Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 627 469 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

44 kirjaa tekijältä David Baron

The history of the ten lost tribes; Anglo-Israelism examined
This book has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. So that the book is never forgotten we have represented this book in a print format as the same form as it was originally first published. Hence any marks or annotations seen are left intentionally to preserve its true nature.
The History of the Ten "Lost" Tribes

The History of the Ten "Lost" Tribes

David Baron

Double 9 Books LLP
2023
nidottu
The ten tribes of Israel that were driven out of their homeland by the Assyrian Empire in 722 BCE are examined in the book "The History of the Ten Lost Tribes" by David Baron. Baron examines different hypotheses and beliefs concerning the fate of the lost tribes, including the assumption that they merged into the cultures of the surrounding countries or were incorporated into the Jewish diaspora. He also takes into account the likelihood that some of the tribes may still survive in other places of the globe as separate ethnic groupings. Baron provides a thorough explanation of the circumstances leading up to the exile of the ten tribes and what happened after they vanished by examining historical data and scriptural scriptures. He contends that there is proof of the extinct tribes' ongoing presence in other locations throughout the globe, including India and Africa. Overall, Baron's book offers a thorough and well-researched examination of the past and present of Israel's ten lost tribes.
The Martians

The Martians

David Baron

W W NORTON CO LTD
2026
nidottu
“There is Life on the Planet Mars” —New York Times, December 9, 1906 This New York Times headline was no joke. In the early 1900s, many Americans actually believed we had discovered intelligent life on Mars, as best-selling science writer David Baron chronicles in The Martians, his truly bizarre tale of a nation swept up in Mars mania. At the center of Baron’s historical drama is Percival Lowell, the Boston Brahmin and Harvard scion, who observed “canals” etched into the surface of Mars. Lowell devised a grand theory that the red planet was home to a utopian society that had built gargantuan ditches to funnel precious meltwater from the polar icecaps to desert farms and oasis cities. The public fell in love with the ambitious amateur astronomer who shared his findings in speeches and wildly popular books. While at first people treated the Martians whimsically—Martians headlining Broadway shows, biologists speculating whether they were winged or gilled—the discussion quickly became serious. Inventor Nikola Tesla announced he had received radio signals from Mars; Alexander Graham Bell agreed there was “no escape from the conviction” that intelligent beings inhabited the planet. Martian excitement reached its zenith when Lowell financed an expedition to photograph Mars from Chile’s Atacama Desert, resulting in what newspapers hailed as proof of the Martian canals’ existence. Triumph quickly yielded to tragedy. Those wild claims and highly speculative photographs emboldened Lowell’s critics, whose withering attacks gathered steam and eventually wrecked the man and his theory—but not the fervor he had started. Although Lowell would die discredited and delusional in 1916, the Mars frenzy spurred a nascent literary genre called science fiction, and the world’s sense of its place in the universe would never be the same. Today, the red planet maintains its grip on the public’s imagination. Many see Mars as civilization’s destiny—the first step toward our becoming an interplanetary species—but, as David Baron demonstrates, this tendency to project our hopes onto the world next door is hardly new. The Martians is a scintillating and necessary reminder that while we look to Mars for answers, what we often find are mirrors of ourselves.