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         Vietnamese Mythology:     more books (24)
  1. Story of the Chinese Zodiac: English Vietnamese by Monica Chang, 1994-06
  2. Once in Vietnam: A Magic Cross-Bow and Other Stories/Ngay Xua O Que Huong Toi : Chiec No Than by Tran Van Dien, 1982-06
  3. Ngay Xua O Que Huong Toi/Once in Vietnam by Tran Van Dien, 1982-06
  4. The original myths of Vietnam (Vietnamese studies papers) by Ngọc Bích Nguyẽ̂n, 1985
  5. The Golden Slipper: A Vietnamese Legend (Legends of the world) by Darrell H. Y. Lum, 1994-06
  6. Legend of Mu Lan by Wei Jiang, 1997-10
  7. Zapotec Oral Literature: El Folklore De San Lorenzo Texmelucan (Folklore Texts in Mexican Indian Languages, No. 4) by Charles H. Speck, 1998-07-01
  8. Pandora's Box by Henriette A. Barkow, Diana Mano, 2002-01
  9. Ithaca in black and white: A play by Paul Woodruff, 1999
  10. Brothers in Arms: A Journey from War to Peace (Southwestern Writers Collection Series) by William, Jr. Broyles, 1996

21. English Verses
As far as possible, however, all references to vietnamese mythology,popular literature and history have been preserved. ME. VIET NAM.
http://www.tuanpham.org/transl.htm
Rice Drum Song
Ti`nh Tu+. Tin
by Pham Duy
English verses by Pham Quang Tuan
1. My love (s)he's got a little drum,
Oh how he plays his love-a-drum drum
(Love-a-drum drum
Love-a-drum drum)
Come and see the boys and girls
They cross the stream
To find, find their dream
(Find their dream) (Drum-a-drum drum, drum-a-drum drum, drum-a-drum drum) 2. REPEAT [1] 3. Drum-a-drum drum I can see these boys and girls (I can see these boys and girls) They cross the stream To find find their dream (find their dream) Let's sing a drum-a-drum-a-song (Let's sing a drum-a-drum-a-song) 4. My love she's got a little song, Oh how she sings her love-a-song song (Love-a-song song Love-a-song song) Come and hear the little tiddle birds They sing in the tree So happy to be free (To be free) (Drum-a-drum drum, drum-a-drum drum, drum-a-drum drum) 5. REPEAT [4] 6. Drum-a-drum drum I can hear these little tiddle birds (I can hear these little tiddle birds) They sing in the tree So happy to be free (To be free) Let's sing a drum-a-drum-a-song (Let's sing a drum-a-drum-a-song)
The Wind On The Bridge Qua Ca^`u Gio' Bay
Folk song, collected by Pham Duy

22. Grants & Awards
1992 National Endowment for the Arts grant for a dance and music work based onvietnamese mythology and the development of curriculom to strengthan identity
http://yuvalronmusic.com/text/biography/awards.html
Grants and Awards back to Bio Grants American Composers Forum The California Council for Humanities grant for a lecture/demonstration of the Mystical Music of the Middle East at the Ford Amphitheater in Hollywood, CA National Endowment for the Arts Rockeffeler Foundation and National Dance Project National Endowment for the Arts grant for a dance and music work based on Vietnamese mythology and the development of curriculom to strengthan identity among immegrent children. Awards Chicago International Festival- Gold Medal Moon Dance Film Festival - Humanity Award Telluride Festival Award CINE Golden Eagle TELLY INTECOM CINDY Gvanim Festival Special Award Keyboard Magazine's Soundpage Contest Finalist AMI - New England Special Award for Creativity Yuval Ron is an affiliated artist of the
Center for Jewish Culture and Creativity.

23. Literature, Libraries
Language ArtsNative American Mythology SW-Language Arts-Norse Mythology SW-LanguageArts-Scottish Mythology SW-Language Arts-vietnamese mythology SW-Language
http://www.amrita-it.com/seaoflinks/sea043.htm
Literature, Libraries
General
Audible
RecordedBooks

Audiobooks

The Dublin Writers' Workshop
... More

24. Untitled
The dragon is a totem in vietnamese mythology and the Vietnamese think of themselvesas descendants of the dragon (Con Rong Chau Tien, children of the Dragon
http://www.advite.com/artoftatoo.htm
Marco Polo, Vietnam in the thirteen-century and the art of tattoo. Marco Polo (1254-1334), the famous Venetian adventurer, started to travel to the East in1271, went through Asia via Mongolia and came back to Europe via Sumatra after spending thirteen years in the service of Kublai Khan (1216-1294). In Vietnamese Kubai Khan is known as Hot Tat Liet . He was the founder of the Mongol dynasty in China ( Dai Nguyen ). His grandfather Genghis Khan is known in Vietnamese as Thanh Cat Tu Han Marco Polo’s book Description of the World Il Milione in Italian or also translated as The Travels of Marco Polo) told of his adventures to the East. At the time of Marco Polo’s departure from Europe in 1271, Vietnam was under the reign of King Tran Thanh Tong (1256-1278). Most of what constitutes modern central Vietnam belonged then to the Kingdom of Champa under King Indravarman. Champa’s capital Indrapura would be ransacked by the Vietnamese in the 15 th century and Champa annexed to Vietnam. That same year of 1271, Kublai Khan conquered China from the Sung dynasty, and sent emissaries to request the Vietnamese King to go to China to attend the Chinese imperial court as a sign of submission. Tran Thanh Tong declined the invitation under the pretext of poor health. War erupted between the two countries in 1284 under King Tran Nhan Ton; Vietnamese forces were under the command of the famous general Hung Dao Vuong Tran Quoc Tuan. The Chinese offensive was under the command of General Thoat Hoan; another front against Champa was under General

25. Dragon Mythology 3
The Dragon ( Long ) in vietnamese mythology is represented with the head of a camel,horns of a deer, eyes of a fish, ears of a buffalo, body and neck of a
http://www.harriet.hume.ca/tone/performance/dragon/dragonmyth3.html
home installations performance leading tone ... shop dragon tango links Exhibition Photo Gallery About Dragons Mythology ... Contact Dragon Mythology
African
American Australian Babylonian ... Vietnamese New Zealand Dragon Myths PITAK:
, the Polynesian slayer of three dragons, from New Zealand.
HOTU-PUKU: a taniwha (dragon). Travellers between the districts of Rotorua and Taupo were disappearing. The Taupo people assumed a war party was waylaying the travellers and sent out a war party to fight them. In Kapenga they found a taniwha called Hotu-puku and fled. A new party, set out to Kapenga. They hung up a noose, and a man called Pitaka acted as bait, going through the noose. As soon as Hotu-puku, the taniwha, put his head through the noose, it was pulled tight until he died. Hotu-puku was cut open, and the bodies of the people he had eaten were found. After burying the bodies, Hotu-puku was cooked and eaten.
PEKE-HAUA: is a water taniwha who lived in Te Waro-uri, a deep water-hole in New Zealand. Following Pitaka's exploits with slaying of Hotu-puku, he was summoned to Te Awan-hou to slay another taniwha, called Peke-haua. Pitaka and his companions wove traps out of vines, before descending into the chasm. When Peke-haua was asleep, Pitaka swam down to him, and tied a rope around him, before quickly escaping. Using spells to aid them, they pulled the taniwha up, so that they could kill him. KATAORE: was a cave dwelling taniwha living near the settlement Rotorua, in the Tiki-tapu district. Pitaka and his companions slayed Kataore. However, this taniwha was the pet of chief Tangaroa-mihi, who was enraged by the death of his pet, and made war on the killers.

26. Vietnam: An Historical Perspective
vietnamese Groups. Shifting Cultivation and Wet Rice Agriculture. Dong Son Civilization. Map 6 Prehistoric Sites in Vietnam. Prehistoric mythology
http://www2.hawaii.edu/cseas/pubs/vietnam/vietnam.html
Vietnam
Table of Contents
PREFACE
Introduction: Chronology of Vietnamese History
Introduction
Prehistoric Period
Map #1: Southern China and Vietnam at the Beginning of Chinese Colonization
Chinese Colonization Period
Independence Period in Vietnam
Map #2: Indochina During French Colonization
French Colonization Period
French-Indochina War
Map #3: Indochina in 1954 Map Exercise Glossary Exercises Answers to the Exercises Chapter 1: Prehistoric Vietnam, The Dawn of Civilization in the Tonkin Delta Introduction Map #4: Asia Today The First Vietnamese Map #5: Sunda Shelf Some Early Vietnamese Groups Shifting Cultivation and Wet Rice Agriculture Dong Son Civilization Map #6: Prehistoric Sites in Vietnam Prehistoric Mythology Cultural and Historical Influences from the South: Champa Cultural and Historical Influences from the North: China Map Exercises ... Important People and Places Map #7: Southeast Asia Exercises Answers to the Exercises Chapter 2: Chinese Colonization Introduction The Effects of Early Colonization on the Vietnamese Map #8: Tonkin Delta at the Beginning of Chinese Colonization Some Aspects of Sinicization The Politics of Chinese Colonization Map #9: Vietnam During Chinese Colonization Rebellions and Uprisings: The Trung Sisters Ly Bon and Other Revolutionaries New Religions Buddhist Monks The Road to Independence Map Exercise Chinese Dynasties Map #10: China Today Glossary Important People and Places Exercises Answers to the Exercises Chapter 3: Vietnamese Independence (950-1859) Introduction Map #11: Vietnam During Independence

27. The Vietnamese - Main Page
IIM Topic Pages vietnamese ORIGINS In this module employees are introduced to someof the interesting history, mythology and origins of the vietnamese people.
http://www.rcmp-learning.org/vietnam/cts.htm
CROSS CULTURAL COMMUNICATIONS SERIES:
THE VIETNAMESE Table of Contents:

Part I- Introduction and Syllabus
INTRODUCTION:
PURPOSE OF THE IIM The purpose of this training/learning material is to provide employees with a basic understanding of another ethno-cultural community and it's people; namely, the Vietnamese. It is hoped training from this course followed by practical experience and application, will promote greater cultural sensitivity leading to a more professional approach by employees when dealing with Vietnamese people. EXAMINATION-ASSESSMENTS Inclusive within this four module individualized instruction method (I.I.M) are a number of Criterion Tests. Following the completion of the readings and exercises of each module, the candidate will complete the Criterion Test questions. ELIGIBILITY/CANDIDATE SELECTION This Multicultural Training IIM has been specifically designed to meet the needs of operational personnel working within communities which have a sizeable Vietnamese population. However, the IIM should prove of general interest and benefit to all employees, and all ranks and levels of responsibility are encouraged to participate.

28. Journal For Week 12: Vietnamese Refugee Culture In America
and MidAutumn. , vietnamese folklore/mythology/legend The traditional vietnamesestories contain many elements within them reflecting vietnamese culture.
http://personal.centenary.edu/~acoughen/vietnam/week12b.html
~ T H E M E S ~ Death: Death appears in many guises. Through this theme, loss can be explained and/or described in various forms. No matter what the form is, the representation always reflects the permanent absence of someone or something. Butler writes about death in several different ways. Sometimes death is literal: the expiration of life. Sometimes death is a type of foreshadowing: showing the death of one, thereby hinting at the death of another. Sometimes death is merely a gauge for measuring differences. Sometimes death represents removal from a specific type of life. The different representations of death connect to each other through the fact that Vietnam and the Vietnamese experienced so much death. Death became commonplace and easy and life became difficult. no life was complete without some type of death attached to it in one way or another. Examples of these representations of the theme of death occur in: " Open Arms Mr. Green The Trip Back A Ghost Story ... Preparation ," and " A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
Family: A sense of and connection to family has always been important in Vietnamese culture. In fact, until the Vietnam War, there were no orphanages in Vietnam because family members took care of each other. This importance of family is reflected in ancestor worship, where the living pray for the peace of the dead of the family. This importance is also shown in the reverence given to the elder members of a family. Family stories bring together members of the same family while also helping to form connections with people who have similar family stories. Peace within the family is emphasized, and family reputation is extremely important, sometimes more important than an individual's reputation. Some of the stories which have the theme of family are: "

29. Journal For Week 12: Vietnamese Refugee Culture In America
This story contains many themes that are inherent in vietnamese folklore/mythology/legend. Allof these are found within vietnamese folklore/mythology/legend.
http://personal.centenary.edu/~acoughen/vietnam/week12a.html
J o u r n a l f o r W e e k 1 2 :
Vietnamese refugee culture in America
A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
Robert Olen Butler
(Penguin)
"OPEN ARMS"
(pp 1-15)
"MR. GREEN"
(pp 17-28)
"THE TRIP BACK"
(pp 29-43)
"FAIRY TALE"
(pp 45-57)
"CRICKETS"
(pp 59-64)
"LETTERS FROM MY FATHER"
(pp 65-72) "LOVE" (pp 73-93) "MID-AUTUMN" (pp 95-101) "IN THE CLEARING" (pp 103-110) "A GHOST STORY" (pp 111-123) "SNOW" (pp 125-135) "RELIC" (pp 137-142) "PREPARATION" (pp 143-154) "THE AMERICAN COUPLE" (pp 155-234) "A GOOD SCENT FROM A STRANGE MOUNTAIN" (pp 135-249) personal reflections (from National Geographic "OPEN ARMS" (pp 1-15) The opening sentence of this story reminds me of Coming Home . The narrator talks about "los[ing his] wife to another man, a cripple" (1). This is similar to Bob losing Sally to Luke (link to on-line discussion board for topic on Coming Home ). Also, the story brings up the subject of nationality. The narrator describes the differences between the Americans and the Australians: the Americans destroy everything in order to set up camp and the Australians merely throw up a tent under a tree and adapt to their surroundings (2). Plus, the narrator mentions the "Citroën sedans," which are French cars, showing the remaining French influence. Besides this

30. The Mythology Of Vietnam - A Reality Check For A Clueless Nation By Ted Rall
Published on Thursday, May 3, 2001 The mythology of Vietnam A Reality Check six menunder Kerrey's command alleges that Kerrey ordered the vietnamese lined up
http://www.country-liberal-party.com/pages/interpret_p20.htm
"Common Dreams NewsCenter is a non-profit news service providing breaking news and views for the Progressive Community." Published on Thursday, May 3, 2001
The Mythology of Vietnam
A Reality Check for
a Clueless Nation
by Ted Rall NEW YORK Historical memory has never done terribly well in this country, but our national case of collective amnesia over the VietnamWar surely sets a record for mass delusion.

Former Sen. Bob Kerrey (finally) admits that he led a commando raid on the village of Thanh Phong on the night of Feb. 25, 1969, that ended up with the accidental killings of between 12 and 14 unarmed civilians. One of the six men under Kerrey's command alleges that Kerrey ordered the Vietnamese lined up and shot. For all we know, both men may be telling the truth as they remember it. According to Dr. Frank Ochberg, a former associate director of the National Institute of Mental Health, the stress of combat "makes it possible to remember things in a part of the brain that causes you
to focus on certain events and completely ignore others."

31. Resources For Studying Mythology And Religion
Chinese mythology; Swords, Spirit and Romance The Legends of China Page, by GalenJang; focuses on the works of Pu Sunglin and Jin Yong; vietnamese Literature;
http://www.dc.peachnet.edu/~shale/humanities/literature/religion/religion.html
Resources for Studying Mythology and Religion
This page is intended primarily as a reference for students of world literature and culture. Mythology here refers to traditional stories that describe a god or gods, or the relation between people and gods. Religion , in this context, designates beliefs that are still widely practised. The terms do occasionally overlap, however, depending on the viewpoint of the person using them. On this page, there is no attempt to validate or question any belief system, past or present. Rather, by providing a variety of experiences, this page offers readers an opportunity to further understand their own beliefs and appreciate the beliefs of others.
Mythology
General Resources
Reference Works
Journals
Studies
Organizations
Indices and Bibliographies

32. Myth Of The Watermelon - Su Tich Trai Dua Hau
When the New Year arrives, every vietnamese family celebrates it with watermelonsbecause watermelons are a part of vietnamese traditions.
http://www.geocities.com/~wingsof100viet/watermelon2.htm
New Year '98 - Tet Mau Dan '98 (Continued) After several months, those seeds grew into young plants creeping on sand and became green spherical-shaped fruits. An-Tiem immediately cut a fruit in halves and saw it had a red color. He tasted it and found out that it was very sweet and watery. Then, he planted more fruits. He used a sharp stick to carve his name, the way to get to the island on the outside of fruits and put them on the sea so they could flow everywhere. Merchant ships passed by and found those fruits. The merchants tried those fruits and liked them. They immediately got to the island and traded rice, clothes...for fruits so they could sell them. An-Tiem named that kind of fruit Watermelon. Rumors about the Watermelon were heard by emperor Hung. He knew how skillful An-Tiem was and ordered him and his family to come back to land. This time, the emperor rewarded An-Tiem and advised him to teach other people how to plant watermelons. Since that time, Van-Lang had another kind of fruit to eat and to sell. When the New Year arrives, every Vietnamese family celebrates it with watermelons because watermelons are a part of Vietnamese traditions.

33. [09-27-95] Andrew Lam, Vietnamese Americans Discover The Rice Field In The Micro
David Tran, a young vietnamese American from Orange County, is somethingof an expert on East Asian mythology. A thirdyear law
http://www.pacificnews.org/jinn/stories/columns/heresies/950927-microchip.html
Jinn Home Page Search Net-Links
Voices
... YO!
HERESIES
CYBERSPACE:
Vietnamese Americans Discover the Rice Field in the Microchip
By Andrew Lam
Date: 09-27-95 Anti-technology feelings are running high these days, not just in the sentiments expressed by the Unabomber but among many ordinary Americans who believe technological progress means more lonely, isolated people. But Vietnamese Americans offer a different experience. For them, high tech has fused the future with the past. PNS editor Andrew Lam is a Vietnamese American reporter and short story writer living in the Bay Area. SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA In his high tech lair full of humming computers and lilting modems, a Vietnamese American friend prophesizes my future. "You will become a workaholic and have tragic romances," he sighs as he contemplates the stars and comets swirling around the hour and date of my birth. "On the other hand, you will always be surrounded by great and intelligent friends." Coming from a Ph.D. from MIT who in his off-hours designs software programs for horoscopes, who was I to argue? My friend works as a computer scientist in Silicon Valley, but he finds no contradiction between his daytime occupation and nighttime hobby. In fact to him, and to many Vietnamese immigrants in America, they mesh. While many native-born Americans blame technology the ATM, automated gas pumps, the home shopping network for breaking down community and family ties, many Asian immigrants will tell you it has had the reverse effect on their lives. Not long ago the ocean was vast, homesickness was an incurable malady, and the immigrant had little more than memories to keep cultural ties alive. Today jumbo jets have shrunk the ocean; the camcorder shows grandma back home what life is like in America; and the newly arrived needs only the fax machine and a satellite dish pointed skyward to keep abreast of developments back home.

34. FAR EASTERN MYTHOLOGY
HomePage Dazhdbog in Russian mythology mythology and Mythical Creatures of MyanmarFar Eastern mythology Chinese, Korean, Japanese, vietnamese Korean Fairy
http://neptune.spaceports.com/~mythos/fareastern.html
Far Eastern
A Course In Mongolian Shamanism

Historic Legends and Tales of Japan

Ancient Latvian Paganism and Mythology

Homepage of Korean FolkTales
...
Mongol Folklore

35. Regional Folklore And Mythology
Extensive list of links organized by cultural and geographical region.Category Arts Literature Myths and Folktales Myths Directories...... vietnamese Legacy of The vietnamese Boat People provides a collection of vietnameseBoatpeople's stories about their Back to my mythology and folklore page.
http://www.pibburns.com/mythregi.htm
Regional Folklore and Mythology
Here you will find links to information about folklore and mythology topics broken down by cultural and geographical region. The regions appear in alphabetical order.
African, excluding Egypt
  • African Mythology discusses the creator god and ancestor worship in Africa. African Myths and Legends by Samantha Martin offers stories from the Bushmen and Hottentots. Folklore About Hyenas by Robin M. Weare offers tales from Africa about these predators. Louis Trichard, Thoyandou by Lynette Oxley offers several myths and legends of the VhaVenda people. Snake and the Frog tells why the snake and the frog won't be found playing games together. Sweet Thorn Studios offers, for sale, original masks and amulets based upon African folklore and legend. Along with pictures of each item there is a brief summary of the myth, legend, or folkore which inspired it. Urban legends of southern Africa offers "The Rabbit in the Thorn Tree," "The Leopard in the Luggage," and "Ink in the Porridge."

36. Mythic Asian Crossroads
Helen Zimmern. Siberian, Buryat Folklore and mythology from the landof Lake Baikal and the Sayan Mountains. vietnamese, Symbols of
http://www.mythiccrossroads.com/asia.htm
Last updated on
AWARD WINNER!
var site="s14mythiccrossroads" Afghan Anatolian Arabic Chinese ... Vietnamese Afghan Afghan Ceremonies and Traditions offers a summary of customs associated with weddings, funerals, and other occasions. Anatolian (Altaic, Hittite, Turk) Folklore discusses the history of folklore studies in Turkey. The Hittite/Hurrian Mythology Reference by Christopher B. Siren presents the history of the Hittites, their deities and their cosmology, along with references to source material on the Hittites. Poems from the Turkish Epic are adapted by Gene Doty from Gulten Yenner's prose translation. Includes the Altaic creation myth, how God Kara-han gets splashed, and the mythical origin of the Altaic tribes. Turkish Mythology by Handan Oz discusses Turkish myths from their origins in Central Asia. Much of the site is in Turkish, some is in English. Arabic 1001 Sites is an Arab Internet Directory and search engine. Arab Folk Tales has three stories The Price of Pride (Saudi)

37. [cen] Local Mythology & Wildlife
in the Central Highlands = is reputed to have once embraced a mythology that precluded Allforeigners in the = highlandsFrench, vietnamese, and Laowould be
http://www.undp.org.vn/mlist/cen/102000/post20.htm
UN UNDP Forum CEN ... Recent messages
From: Dai Peters dpeters@fpt.vn Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2000 09:25:11 +0700 Subject: Mailing List: CEN submitted to cen by "Dai Peters"
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
I'll try this one again also...
- Original Message -
From: Dai Peters
To: CEN
Sent: Friday, October 27, 2000 1:54 PM
Dear Cen Members: My recent reading of Jeffrey McNeely's and Paul Spencer Sochaczewski's = 1988 book, "Soul of the Tiger: Searching for Nature's Answers in = Southeast Asia," has left me wondering about the link between local = legends and taboos, and the protection of fauna and flora. As you will = see below, at least one ethnic minority group in the Central Highlands = is reputed to have once embraced a mythology that precluded them from = eating certain animals, like snakes, and other creatures. I am = wondering if anyone else working in Vietnam has experience with this = type of culturally-dependent taboo, because I know from my experience in =

38. Behind The Name: Statistics
52 Esperanto names, 28 Lithuanian names, 13 vietnamese names. 3 Estonian names,7 Macedonian names, 285 Welsh names. 1 Far Eastern mythology name, 6 Manx names,31
http://www.behindthename.com/statistics.html
t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s Statistics Statistics automatically generated at 01:37 PST on January 3, 2003. Grand Total names By Gender masculine names feminine names masculine or feminine names feminine or masculine names By Inital Letter names beginning with A names beginning with J names beginning with S names beginning with B names beginning with K names beginning with T names beginning with C names beginning with L names beginning with U names beginning with D names beginning with M names beginning with V names beginning with E names beginning with N names beginning with W names beginning with F names beginning with O names beginning with X names beginning with G names beginning with P names beginning with Y names beginning with H names beginning with Q names beginning with Z names beginning with I names beginning with R By Length names 2 letters long names 7 letters long names 12 letters long names 3 letters long names 8 letters long names 13 letters long names 4 letters long names 9 letters long names 14 letters long names 5 letters long names 10 letters long names 6 letters long names 11 letters long By Category African names Finnish names Maori names Albanian names French names Modern English names Ancient names Frisian names Mormon name Ancient Celtic names Galician names Mythology names Ancient Egyptian names German names Native American names Ancient Germanic names Germanic Mythology names Near Eastern Mythology names Ancient Greek names Greek names New World Mythology names

39. Behind The Name: Names By Usage
Hindu mythology Far Eastern mythology New World mythology JudeoChristian Indian IranianJapanese Jewish Khmer Korean Maori Native American vietnamese Turkish.
http://www.behindthename.com/usage.html
t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s Names by Usage Western European Eastern European Categories Basque
Breton

Catalan

Cornish
...
Late Roman
Worldwide African
Armenian

Arabic

Chinese
...
Contact Information

40. Tucson Pima Public Library /All Locations
2 mythology Roman Juvenile Literature 8 mythology Slavic 2 mythology Spiders JuvenileLiterature 1991 1 mythology Stars 1979 1 mythology vietnamese 2001 1
http://infolynx.ci.tucson.az.us:90/kids/10,862,864/search/dMythology, Roman -- J
Tucson-Pima Public Library Catalog
WORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT Children's Materials Internet View Entire Collection Mark Nearby SUBJECTS are: Year Entries Mythology Polynesian Juvenile Literature Mythology Pomo See Pomo mythology
Mythology Psychological Aspects

Mythology Rattlesnakes
Mythology Roman See also Hercules (Roman mythology)
Mythology Roman

Mythology Roman Juvenile Literature

Mythology Roses
Mythology Russian See Mythology, Slavic
Mythology Semitic
Mythology Slavic
Mythology Slovak See Mythology, Slavic

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