Doying


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The folktales are wrapped in an air of pulsating saga and mysteries replete with romance, bravery, mysterious encounters with the unknown and also fantasy elements such as spirit possession and haunting. Before reading the folktales, you need to understand that the Adis, a major tribe from Arunachal Pradesh, consider everything animate or inanimate to having an existential life which goes through the process of creation, procreation and regeneration even after its demise. Most folktales contain the regenerative element where a dead body or a severed part of a body can regenerate and metamorphose into an entirely different entity having a life on its own! Are you thrilled after reading this information? Would you like to know more?




Moshup Legape Doying Agom Lunen


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Encyclopaedia of North-East India


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Contents: Vol. 1: Arunachal Pradesh, Vol. 2: Assam, Vol. 3: Manipur, Vol. 4: Meghalaya, Vol. 5: Mizoram, Vol. 6: Nagaland, Vol. 7: Sikkim, Vol. 8: Tripura







Atlantic Reporter


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New York Court of Appeals. Records and Briefs.


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Volume contains: 114 NY 307 (Crain v. Wright) 114 NY 487 (Wilson v. Kings Co. Elevated R.R. Co.) 114 NY 452 (Baldwin v. Doying) 114 NY 458 (Weidner v. Phillips) 114 NY 462 (Weidmer v. N.Y. Elevated R.R. Co.) 114 NY 469 (Sawyer v. Dean) 114 NY 469 (Sawyer v. Dean)







New Jersey Law Reports


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N.Y. Supreme Court


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Anthony Littlefield of New York and Michigan and His Descendants


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"Anthony R. Littlefield, son of Daniel and Eleanor Littlefield, was born Aug. 18, 1794, died June 14, 1864, married April 4, 1812, Bethany Green. ... According to the censuses, Anthony R. Littlefield was born in N.Y. State. We have not found evidence of the locality, but it probably was in Fort Ann township of Washington Co., as we find him and his family there in the 1820 and 1830 censuses."--Page 1. Anthony and his family eventually left New York and relocated in Michigan. They finally settled in Toscola County " ... where Anthony spent his remaining years. He died in Tuscola Co. ..."--Page 1. Bethany Green Littlefield was the daughter of Johnathan and Bethany Green. She was born 2 July 1796 near Lake Champlain in New York State. After the death of her husband Anthony, Bethany lived with her son Jerome who also lived in Toscola Co., Michigan. Upon his death in 1874, she went to live with her daughter Bethany Sparks (Mrs. Ezra B. Sparks) in Pine Run, Genesee Co., Michigan. Bethany Green Littlefield died in Pine Run, Michigan and " ... is buried in the Pine Run Cemetery without a grave marker."--Page 2. Descendants and relatives lived in New York, Michigan, Minnesota, Kansas, California and elsewhere.