man Tried, Fallen, And Redeemed by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-04-05
  9. A System of Moral Science by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-10-14
  10. Empirical Psychology: Or the Human Mind As Given in Consciousness by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-01-11
  11. Rational Psychology (Amer Philosophy, Religion) by Laurens Hickok, Perseus Hickok Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2009-06-04
  12. Empirical Psychology: Or, the Human Mind As Given in Consciousness. for the Use of Colleges and Academies by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-01-12
  13. Creator And Creation: Or The Knowledge In The Reason Of God And His Work (1872) by Laurens Perseus Hickok, 2010-09-10
  14. Perseus by Warwick Hutton, 1993-03

101. Perseus Encyclopedia
With bibliography, from the perseus Project.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0004&que

102. Perseus Canada Inc.
Advanced survey software for creating Web surveys and polls. Create Web surveys,email surveys, exit polls, and customer satisfaction surveys easily.
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103. Herodotus Book 2
Herodotus's account of Egyptian life after the invasion by the Persians.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/GreekScience/hdtbk2.html
Herodotus Book 2
Chapter 1
[1] After the death of Cyrus, Cambyses inherited his throne. He was the son of Cyrus and of Cassandane, the daughter of Pharnaspes, for whom Cyrus mourned deeply when she died before him, and had all his subjects mourn also.
[2] Cambyses was the son of this woman and of Cyrus. He considered the Ionians and Aeolians slaves inherited from his father, and prepared an expedition against Egypt, taking with him some of these Greek subjects besides others whom he ruled.
Chapter 2
[1] Now before Psammetichus became king of Egypt, the Egyptians believed that they were the oldest people on earth. But ever since Psammetichus became king and wished to find out which people were the oldest, they have believed that the Phrygians were older than they, and they than everybody else.
[2] Psammetichus, when he was in no way able to learn by inquiry which people had first come into being, devised a plan by which he took two newborn children of the common people and gave them to a shepherd to bring up among his flocks. He gave instructions that no one was to speak a word in their hearing; they were to stay by themselves in a lonely hut, and in due time the shepherd was to bring goats and give the children their milk and do everything else necessary.
[3] Psammetichus did this, and gave these instructions, because he wanted to hear what speech would first come from the children, when they were past the age of indistinct babbling. And he had his wish; for one day, when the shepherd had done as he was told for two years, both children ran to him stretching out their hands and calling "Bekos!" as he opened the door and entered.

104. Greek Mythology Hero Perseus
Acrisius was furious, he shut Danae and baby perseus up in a large chest and Polydectes would have married Danae by force if perseus wasn t there to
http://edweb.sdsu.edu/people/bdodge/scaffold/GG/perseus.html
Perseus
Once there was a king named Acrisius, he had a beautiful daughter named Danae . The oracle of Apollo told Acrisius that Danae's son would one day kill him. Acrisius could not let that happen, so he locked Danae in a bronze tower so that she would never marry or have children. The tower had no doors, but it had one very small window. Danae was very sad, but one day a bright shower of gold came through the small window. A man appeared, he had a thunderbolt in his hand and Danae knew he was a god, but she didn't know which. The man said, "Yes, I am a god and I wish to make you my wife. I can make this dark prison a wonderful sunny land with many flowers " All happened as he said, the horrible prison became fields almost as wonderful as the Elysian Fields themselves, but one day Acrisius saw light coming out of the small window. He told his men to tear down one of the walls. He walked into the tower and saw Danae with a baby on her lap, smiling she said, "I have named him Perseus." Acrisius was furious, he shut Danae and baby Perseus up in a large chest and cast them out to sea. Somehow they got safely to the island of Seriphos where Polydectes was king. The kings brother who was a fisherman, caught them in his net and pulled them to shore, his name was Dictys. Perseus grew up to become a strong young man. Polydectes heard about Danae and wanted her to marry him, but she rejected him. Polydectes would have married Danae by force if Perseus wasn't there to protect her.

105. Perseus Colony, Star Trek RPG, Andromeda Trek
Set in the Star Trek time line around the time of Kirk and the Enterprise. Rating 18.
http://www.atrek.org/perseus/
Perseus Colony
A member of ATrek
Fata viam invenient Cast and crew. ATrek home. New members welcome ! Current Mission Perseus setting and background. Perseus Colony is a Play By email writing game and part of the Andromeda Trek RPG. Mysteriously transported to the Andromeda galaxy, the survivors of the Klingon attack on DS-4 find safety with the generous people of Drux. Faced with the reality that their homes are now over 2 million light years away they accept the Drux'll offer of forming a settlement on cold barren islands on Drux.
PGP signed copy of this file

106. Perseus - Home Page
perseus aims at providing various components that are of general interest whenmanaging persistency. The following components are provided int perseus
http://perseus.objectweb.org/
Consortium Solutions Middleware Forge ... MyObjectWeb Go to ObjectWeb... Home Page Consortium Solutions Middleware Project Forge My ObjectWeb Advanced - Powered by Google
Perseus Project Links
Home

Download

Documentation

Mailing Lists
...
Partners

Developers' Corner
CVS Repository

ObjectWeb Forge Site

About Team Contacts
Perseus
Perseus aims at providing various components that are of general interest when managing persistency. These components sould be used when constructing different persistence personalities such as EJB/CMP or JDO. But some components should also be used in other context that the persistency.The following components are provided int perseus:

107. Herodotus, The Histories (ed. A. D. Godley)
The Histories printed on the Internet, available in Greek or English.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0126&loc

108. StarDate Online | Constellation Guide | Perseus
One of the brightest and most interesting stars in perseus is Algol. A faintstar cluster in perseus, called M34 is visible with binoculars.
http://stardate.org/nightsky/constellations/perseus.html
Contact StarDate About StarDate Friends of McDonald Sign up for Sky Tips
Keywords
Constellation Guide Nearby
  • Pegasus, the Flying Horse
  • Auriga, the Charioteer
  • Cassiopeia Keyword Search Find StarDate radio programs about:
    Aquila, the Eagle

    Auriga, the Charioteer

    Big Dipper

    Boøtes, the Herdsman
    ...
    Ursa Major, the Great Bear

    Perseus
    Perseus, the hero, arcs high overhead in fall and early winter. Many of its stars are immersed in the faint glow of our galaxy, the Milky Way. In fact, if you look at Perseus under dark skies, you may be able to see three of the spiral arms that enfold the Milky Way.
    A faint star cluster in Perseus, called M34 is visible with binoculars. Home Site Map Privacy McDonald Observatory
  • 109. Perseus: Complete Text In Latin Only
    omnem spem salutis deposuerat et, ubi perseus adiit, terrore. paene exanimata erat . perseus, ubi haec cognovit, irâ magnâ commotus est; ad
    http://www.languages.uncc.edu/classics/latin/perseus/perseus_texts.htm
    Latin 1201
    Latin 1202

    Latin 2201
    Perseus ... Chapter 11 Haec narrantur a poetis de Perseo. Perseus filius erat Iovis, maximi deorum. Avus eius Acrisius appellabatur. Acrisius volebat Perseum, nepotem suum, necare; nam propter oraculum puerum timebat. Comprehendit igitur Perseum, adhuc infantem, et cum matre in arcâ ligneâ inclusit. Tum arcam ipsam in mare coniecit. Danaë, Persei mater, magno- pere territa est; tempestas enim magna mare turbabat. Per- seus autem in sinû matris dormiebat. Iuppiter tamen haec omnia vidit, et filium suum servare constituit. Fecit igitur mare tranquillum, et arcam ad insulam Seriphum perduxit. Huius insulae Polydectes tum rex erat. Postquam arca ad litus appulsa est, Danae in harenâ quietem capiebat. Post breve tempus a piscatore quodam reperta est, et ad domum regis Polydectis adducta est. Ille matrem et puerum benigne excepit, et sedem tutam in finibus suis dedit. Danae hoc donum libenter accepit, et pro tanto beneficio regi gratias egit.

    110. Diodorus Siculus, Library
    Fragments of Books 9 and 10 plus Books 1117 available in English and Greek from a 1989 translation by C.H. Oldfather.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Diod. 9.13.1

    111. (44) Macedon, Perseus
    confronted perseus at Pydna in Macedonia, where the Macedonian army was perseus eventually surrendered to the Romans and died in captivity in Rome.
    http://www.lawrence.edu/dept/art/buerger/catalogue/044.html
    (44) Macedon, Perseus - AR tetradrachm, 171-168 B.C., 15.54 g. (inv. 91.061).
    Obverse: Bearded and diademed head of Perseus r.
    Reverse: In oak wreath, eagle on thunderbolt r.; monograms above eagle and in r. field; below wreath, plough; : of King Perseus.
    Provenance: Ex Fred V. Fowler collection; Stack's, 1969.
    Bibliography: N. Davis and C.M. Kraay, The Hellenistic Kingdoms: Portrait Coins and History (London 1973) 228-229.
    Perseus, the last Macedonian king, succeeded his father, Philip V, in 179 B.C. From the beginning he was careful in securing allies against his greatest threat, Eumenes II of Pergamon. He renewed a treaty with Rome, which treated him as an ally until Eumenes convinced Rome to declare war against Perseus in 171 B.C. The conflict dragged on for three years, until the Roman commander, Aemilius Paullus, confronted Perseus at Pydna in Macedonia, where the Macedonian army was slaughtered. Perseus eventually surrendered to the Romans and died in captivity in Rome. Macedonia was divided into four powerless republics, and the kingdom of Alexander the Great ceased to exist.
    The portrait on the obverse is presumably realistic, since it includes distinctive features such as the sloping forehead, prominent nose, and short, wispy beard, and has few of the idealizing qualities common to Hellenistic coin portraits inspired by those of Alexander the Great. The eagle on the thunderbolt and the oak wreath of the reverse refer to Zeus, a patron deity of Macedonian royalty since Alexander.

    112. The Julius Caesar Site
    Texts, historical sources and analogues, and student projects.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/JC/
    The Julius Caesar Site
    Bust of Julius Caesar, from the British Museum
    from The Art of the Romans by H. P. Walters (1911) Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
    Sources and Analogues

    Tufts Students' Projects

    Click here for the extensive index of what this growing site includes and what is coming soon This site is currently under construction at Tufts University
    as part of the Perseus Project , a digital library for the study of
    ancient Greece, Rome, and now the English Renaissance. webmaster@perseus.tufts.edu

    113. The Stories Of The Constellations - Perseus
    perseus this constellation is the cornerstone of probably the most intriguing and Greece the legend of perseus encompasses seven separate star groups
    http://www.ufrsd.net/staffwww/stefanl/myths/perseus.htm
    The Legend of Perseus Perseus : this constellation is the cornerstone of probably the most intriguing and involved legends within classical Greek mythology. The bright, variable star Algol has often been identified as an evil star owing in part to its obvious changes in brightness every three days. Its name is derived from the Arabic Ras al-Ghul, the root of our word ghoul and translated as Head of the Devil. Strangely enough, later Christian representations of the constellation identified the star as the Bible as held by the apostle Paul. Mesopotamia : associated with the violent, uncouth god Amurru or Martu. He is often described as a storm, one who digs up truffles in the foothills, eats raw flesh and has no permanent home. The nomadic people with which this god can be associated before he was absorbed into the mythologies of the ancient Mesopotamians are the Amorites described in the Bible. See the Mesopotamian legends of Auriga
    A later representation marks this constellation as Marduk, who battled chaos in the creation of the universe and chained the goddess Istar (Andromeda) to a stone while preparing to fight her companion Tiamat (Hydra). See the Mesopotamian legends of Andromeda Cetus Draco Hercules and Hydra
    Greece : the legend of Perseus encompasses seven separate star groups including Cepheus Andromeda Cassiopeia Pegasus ... Cetus , Medusa (at one time considered a separate constellation) and of course, Perseus himself.

    114. Texts In Perseus For Browsing: Greek
    Hundreds of Greek texts from 33 authors. Options to view in Roman or Greek characters, with links to lexicons for practically every word.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Texts/chunk_TOC.grk.html
    Perseus Tufts Collections: Classics Papyri Renaissance London ... Support Perseus
    Primary Text Index: Greek
    Note: This page is outdated. Perseus Texts are found in the Table of Contents Some links below may not work. Here are the primary texts currently available on our web site. They have been broken into chunks for ease of browsing, with links and a lookup tool to help you navigate through the texts quickly. Clicking on any Greek word in the text which is a link will take you to the morphological analysis for that word, and from there you can use the other text tools. Please see Text Help if you are unsure how to display Greek properly or how to use text tools Note: Textual reference appearing after titles in parentheses gives their standard scholarly abbreviations, and provides a template for how to look up other passages in that author while browsing.
    Index of Authors
    Aeschines Aeschylus Andocides Antiphon ... Xenophon
    Authors and their works:

    115. 'Knowledge Management In The Perseus Digital Library', Ariadne Issue 25
    The perseus digital library is a heterogeneous collection of texts and In previous instantiations of the perseus Digital Library, after a text was
    http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue25/rydberg-cox/
    Knowledge Management in the Perseus Digital Library
    Jeffrey A. Rydberg-Cox, Robert F. Chavez, David A. Smith, Anne Mahoney, Gregory R. Crane
    In this paper, we describe the new document delivery and knowledge management tools in the Perseus Digital Library Digital libraries can be an extremely effective method of extending the services of a traditional library by enabling activities such as access to materials outside the physical confines of the library
    I. What is Perseus?
    The Perseus digital library is a heterogeneous collection of texts and images pertaining to the Archaic and Classical Greek world, late Republican and early Imperial Rome, the English Renaissance, and 19th Century London. The texts are integrated with morphological analysis tools, student and advanced lexica, and sophisticated searching tools that allow users to find all of the inflected instantiations of a particular lexical form. The current corpus of Greek texts contains approximately four million words by thirty-three different authors. Most of the texts were written in the fifth and fourth centuries B.C.E., with some written as late as the second century C.E. The corpus of Latin texts contains approximately one million five hundred thousand words mostly written by authors from the republican and early imperial periods. The digital library also contains more than 30,000 images, 1000 maps, and a comprehensive catalog of sculpture. Collections of English language literature from the Renaissance and the 19th century will be added in the fall of 2000.

    116. Prodicus Of Ceos
    A resource provided by the perseus Project, with links to every mention of this Sophist in Plato's dialogues.
    http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/char/prodicus.htm
    Bernard SUZANNE Last updated December 5, 1998 Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography Works History of interpretation ... New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author This page is part of the "tools" section of a site, Plato and his dialogues , dedicated to developing a new interpretation of Plato's dialogues. The "tools" section provides historical and geographical context (chronology, maps, entries on characters and locations) for Socrates, Plato and their time. For more information on the structure of entries and links available from them, read the notice at the beginning of the index of persons and locations Prodicus, one of the sophists most often mentioned by Plato in his dialogues , was born in the city of Iulis, in the island of Ceos , an Athenian colony off the coast of Attica east of Cape Sunium . The exact date of his birth is not known, nor is that of his death, but, based on various indications about his relative age compared to other sophists and philosophers of the time, he must have been born around and he most likely died after Socrates, as the later talk about him in the present tense in the

    117. PERSEUS: Portal-Enabled Resources Via Shibbolized End-User Security
    perseus (PortalEnabled Resources via Shibbolized End-User Security) will addressthe key challenge of Shibboleth-based access management to information
    http://www.jisc.ac.uk/index.cfm?name=project_perseus

    118. Basic Books Home
    A New York based publisher dedicated to producing serious nonfiction by leading intellectuals, academics and journalists. Basic Books is a member of the perseus Books Group.
    http://www.basicbooks.com
    @import "../css/ba.css";
    Welcome to Basic Books - Books that make you think.
    The Republican War on Science
    by Chris Mooney
    The Republican War on Science is a wake-up call to all Americans who value intellectual honesty and civility in our national affairs...a must-read for all who care about this nation's future."
    Russell E. Train, EPA administrator under Presidents Nixon and Ford
    Science has never been more crucial to deciding the political issues facing the country. Yet science and scientists have less influence with the federal government than at any time since the Eisenhower administration.
    On a broad array of issues - stem cell research, climate change, abstinence education, mercury pollution, and many others - the Bush administration's positions fly in the face of overwhelming scientific consensus.
    In The Republican War on Science , Chris Mooney ties together the disparate strands of the attack on science into a compelling and frightening account of our government's increasing unwillingness to distinguish between legitimate research and ideologically driven pseudoscience.
    Visit the official War On Science website
    More

    Buy this book
    Three Billion New Capitalists
    The Great Shift of Wealth and Power to the East by Clyde V. Prestowitz

    119. Internet Archaeol 3. Reviews. Eiteljorg. Perseus 2.0
    perseus 2.0 Sources and Studies on Ancient Greek Culture perseus 2.0 is verymuch enlarged from the first version, and it now fills four CDs (and there
    http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue3/reviews/eiteljorg.html
    Perseus 2.0: Sources and Studies on Ancient Greek Culture
    Harrison Eiteljorg, II
    Available for the Macintosh on four CD-ROMS or concise version on one CD-ROM. For further details, including price and how to order, see: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/ I have a love-hate relationship with the Perseus Project. Since I first learned about it, when it was still a plan more than a project, I have been impressed by its audacious scope. I have also been very impressed by the far-sightedness of the project directors as they have made certain that the data they store - not necessarily the data they put out on the commercial CDs but the underlying data stored on disc at project headquarters - have been stored in the most sophisticated and neutral formats possible. They have, for instance, used SGML for text and complex databases for other information. They are also storing mapping information in GIS format. On the other hand, I have found myself unimpressed with the CDs produced, both the original one in 1992 and the most recent version, Perseus 2.0

    120. ARC :: Lord Frederick Leighton (1830-1896) :: Page 1 Of 11
    The Art Renewal Center's information on Lord Frederick Leighton. Features biography and a large collection of highresolution images, including Music Lesson, Flaming June, Lachrymae, perseus on Pegasus Hastening to the Rescue of Andromeda, The Maid with the Yellow Hair, and Spirit of the Summit.
    http://www.artrenewal.org/asp/database/museum_template.asp?artist=14

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