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Bibliographies



Ellwood, Robert S. and McGraw, Barbara A.  2002.  Many Peoples, Many Faiths.  Upper Saddle River, New Jersey:  Prentice Hall.

Fasching, Darrell J. and deChant, Dell.  2001.  Comparative Religious Ethics.  Malden, Massachusetts:  Blackwell Publishers Inc.

Dell deChant informed me during the fall 2002 semester at the University of South Florida, in his introduction to World Religions Class REL 2300-001, about the religious beliefs of archaic and primal religions, along with the empirical religions of the time period discussed in his lecture.

Houston, Stephen.  1996.  Of gods, glyphs and kings:  divinity and rulership among the classic maya.  Antiquity.  Volume 70.  Number 268.  PP.  289-312.

Ripinsky-Naxon, Michael.  1993.  Maya Cosmovision and Shamanistic Symbolism.  Journal of Prehistoric Religion.  Volume 7.  PP. 49-61.

Mcgee, R. Jon.  1996.  Lacandon maya oral performance and the inscriptions of Palenque.  Eighth Palenque Round Table.  Number 10.  PP.  129-134.

Schlak, Arthur.  1996.  Venus, Mercury, and the Sun:  GI, GII. and GIII of the Palenque Triad.  Res -- Cambridge, Mass.  Volume 29-30.  PP.  180-202.

Spalinger, Anthony.  1998.  The limitations of formal Ancient Egyptian Religion.  Journal of Near Eastern Studies.  Volume 57.  Number 4.  PP.  241-260.

Nash, June.  1997.  Gendered deities and the survival of culture.  History of Religions.  Volume 36.  Number 4.  PP.  333-356.

"Maya Civilization," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2003
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved

Hooker, Richard.  1996.  The Mayas.  Civilizations in America.  http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/civamrca/mayas.htm

"Egyptian Mythology," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2003
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.






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