Make us homepage
Add to Favorites
FAIL (the browser should render some flash content, not this).

Main page » Non-Fiction

Sort by: date | rating | most visited | comments | alphabetically

#1

#2

#3

#4

#5


Managing Stress
6
 
 

Managing StressManaging Stress

We may not be able to control the events that happen to us but we can certainly manage the meaning and the impact that they have upon us. In this textbook, you'll be given information, techniques and strategies to manage your stress levels.
 
  More..
Macroeconomics
11
 
 

Macroeconomics (SparkCharts)Macroeconomics (SparkCharts)

2004 ed.—created by Harvard students for students everywhere—serve as study companions and reference tools that cover a wide range of college and graduate school subjects, including Business, Computer Programming, Medicine, Law, Foreign Language, Humanities, and Science. Titles like How to Study, Microsoft Word for Windows, Microsoft Powerpoint for Windows, and HTML give you what it takes to find success in school and beyond.

 

 
  More..
Mark Antony's heroes
2
 
 

Mark Antony's heroesMark Antony's heroes

This fourth book in Dando-Collins’s definitive history of Rome’s legions tells the story of Rome’s 3rd Gallica Legion, which put Vespasian on the throne and saved the life of the Christian apostle Paul. Named for their leader, Mark Antony, these common Roman soldiers, through their gallantry on the battlefield, reshaped the Roman Empire and aided the spread of Christianity throughout Europe.
 
  More..
Imperial Inquisitions
5
 
 

Imperial InquisitionsImperial Inquisitions

Delatores (political informants) and accusatores (malicious prosecutors) were a major part of life in imperial Rome. Contemporary sources depict them as cruel and heartless mercenaries, who bore the main responsibility for institutionalising and enforcing the 'tyranny' of the infamous rulers of the early empire, such as Nero, Caligula and Domitian.
 
  More..
Human rights in Ancient rome
4
 
 

Human rights in Ancient romeHuman rights in Ancient rome

The concept of human rights has a long history. Its practical origins, as distinct from its theoretical antecedents, are said to be comparatively recent, going back no further than the American and French Bills of Rights of the eighteenth century. Even those landmarks are seen as little more than the precursors of the twentieth century starting-point - the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which was adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1948.
 
  More..