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The Mahabharata (Volume 3)

PDF The Mahabharata (Volume 3) by Bibek Debroy (Trans.) in History

Description

A guide to the important but half-forgotten chapters of New York State’s French history. Raquette Lake; Ausable River; Lake Bonaparte—despite the number of French place names scattered across the state; New York’s rich and compelling French history has received less attention over the years than its English and Dutch heritage. Aiming to correct this imbalance; J’aime New York; 2nd Edition offers information on the French who have explored; settled; and visited New York State; revealing the unique characteristics of the French presence in each of the state’s seven major regions: Capital District; Lower Hudson; Metropolitan; North Country; Thousand Islands; Central; and Western. Readers of this bilingual guide will discover that New York’s French connections link it to Europe; Canada; and even the Caribbean; and the French text will enable all students of French to check and increase their grasp of the language and vocabulary. Students and teachers will find that discovering the hidden aspects of local and regional history make learning much more meaningful; and this engagement with local history may inspire further research; since the final chapters of the French influence in New York have yet to be written.


#3049014 in Books 2015-06-01Original language:English 5.59 x 1.65 x 8.46l; 1.17 #File Name: 0143425161


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. MahabharatBy Dr Ashutosh A HardiarIt is an amazing effort to make the translated version of the critical edition available. I am so happy to be able to read this version that the biased opinions of contemporary authors on this topic0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. An Excellent ContinuationBy Lane D. CallahanMr. Debroy is still going strong with his translation of the Mahabharata. His footnotes are still copius. He also explains the titles of the sub-sections. Here is an example for Kichaka-Vadha Parva."Vadha means to kill and is also the act of slaying. Kichaka is Virata's general and Sudeshna's brother and lusts after Droupadi. Kichaka is killed by Bhima; which explains the name of this section."0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy CustomerExcellent

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