No. (of Notes, dc.)
157—60. — Boeckh, Corpus Inscrip.
Græc., i.p. 523.—Ptolemy, lib. v. 14.—
Josephus, Antiq., i. 6.1.—Rev. Archéol.,
1846, pp. 114-15 ; and 1847, p. 448.
591 DoDaNIM. Bochart, pp. 183-8.—Wise,
man, Connection between Sei. and Rev.
Rel., 1836 ; ii. pp. 168-9.—Champollion-
Figëac, Dissert, s. l’Étymologie, p. 8.
—Herod., ii., § 52.
592 Wood-cut, fig. 356.—Champollion, Grammaire,
pp. J50, 151, 195, *07; Dictionnaire,
p. 409.—Hincks, Hierog. Al-
phabet, p. 16 ; pi. i., figs. 23, 26, 27.
593 Letronne, Opinions cosmographiques des
Peres de l’Église; Rev. des deux
Mondes, 1837, pp. 601-33 : and Recueil
des Inscrip., ii. p. 37, seq. — Raoul-
Rochette, Archéologie comparée, 1848 ;
Part ii. p. 190, seq.—Lenormant, Cours
d’Hist. Ane., p. 228.
594 KUSä. Bochart, p. 238, and 241.—Martin,
Etudes sur le Timèe de Platon,
Paris, 1841 ; “ Atlantide,” i. p. 332.—
Walton, Bibi. Polygl. ; Proleg., xv. pp.
97-9.—De Wette, i. pp. 228-31.—Wells,
Hist. Geog, of O. and N. Test., 1804,
pp. 103-105. — Lanci, Paralip., ii. p. 45.
Nott, Bibl. and Phys. Hist., p. 143.—
Forster, Geog. of Arabia, 1844, i. pp.
26-7, 28, 29. — Burckhardt, Travels in
Arab., ii. p. 385.—Rosellini, Monumenti
Civili, ii. pp, 394-403.—Gliddon, Otia,
p. 133.—Forster, op. cit., i. 14-6.—Letronne,
Mém. etDocum., Rev. Archéol.,
1849, p. 85. — Cahen, Bible, v. ; avant
propos, p. 13. — Quatremère, Recher.,
Coptes.—De Wettè, i. pp. 202-6.—Pey-
ron, Coptic Lexicon, voce Ethosh.—Parthey,
Vocabularium Copticum, p. 549.
Wilkinson, Topog. of Thebes, p. 487;
Mod. Eg. and Theb., ii. p. 317.—Birch,
Stat. Tabl. Karnac, p. 47.—Anthon,
Class, Diet. ; and Syst. of Anc. Geog. ;
voce “ Asia.”—Rémusat, in Pauthier’s
Chine, p. 259.—Kitto, Bibl. Cyclop., i.
p. 238.
595 Volney, Recherches Nouvelles, Paris,
1822, iv.— Lenormant, Cours d’Hist.
Anc., 1838, pp. 24, 129. —Jomard,
Arabie ; in Mengin, 1839, iii. p.- 327-9,
and passim. — Fresnel, “ Histoire des
Arabes avant l’Islanisme,” in Jour.
Asiat., “ 4me Lettre” Djeddah, Jan.,
•1838. — Sale’s Introd. to the Kur’an,
Liv. Sac. d’Or., p. 467. —Lane, Selections,
p. 17. — Forster, Geog., i. p. 20.
— Gesenius, in De Wette, i. pp. 433-4.
Hyde, Hist. rel. veter. Persarum, p.
- 37—Kitto, “ Cush,” i. p. 503.—Asse-
mani, Bibliotheca Orientalis, iii., part.,
2, p. 568, seq. — Turner, “ Himyarite
Inscriptions,” Trans. Amer. Ethnol.
Soc., New York, 1845, art. iv.—Fresnel,
Recherches sur les Inscrip. Himya-
riques, 1845; Jour. Asiatique, No. 11;
also, Lettres, Feb., March, April, May,
1845. — Gesenius, Geschichte der Heb.
Sprache und Schrift, 1815./— Forster,
Geog. of Arabia, i. pp. 24-76, 94-102.
596 Syncellii “ Chronographeion,” p. 51.—
Letronne, in Biot’s Recherches sur
l’Année vague des Égyptiens, 1831, pp.
25-7.—Biot, Mémoire sur divers points
de l’Astron. Anc., 1846, p. 37.—Matter,
No. (of Notes, de.)
Hist, de l’EcoIe d’Alexandrie, 1844 ■ ¡i
pp. 190-1.—Barucehi, Discorsi Critiei ’
Torino, 1844; pp. 14, 15. —Bockh’
Manetho und die. Hundstern-periode’
Berlin, 1848; p. 40. — Bunsen, IEevd’
tens Stelle, 1845; i. pp. 256- 63?—
Raoul-Roohette, Jour, des Savans, 1846-
pp. 141, 241-2. — Lepsius, Chron. der
-Ägypter, i- p. 446. — Kenrick, Egypt
under the Pharaohs, 185]..—Maury, in
Rev. Archéol., Juin, 1851; pp. ,160-4]
597 MiTsRIM. Grotefend’s “ Analyse de
Sanconiathon,” trad. Lebas, Pans,1839'
Introduction, pp. 79-85— Champollion?
L’Egypte sous les Pharaons, 1814; i’.
Chap. 2. — Parthey, Vocab. Copt., pp.
511-2.—Rawlinson, Behistun, 1846, pp.
I, 27.—Commentary, 1850, pp. 60-7.—
De Saulcy, Rev. Archéol., 1850, no
768-9,-771; pi. 133, No. 19; and r£
cherches, Inscrip. de Van, 1848, p. 27.
Nash, on the term Copt, and the name
of Egypt; Burke’s Ethnol. Jour., No.
II, 1849, p. 496. — Hincks, Hierog
Alph.; p. 28, pi. i. fig. 78. — Gliddon,
Chapters, p. 41.—Rosellini,. Mon. Stor.,
i. p. 58. — Portal, Symboles des Egyp-
tiens, pp. Si, 73.-— Lanci, Lettre ä M.
Prisse, 1847, pp. 99-103. — Lenormant,
Cours, p. 233. — Birch, “ Merter,” in
Annals of Thotmes III., p. 138; Eg.
Inscrip. in Bibliotheque Nat., p. 12; also,
on “ Kam, the black country,” as found
in the Ritual, in Chseremon on Hieroglyphics,
p. 11.—Bochart, p. 292.»
598 PAUT. Bochart, pp. 333-9. — Gliddon,
Otia, p. 127.—D’Eichthal, Foulahs, pp,
1, 8, 150. — Jerome, Commentary on
Isaiah, lxvi.,19.—Ptolemy, lib.,iii. 1.-
Pliny, Hist. Nat., v —Josephus, Antiq.,
i. 6, 2. — Graberg-de Hemso, Specchio,
p. 291, seq.— Cervantes de Marmol,
Descripción general dé Africa, Grenada,
1573; i. fol. 31, seq. — Champollion,
Diet., pp. 339-40. — D’Avezac, Afrique
Anc., p. 31. — Lenormant, Cours, pp.
233-6. — Hengstenberg, Eg. and Books
of Moses; transí. Robbins, p 211.—De
Saulcy, Rev. Archéol., 1850, pp. 769,
772.—Birch, Eg. Inscrip., p. 13.
599 KNAáN. Cahen, Genése, i. p. 25.—
Procopius, De bello Vandálico, ii, cap.
20.—St. Augustin, Expos. Epist. Rom.;
cited in De Wette, i. p, 431. — Lanci,
Bassorilievo Fenicio di Carpentrasso;
Roma, 1824, p. 126. — Munk, Inscrip.
Phcenicienne de Marseilles; Journal
Asiat., 1847, pp. 473, 483 , 526; and
Palestine, pp. 87-8, 192. — Gesenius,
Geschichte der Heb. Sprache, 1815, pp.
8, 9.—;De Saulcy, Mém. sur une Inscrip.
Phcenicienne, 1847; passim.—Josephus, I
Cont. Apion., i, 22.—Kitto, i. p. 823,
“Hebrew Language.”—Eusebius, Prte-
par. Evang., i. cap. 10. — Lenormant,
Cours. p. 236.—Bochart, pp. 339-42.
600 SoBA. Volney, Recherches, iv. p. 232.
—Josephus, Antiq. viii. 6.5,—Ludolph.
Hist. JEthiopica; ii. cap. 3. — Forster,
Geog., i.p. 157, seq. — Wathen, Arts,
Antiq. and Chron. of Egypt, 1842, pp.
69-70. — Hoskins, Ethiopia, p. 339 [not
directly, I find, but inferentially. — G.
R. G.]. — Fresnel, 4me Lettre, Jan.,
No. (of Notes, dc.)
1838, pp. 71-7; and Inscriptions Him-
yariques, pp. 34, 67-9.— Pauthier,
Chine, pp. 94-100, notes.—D’Herbelôt,
Bibliothèque Orientale, vöce “ Salomon,”
and “ Thahamurath. ” — De
Wette, ii. pp. 248-65.—Forster, Geog.,
i. pp. 33-8, and Maps. — Bochart, pp.
146-56.
601 KAUILaH. Bochart, pp. 161-3.—Forster,
i. pp. 9, 38, 54.
602 SaBTfaH. Lenormant, Cours, pp. 237-8.
— Strabo, xvi. p. 771, Fr. Transi.—
Jomard, Arabie, pp. 373, 389-90.—
Pliny, vi. 32. — Volney, iv. p. 232.—•
Fresnel, Inscrip. Himyar., pp. 51-2. "
Forster, Geog., i. pp. 57-8. — Bochart,
pp. 252-4..
603 RAaMaH. Volney, iv. p. 235.—Forster,
i. pp. 59—76 j ii. 223-7.-—Fresnel, 4me
et 5me Lettres, 1838.—Wellsted, Trav.
in Arabia, 1838, ii. p. 430. — Burckhardt,
Arabia, ii. p. 385. — Bochart, p.
247.
604 SaBTieKA. References as above, No.
603.
605 SseBA. Munk, Palestine, p. 438, ön
“ Ezra.” — De Wette* ii. pp. 47-8. — '
Forster, ii. pp. 323-4 ; and i. pp. 71-3.
-—Bochart, pp. 249-51.
606 DeDaN. Bochart, p. 248.—Forster, i. 38;
and Maps. -^- Letronne, “ Vénus Angé-
rone,” Mém. et Doc., Rev. Archéol.,
1849, p. 277.—Glaire, Les Livres Saints
vengés, Paris, 1845, passing. — Rev.
Sidney Smith, Elementary Sketches of
Moral Philos., New York ed., 1850; p.
254.—Strauss, Vie de Jesus, trad. Littré,
Paris, 1839 ; Preface, p. 8.
607 NiMRoD. Vide W. W.’s profound articles
“ Scripture,” and “ Verse,” in Kitto,
ii. pp. .717, 910. — [For hallucinations
on Nimrod,” see Anc. Univ. Hist.,
i. p. 275, seq. ; Faber, Origin of Pagan
Idolatry, and Bryant, Anc. Mythology,
passim ; Hales, Analysis of Chron., i.
p p .-358-9, and ii.] “ Nimrod, a Discourse
on certain passages of History
and Fable,” London, 1829, printed for
Richard Priestley. — Higgins, Anaca-
lypsis, London, 1836', i. p'. 6.—Wiseman,
Lectures, i. p. 37.—Birch, Two Egypt.
Cartouches, 1846, pp. 168-70.—Lepsius,
Chron. der Ægyp., i. p. 223. — Bunsen,
Ægyptens Stelle, iii. p. 133.| | | Sharpe,
in Bonomi’s Nineveh, 1852, pp. 69-78.
—Rawlinson, Commentary, pp. 4, 6, 7,
22.—Layard, Babylon, pp. 33, 123.—De
Saulcy, Dead Sea, ii. p. 544.—D’Herbelôt,
voce “ Nimrod;” and Ouseley,
Oriental Collections, ii. p. 375.-^-Josephus,
Antiq. i. 4, 21.
608-609 De Sola, Lindenthal, and Raphaff,
Scriptures in Heb. and English ; London,
1846; p. 40, notes. — Glaire, Liv.
Sts. vengés, i. pp. 313-20.—Rawlinson,
Commentary, p. 14. — Lanci, Paralipo-
meni, ii. parte 8va. — Gesenius, in De
Wette, i. p. 435.—Meyer, Hebraïsches
Wurzel-Wörterbuch ; cited by Bunsen,
Disc, on Ethnol., 1847, p. 273;—D’ Olivet.,
Langue Hébraïque restituée, 1815 ; pp.
281, 343. — Bochart, 256-60.
MO Gliddon, MS. “ Remarks on the Introduction
of Camels and Dromedaries,
No. (of Notes, dc.)
for Army-Trànsportation, Carriage of
Mails, and Military Field-service, into
the States and Territories lying south
and west of the Mississippi-, between
the.Atlantic and Pacific coasts —presented
to the War-department, Washington,
Oct'. 1851.” As I intend to publish
an entire account of this affair for
public edification ere long, it is sufficient
now to determine the very recent introduction
of the Arabian camel into
Africa by quoting Humboldt (Aspects
of Nature, p. 71); Ritter (Das Kameel,
in Asien, viii. pp. 755-9); Procopius
(Bello Vandalico, i. 8; ii. 11.); Corippus
(iv. 598—9) ; and Bodichon, Études sur
l’Algérie, pp. 62-3.—G. R. G.
611 LUDIM. Bochart, pp. 299-310.^-Grâberg
de Hemso, Maroceo, pp. 69, 246,
251,r;seq.—Castiglione, Recherches sur
les Berbères Atlantiques, Milan, 1846;
pp. 89, 100rl.—Lacroix, Numidie, p* 4.
-r-r D’Avezac, Afrique Anc., p. 28.—
Yanoski, L’Afrique Byzantine, pp. 93,
99. — Ebn-fKhaledoon, “ Fee ahbàr el-
Berber,” 3d book; transi. Schulz, in
Jour. Asiate 1.828; pp. 140-1.—Asiatic
Miscellany, p. 148. — Marmol, op. cit.,
trad. Perrot, 1667, i. p. 68. — Léo Afri-
canus (Hassan ebn Mohammed el
Gharnàtee) AfricæDescriptione,1556, p.
5.,^-Bertholet, Guanches, Mém. Soc.
Ethnol., Paris, 1841 ; Part i., pp. 130-46.
Agassiz, Diversity of Origin of Human
Races; Christian Examiner, Boston,
July, 1850, p. 16.—Dureau de la Malle,
Carthage, pp. 1—3,-13. — Gibbon, Mil-^
man’s, viii., pp. 227-8. — Bodichon,
Études, pp. 32, 64, 103, 109.— Quatremère,
1st art. on Hitzig’s Philistaer;
Jour, des Savans, 1846, May ; pp. 260,
266 ; — [That these views upon • the
“ Ludim” are new, the reader can per-
. ceive by opening Munk (Palestine, p.
432) ; Lenormant (Cours, p. 244); Cahen
(Genèse i. pp. 27, 184) ; Kitto (Cyclop.,
pp. 397-8) ; and all English commentators.]
612 AaNaMIM. Forster, i. pp. 56-9.— De
Saulcy, Dead Sea, 1853 ; i. p. 64 ; ii. p.
837.—-Birch, Hieratic Canon of Turin,
p. 6. — Anthon, Class. Diet., p. 872.—
Bochart, p. 322.
613 LeHaBIM. Bochart, p. 316.— Anthon,
Anc. and Mod. Geog., pp. 708, 749.—
D’Avezac, Afrique, pp. 4, 28, 64-9.—
Champollion, Ég. s. 1. Phar., ii. p. 363.
— Parthey, Vocab. Copt., pp. 497, 530.
— Gliddon, Otia, p. 131.
614 NiPAaiaTiuKHM. Bochart, pp. 317-21;
Otia, pp. 9, 16, 133, 136.—Nott, Bibl.
and Phys. Hist,, pp. 144-5.— ChampoL
lion, op. cit., i. p. 55; ii. pp. 5, 31, 144,
seq. — Parthey, pp. 110, 506, 530.—
Hérod., ii., § 18.—Champollion,Lettres,
p. 124 ; apd the hieroglyphics in Gram.,
pp. 169, 363, 406 ; Diet., pp. 339, 341.
— Peyron, Gram. Ling. Copticæ, pp.
30,- 36-8. — Hengstenberg, p. 211 ; and
Gliddon, Chapters, p. 41.—Lenormant,
Cours, pp. 235, 244-5.:r-Brugsch, Scrip-
tura Ægyptiorum Demotica, p 25.—De
Saulcy, Lettre à M. Guigniaut, p. 18.—
Lepsius, Lettréf à M. Rosellini, p. 66.*