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    <div class="container">
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        <div class="display-4">Staff of the Cuneiform Circle</div>
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        <div class="row">
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                <div class="display-5">Editorial board</div>
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                <ul>
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                    <li><a href="#sl01">Ass. Prof. Sergey Lyosov</a><br/>
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                    <li><a href="#lp01">PhDr. Lukáš Pecha, Ph.D.</a><br/>
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                    <li><a href="#fr02">PhDr. Furat Rahman, Ph.D.</a><br/>
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                </ul>
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                <div class="display-5">Active members</div>
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                <ul>
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                    <li><a href="#sk01">Štěpán Kovář</A><br/>
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                    <li><a href="#nn01">PhDr. Nea Nováková</a><br/>
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                    <li><a href="#ks01">Kateřina Šašková, M.A.</a><br/>
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                    <li><a href="#nw01">Nathan Wasserman, Ph.D.</a><br/>
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                </ul>
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                <div class="display-5">Technical support</div>
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                <ul>
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                    <li><a href="#jb01">Jaroslav Bauml</A><br/>
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                </ul>
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                <div class="display-5" id="sl01">Ass. Prof. Sergey Lyosov</div>
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                <p>
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                    MA in Philology, Moscow State University, 1981.
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                    <br>Ph.D. in History, Russian State University for Humanities, Moscow, 1994.
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                    <br>
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                    During the 1980s and early 1990s he was engaged in the New Testament research. Since mid-nineties
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                    the
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                    principal field of his teaching and research have been Semitic languages: Hebrew, Aramaic, Akkadian,
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                    Ugaritic.
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                    <br>Since 1992 he has been engaged in teaching and research at the Russian State University for
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                    Humanities (Moscow), at present he is an Associate Professor for Semitic Philology at that
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                    University.
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                    He is a co-editor of the "Annual for Biblical Studies" published by his institution in Russian.
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                    <br><span
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                            class="font-weight-bold">Among his works (in Russian, if not indicated otherwise) are:</span>
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                    <br>The Canonical Gospels: An Introduction. - in: "Canonical Gospels" (Moscow, 1992). - P.5-78.
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                    <br>The Central Themes in the Interpretation of the Gospel of Mark. Ibid., p.116-134.
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                    <br>The Gospel of Mark: A New Translation and a Commentary (Moscow, 1994), 96 p.
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                    <br>The Theology of Rudolf Bultmann. - in: Voprosy filosofii [Philosophical Monthly], Moscow, 1992.
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                    Vol.
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                    11, p.71-85.
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                    <br>The School of the History of Religions in the New Testament Reasearch. - in: Voprosy filosofii
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                    [Philosophical Monthly], Moscow 1994. Vol. 12, p.135-152.
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                    <br>History and Hermeneutics in the Study of the New Testament (Moscow, 1996), 375 p.
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                    The Syntax of the Hebrew Narrative and the Syntax of the Gospel of Mark. - in: Annual for Biblical
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                    Studies. Moscow, 1998. Vol 1, p. 280-298.
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                    <br>Text-Linguistics and Biblical Hebrew. - in: Annual for Biblical Studies. Moscow, 1998. Vol 1,
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                    p.187-217.
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                    (with J. Eidelkind) "SI VERA LECTIO: The Syntax of the Speech of Narrator in the Biblical Hebrew
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                    Prose."
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                    - in: Annual for Biblical Studies. Moscow, 1999. Vol 2, 117-260.
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                    <br>Notes on the Syntax of Biblical Hebrew Dialogue. - in: Annual for Biblical Studies. Moscow,
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                    1998.
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                    Vol 2, 261-360.
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                    <br>Essays in Understanding: Selected Works. Moscow/St.-Petersburg, 1999, 575 p.
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                    <br>A Midrash on Abraham in the Roemerbrief. - in: Annual for Biblical Studies. Moscow, 1999. Vol 3,
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                    342-369.
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                    YQTL in Autocommentary. - in: Annual for Biblical Studies. Moscow, 2001. Vol 4, 125-132.
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                    <br>ARM X 4: A Commentary. - in: Festschrift Militarev (Moscow, 2003, in English).
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                    <br>Old Aramaic. Forthcoming in: Languages of the World: The Semitic Languages. (Moscow) Classical
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                    Syriac. Forthcoming ibidem.
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                    <br>
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                </p>
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        </div>
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                <div class="display-5" id="lp01">PhDr. Lukáš Pecha, Ph.D.</div>
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                <p>
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                    <span class="birth-date small">(born 26. 8. 1969)</span><br>1987–1992 studies at the Charles
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                    University,
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                    Faculty
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                    of Arts, Prague (Assyriology and New Persian).
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                    <br>October 1992 to August 1993 study at the Westphälische Wilhelms-Universität in Münster (study of
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                    Akkadian, Sumerian, Urartian, Hurrian and Ugaritic languages, data input of Old Assyrian texts into
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                    computer).
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                    <br>1993-1998 graduate student at the Faculty of Arts of the Charles University, Ph.D. thesis <span
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                            class="font-italic"><span class="font-weight-bold">Taxes
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                            in
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                            the Old Babylonian Letters.</span></span>
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                    <br>since 1998 research fellow of the Oriental Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech
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                    Republic.
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                    <br>since 1999 gives lectures on the history, economy and society of the Ancient Near East at the
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                    West
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                    Bohemian University Pilsen.
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                </p>
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                <p>Selected bibliography:</p>
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                <p>– "Das Amt des <span class="font-italic">šassukkum</span> in der altbabylonischen Zeit", in: <span
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                            class="font-italic">Archív
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                            orientální</span> 67 (1999), pp. 51–71.</p>
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                <p>– "Die <span class="font-italic">igisum</span>-Abgabe in den altbabylonischen Quellen", in: <span
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                            class="font-italic">Archív
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                            orientální</span> 69 (2001), pp. 1–20.</p>
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                <p>– Nea Nováková, Lukáš Pecha, Furat Rahman,<span class="font-italic"> Dějiny
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                        Mezopotámie</span>(History of Mesopotamia), Prague 1998. 266 pp. (ISBN
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                    80-7184-416-0).</p>
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                <p>– Nea Nováková, Lukáš Pecha, Furat Rahman, <span class="font-italic">Základy starobabylonštiny</span>
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                    (Foundations
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                    of the Old Babylonian Language), Prague 2000. 416 pp. (ISBN 80-7184-997-9).</p>
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                <p>Author of Stručná gramatika urartejštiny (Concise Grammar of Urartu language,
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                    Enigma
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                    Corporation, Prague 1994, 92 p., ISBN 80-901704-2-0).</p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="fr02">PhDr. Furat Rahman, Ph.D.</div>
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                <p>
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                    <span class="birth-date small">(born 1967)</span>
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                    <br>1986-1992 studies at the Charles University, Faculty of Arts, Prague (Arabic studies,
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                    Assyriology
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                    and New Persian)<br>1992 M.A. thesis Proper Names in the Old Babylonian Letters. During his study
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                    data
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                    input of the Old Babylonian letters into computer as well as other active work in the computer field
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                    (two years practice in the Computer Laboratory of the Faculty of Arts)<br>1992–98 assistant, later
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                    scientific assistant of the Department of Ancient Near Eastern Studies.
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                    <br>October 1992 to July 1993 study at the Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich (further study of
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                    Akkadian and Sumerian languages, data input of Sumerian texts into computer). <br>In 1993-1998
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                    graduate
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                    student at the Faculty of Arts of the Charles University, Ph.D. thesis <span
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                            class="font-weight-bold">
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                        <span class="font-italic">Abbreviated
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                            Anthroponyma in
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                            Old Babylonian.</span></span>
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                    <br>since 2001 teaches Akkadian and Sumerian languages and literatures at the West Bohemian
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                    University
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                    Pilsen.
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                    <br>2001 member of the Prague linguistic circle.
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                </p>
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                <p>Participation in international conferences (Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Berlín 1994,
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                    Praha
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                    1996), Use of Computers in Historical and Comparative Linguistics (Praha 1993, 1998).</p>
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                <p>Selected bibliography:</p>
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                <p>– Sumerische Lesestücke. Ein Versuch der Hypertext-Bearbeitung auf dem CD-ROM
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                    Datenträger, Prague 1996. (ISBN 80-902019-0-3)</p>
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                <p>– Nea Nováková, Lukáš Pecha, Furat Rahman,<span class="font-italic"> Dějiny Mezopotámie</span>
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                    (History of
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                    Mesopotamia),
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                    Prague 1998. 266 pp. (ISBN 80-7184-416-0). </p>
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                <p>– Nea Nováková, Lukáš Pecha, Furat Rahman, <span class="font-italic">Základy starobabylonštiny</span>
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                    (Foundations
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                    of the Old Babylonian Language), Prague 2000. 416 pp. (ISBN 80-7184-997-9).</p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="sk01">Mr. Štěpán Kovář</div>
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                <p>Student of the 2nd year study program Near Eastern Studies (started 2004).</p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="nn01">PhDr. Nea Nováková</div>
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                <p>1956-1961 studied in the Faculty of Arts of
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                    the Charles University (Arabic and Cuneiform)
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                    <br>1966 candidate of art sciences (<span class="font-weight-bold"><span class="font-italic">Terres cultes de Tell Erfad</span></span>,
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                    Prague 1971, Vol. 1-2, 166, 163 pages), since 1965 assistant lecturer.
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                </p>
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                <p>Lecturer at the Institute of Ancient Near Eastern Studies for ANE languages (especially
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                    Akkadian).</p>
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                <p>
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                    <span class="font-weight-bold">Her published works include:</span>
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                    Zur Graphik der Gesetze Hammurabis. Acta Universitatis Carolinae -
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                    Philologica 4, Orientalia Pragensia XI, Prague 1984, page 7-44 (with the late Prof. Vladimír
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                    Souček).
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                    Die akkadischen Verbalwurzeln und das akkadische Verbum vom statistischen
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                    Gesichtspunkt. In: Šulmu, Papers on the Ancient Near East presented at
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                    International Conference of Socialist Countries, Charles University,Prague
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                    1988, page 235-239.
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                </p>
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                <p>Die Graphik der Gesetze Hammurabis in einer statistischen Analyse. In:
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                    Studies in Near Eastern Languages and Literatures, Memorial Volume of
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                    Karel Petráček, Vol. II, Prague 1996, 52 pages.</p>
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                <p><span class="font-weight-bold">In Czech:</span>
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                <p>
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                <p>Author of the textbook "Arabs before Islam", Prague 1969, co-author of the textbook "Introduction
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                    into
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                    Cuneiform and Babylonian", Prague 1980 and 1984, Vol. 1-2, 350 + 218 pages. Also author of book
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                    Mesopotamian
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                    Hills, Prague 1994, 87 pages.</p>
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                <p>Mrs. Nováková contributed to following books written in Czech language:<br>
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                    Nováková N., Pecha L., Rahman F., History of Mesopotamia. Prague 1998.
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                    Praha. 250 p. and in 1998 to the book: Nováková N.,Pecha L., Rahman F., Foundations of Old
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                    Babylonian,
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                    Prague 2000. 416 pages.
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                </p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="ks01">Kateřina Šašková, M.A.</div>
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                <p>Graduated 2003 from the West Bohemian University in Pilsen, Faculty of
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                    Humanities, in the Cultural Anthropology of the Near East. M.A.
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                    thesis: Neo-Assyrian Empire, its Beginning, Development and Inner
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                    Structure.<br/>
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                    In 2004-2006 taught Akkadian language and history of great empires of
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                    the Ancient Near East at the West Bohemian University Pilsen.<br/>
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                    Since 2003 Ph.D. student at Protestant Theological Faculty of the
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                    Charles University in Prague.
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                </p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="nw01">Nathan Wasserman, Ph.D.</div>
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                <p>Nathan Wasserman, Ph.D. (1993) in Assyriology, the Hebrew University
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                    Jerusalem, is Senior Lecturer at the Department of Assyriology at the
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                    Hebrew University of Jerusalem. <br/>Contributed by his reading of OB Tell
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                    al-Rimah tablets (edition: S. Dalley, C.B.F. Walker and J.D. Hawkins,
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                    The Old Babylonian Tablets from Tell Al Rimah, British School of
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                    Archaeology in Iraq, 1976).
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                </p>
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                <div class="display-5" id="jb01">Bc. Jaroslav Bauml</div>
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                <p>Technical support of OBTC.<br/>
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                    Graduated 2006 from the West Bohemian University in Pilsen, Faculty of Applied Sciences, in
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                    Informatics.<br/>
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                </p>
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