05917nam 2200721 a 450 991096777290332120240410195112.097816073206161607320614(CKB)2670000000081264(EBL)3039742(OCoLC)923704920(OCoLC)721877202(MdBmJHUP)muse4085(Au-PeEL)EBL3039742(CaPaEBR)ebr10457066(CaONFJC)MIL921518(DE-B1597)716342(DE-B1597)9781607320616(MiAaPQ)EBC3039742(Perlego)2041088(EXLCZ)99267000000008126420110124d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Carnegie Maya III Carnegie Institution of Washington notes on Middle American archaeology and ethnology, 1940-1957 /compiled and with an introduction by John M. Weeks1st ed.Boulder [Colo.] University Press of Coloradoc20111 online resource (637 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9781607320593 1607320592 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Figures; Tables; Introduction; Preface; Notes on Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology; Clay Heads from Chiapas, Mexico; Pottery from Champerico, Guatemala; The Ruins of Culuba, Northeastern Yucatan; The Missing Illustrations of the Pomar Relación; An Ethnological Note from Cilvituk, Southern Campeche; The Prototype of the Mexican Codices Telleriano-Remensis and Vaticanus A; Observations on Glyph G of the Lunar Series; A New Pottery Style from the Department of Piura, Peru; Archaeological Specimens from Yucatan and Guatemala; The Payment of Tribute in the Codex MendozaNotes on Sculpture and Architecture at Tonala, ChiapasMaya Epigraphy: A Cycle of 819 Days; The Periods of Tribute Collection in Moctezuma's Empire; Notes on Glyph C of the Lunar Series at Palenque; A Figurine Whistle Representing a Ball Game Player; Notes on a West Coast Survival of the Ancient Mexican Ball Game; Animal-Head Feet and a Bark-Beater in the Middle Usumacinta Region; New Photographs and the Date of Stela 14, Piedras Negras; Grooved Stone Axes from Central America; A Vase from Sanimtaca, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala; A Human-Effigy Pottery Figure from Chalchuapa, El SalvadorA Preconquest Tomb on the Cerro del Zapote, El SalvadorA Tentative Identification of the Head Variant for Eleven; A Possible Lunar Series on the Leyden Plate; Stucco Decoration of Early Guatemala Pottery; Certain Pottery Vessels from Copan; Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala; Jottings on Inscriptions at Copan; The Dating of Seven Monuments at Piedras Negras; Archaeological Finds near Douglas, British Honduras; The Vienna Dictionary; Ixtla Weaving at Chiquilistlan, Jalisco; Worked Gourds from Jalisco; The Graphic Style of the TlalhuicaVariant Methods of Date Recordings in the Jatate Drainage, ChiapasThe Venus Calendar of the Aztec; An Inscription on a Jade Probably Carved at Piedras Negras; Costumes and Wedding Customs at Mixco, Guatemala; Combinations of Glyphs G and F in the Supplementary Series; Moon Age Tables; A Second Tlaloc Gold Plaque from Guatemala; Rock Paintings at Texcalpintado, Morelos, Mexico; A Pyrite Mirror from Queretaro, Mexico; Informe sobre la existencia de jugadores de pelota mayas en la cerámica escultórica de Jaina; Un sello cilindrico con barras y puntosThe Inscription on the Altar of Zoomorph O, QuiriguaThe third in a series of volumes intended to republish the primary data and interpretive studies produced by archaeologists and anthropologists in the Maya region under the umbrella of the Carnegie Institute of Washington's Division of Historical Research, The Carnegie Maya III makes available the series Notes on Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology. The series began in 1940 as an outlet for information that may have been considered too unimportant, brief, or restricted to be submitted for formal publication. However, these notes are often of great interest to the specialists for whom they are designed and to whom their distribution is restricted. The majority of the essays-most of which are on the Maya-are on archaeological subjects, epigraphy, ethnohistory and ethnography, and linguistics. As few original copies of the Notes series are known to exist in U.S. and Canadian libraries, the book will make these essays easily accessible to students, academics, and researchers in the field. Purchase of the print book comes with free individual access to the Adobe Digital Editions Carnegie Maya Series Ebook, which contains the complete set of The Carnegie Maya, The Carnegie Maya II, The Carnegie Maya III and The Carnegie Maya IV, thus making hundreds of documents from the Carnegie Institution's Maya program available in one source.Carnegie Maya 3Carnegie Maya threeMayasMexicoAntiquitiesMayasCentral AmericaAntiquitiesEthnological expeditionsMexicoHistory20th centuryArchaeological expeditionsCentral AmericaHistory20th centuryMexicoAntiquitiesCentral AmericaAntiquitiesMayasAntiquities.MayasAntiquities.Ethnological expeditionsHistoryArchaeological expeditionsHistory972/.6Weeks John M144494MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910967772903321The Carnegie Maya III4362548UNINA02388aam 2200337 n 450 99109858806033212025061810222383-8142-262-0(CKB)4100000008207477(ceeol)ceeol839191(CEEOL)839191(EXLCZ)99410000000820747720252218d2018 ||l |polJedna Rosja w systemie politycznym Federacji RosyjskiejMichał SłowikowskiŁódź [Poland] Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego20181 online resource (1 p. 550)83-8142-261-2 The starting point in this discussion on the place and role of United Russia in the political system of the Russian Federation in the years 2001–2016 is the premise that it is a specific party type within the family of authoritarian parties. Its basic characteristics are direct ties with the ruling faction – the real decision-making centre within a particular political system – and a stabilizing influence over an authoritarian regime. This type of authoritarian parties is internally heterogeneous because parties differ in their actual contribution to the stabilization of an authoritarian system and in the degree of their internal and external institutonalisation, mainly with respect to decision-making autonomy and systemic structure. Consequently, two party types can be distinguished: the dominant type and the ruling type. United Russia has not acquired any typical features of a perfect dominant party in the 15 years of its existence. It has definitively come closer in that period to an ideal type of a ruling party, even though it differed from the ruling parties of the Russian political system in the 1990s. Considering the degree of its institutonalisation and the range of its actual powers, it can be argued that United Russia should be best described as a dominant ruling party.Politics / Political SciencesGovernment/Political systemsPolitics / Political SciencesGovernment/Political systemsSłowikowski Michał1826355Central and Eastern European Online LibraryceeolceeolBOOK9910985880603321Jedna Rosja w systemie politycznym Federacji Rosyjskiej4394325UNINA