bagi yg telah memiliki ebook ini mohon kirim ke saya Pls
tq

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: audrey_sexycute 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, September 21, 2006 9:25 PM
  Subject: [Id-ebook] Re: Dictionary of Celtic Mythology


  Wow, cikal bakal budaya Eropa ya.
  Keren, hehe.
  Kak Bagus memang sering dapatkan ebooks bagus2 ya.
  O ya, sekalian nanya, ada saran ga gimana baca ebook dengan nyaman?
  Kalo di komputer, lama-lama capek juga (@@).
  Gimana ya temen-temen?
  Thx ya.

  --- In [email protected], "Bagus Pursena" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  >
  > Rekan sekalian,
  > 
  > Kalau mau tahu cikal-bakal budaya dan manusia Eropa, satu buku ini 
  perlu
  > dibaca dan ngga boleh terlewat, bener deh.
  > -bp.
  > 
  > Dictionary of Celtic Mythology 
  > ==============================
  > 
  > File Size: < 1.0 MB
  > Pages: 240 pages
  > Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; Reprint edition (June 1, 
  1994)
  > ISBN: 0195089618
  > 
  > Summary:
  > The Celts were one of the great founding civilizations of Europe 
  and the
  > first North European people to emerge into recorded history, 
  producing a
  > vibrant labyrinth of mythological tales and sagas that have 
  influenced the
  > literary traditions of Europe and the world.
  > The first A-Z reference of its kind, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology 
  is
  > fascinating and accessible guide to the gods and goddesses, the 
  heroes and
  > heroines, the magical weapons, fabulous beasts, and otherworld 
  entities that
  > populate the myths of this rich European culture. Like A Dictionary 
  of
  > Irish Mythology before it, this is a who's who and what's what of 
  the epic
  > Celtic sagas and tales. Predated only by Greek and Latin by virtue 
  of the
  > fact that the Celtic languages were not written until the early 
  Christian
  > era, Celtic mythology is a development from a far earlier oral 
  tradition
  > containing voices from the dawn of European civilization. The 
  peoples of
  > these Celtic cultures survive today on the western seaboard of 
  Europe--the
  > Irish, Manx, and Scots, who make up the Goidelic- (or Gaelic) 
  speaking
  > branch of Celts, and the Welsh, Cornish, and Brentons, who 
  represent the
  > Brythonic-speaking branch. And it is in these languages that their 
  vibrant
  > and fascinating mythology has been recorded and appreciated 
  throughout the
  > world. In his introduction, Ellis discusses the roles of these six 
  cultures,
  > the evolution (or demise) of the languages, and the relationship 
  between
  > the legends, especially the Irish and Welsh, the two major Celtic 
  cultures.
  > From Celtic legends have come not only the stories of Cuchulainn 
  and Fionn
  > MacCumhail, of Deidre of the Sorrows and the capricious Grainne, 
  but the
  > stories of the now world-famous Arthur, and the romantic tragedy of 
  Tristan
  > and Iseult.
  > An easy-to-read handbook, The Dictionary of Celtic Mythology 
  presents a
  > fascinating window to centuries of rich oral and written tradtion 
  from the
  > mists of Europe's origins.
  > 
  > Download:
  > 
  http://rapidshare.de/files/33651773/Dictionary.of.Celtic.Mythology.eBo
  ok-EEn
  > .chm
  >



   

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