INDEX.
- The dignity of the study of antiquities, Page 1, 46
- Religion the principal purpose of life, 6, 7, 55, 85, 100
- The patriarchal and Christian religion the same, 4, 6, 62, 68, 89, 102
- Publick religion began with Adam’s grandson, Enos, 2, 6
- Exercis’d in a publick place call’d a temple, 3, 7, 25
- A temple was an open circle of stones, 4, 8
- Groves planted as cathedrals, summer-temples, 4, 5
- Groves and temples equivocal, ibid.
- The Druid temples were patriarchal, 4, 5, 102
- Heathen remains of patriarchal temples, 5, 8, 33, 52, 83
- Our patriarchal round temples often dedicated to the sun, 9, 67
- Likewise to dead heroes who built them, 13, 84, 95, 98, 101
- Publick religion was on a stated day, the sabbath, 6, 36, 68
- Heathen remains of the sabbath, 68
- The ordinary service of publick religion was call’d invoking, 3, 4, 6
- Heathen remains of invoking, 4, 6
- This implies an expected mediator, Messiah, 3, 6
- Jehovah was the Messiah who appear’d visibly, 3, 6
- Knowledge of the nature of the deity, the highest wisdom, 7, 85, 90
- From that knowledge idolatry first began, 62, 84, 89, 101
- Sacrificing was the extraordinary service of religion, 4, 38
- At the four solar ingresses, 68
- Temples were form’d on figures of the symbol of the deity, 8, 9, 92
- Whence thought prophylactic, to guard the ashes of the dead, 41, 52, 82, 95
- When desecrated to idolatry, the Mosaic tabernacle was order’d; square and cover’d, 3, 5, 8, 14, 24, 62, 72
- Three kinds of Druid or patriarchal temples, from the threefold symbol of the deity. First, the circle, 9
- The circle, the symbol of the Supreme, 54, 61
- The Supreme, as invisible, had no picture, no name, 3, 50, 62, 98
- Called As, Atys, Hesus, by the Druids, 100
- Rowldrich temple described, as an example of the first kind, 10
- The requisites of a Druid temple drawn up, 10, 13
- The Second kind of temple, the circle and snake, Dracontium, 9, 54
- ABURY, a serpentine temple of the second kind, described, 14
- Another at Shap in Northumberland, 62
- Another at Classerness, ibid.
- Of the symbol of the snake, 49, 54, 56, 92
- It means the divine Son, 55, 60, 61, 62, 93, 94
- The Druids’ great regard to it, 56
- The natural history of the serpent, 50, 57
- Origin of serpent worship, 59
- Of symbols in general, 55
- It was the ancient form of writing, 56
- The divine Son call’d Phtha, νους ἑτερος, mind, creator, wisdom, word, Logos, 50, 61, 62, 88
- He was Jehovah, the Mediator, who appeared visibly, 3
- He was called the NAME, 3, 6, 100
- Called Belenus by the Druids, 100
- Of the kebla or central obelisc in our temples, called ambre, 5, 23, 24, 67, 100
- Became idols, 5, 67
- The petra ambrosia of the heathen, 24, 75, 82
- Of the cove, or ansæ, 5, 23, 100
- Kist vaen, 13
- Indicative of the divine presence, 24
- The Hakpen, or snake’s head, 15, 31, 32
- Heathen remains of such, 33, 84, 97
- The snake’s tail, 36, 37, 52
- The whole symbol of the deity was a circle, snake, and wings; call’d Cnephtha, 9, 29, 54, 62, 92, 93
- Heathen remain of this in Medusa’s head, 69, 93
- The Third sort of Druid temple form’d like the circle and wings, alate temples, 9, 76, 83, 92
- This figure call’d Cneph, means the divine spirit, or anima mundi, 62, 92, 93
- An alate temple of the Druids on the banks of the Humber, described, 92
- An alate temple on Navestock-common, 96
- Another in Cornwall, 97
- Another in the isle of Scianach, ibid.
- Hence the Mercury of the heathen, 84, 98, 101
- The same as Neptune, 84, 94, 98
- Same as Taranus, Thoth, 101
- Same as Hermes, 98
- Same as Canaan, ibid.
- An alate temple over the tomb of Canaan, ibid.
- By the lake Canopus, 96
- In the isle Chios, 98
- In the isle of Cyprus, 97
- At the tomb of Hermes or Lud, 98
- At the tomb of Memnon, 95
- Over the tomb of Neptune or Tarsis, 98
- In the isle of Rhodes, 95, 97
- In the isle of Tenos, 97
- The crab likewise a symbol of the anima mundi, 76
- Serpentine temples, Dracontia, built by the ancients, 9, 61
- By Phut or Typhon, son of Cham, 61, 63
- The history of Phut, 64
- His effigies, 66
- The patriarchal and heathen genealogy, 65
- The heroical effigies of Phut’s mother, 66
- Dracontia built by the Tyrian Hercules, 70, 75, 76
- He was a great navigator, and had the use of the compass, 97
- His history and time fixed, 53, 71
- He planted Britain, 53, 77, 78
- He was king in Egypt when Abraham went thither, 72
- He learn’d religion and other things from Abraham, 74, 76
- He built temples wherever he came, thence call’d Saxanus, 74
- He brought the use of alphabet-writing hither, 73
- He had a son call’d Isaac, 76
- Apher, grandson of Abraham, a companion of Hercules in planting Britain, 70, 77
- Of Albion and Bergion, 77
- Dracontia built by Cadmus, 34, 80
- History of Cadmus son of Canaan, 79
- The Cadmonites related to the Jews, 84
- Serpentine temples at Acon, 75
- At Colchis, 69
- By Damascus, 84
- By the tomb of Orpheus, 95
- By the river Orontes, 69
- At Parnassus, 67
- In the isle of Rhodes, 95
- At Sarephtha, 82
- At Tyre, 75
- The Druid measure, cubit, stadium, 11, 19, 31
- A demonstration of the Druid works prior to roman times, 26, 43, 45
- A Druid celt or hatchet found at Abury, 27
- Another at Stonehenge, 41
- The time of founding Abury conjectured, 52
- The founder’s tumulus, Silbury-hill, 41
- A conjecture concerning his name, 42
- A conjecture concerning the time of his death, 44
- The founder of Abury’s bridle dug up, 42
- Antediluvian bones, 17, 35
- The formation of sarsens, 16
- British beads, urns, &c. dug up, 44, 45
- Heathen barrows like ours, 42, 44, 46, 52, 66, 98
- Conjecture concerning the age of Abury, from the wear of the weather, 17, 38
- From the Variation of the magnetic needle, 51, 52
- Of the use of the loadstone of old, 51, 96
- Seems to have been known to Noah, to Japhet, to Phut, to Hercules, 97
- A magnetic needle among the constellations, ibid.
- The origin of alphabet-writing, 56, 73
- The patriarchal genealogy, 65
- Origin of Egyptian learning from Abraham and Joseph, 72, 74
- The reason of the Mosaic institution, 8, 62, 72
- Of mythology, the oldest heathen history, 13, 31, 33, 63, 76, 83
- Our present reports at the Druid temples the same mythology, 5, 13, 76, 83
- Why EI inscrib’d on the door at Delphos, 100
- Temples made on account of sepulchres, 13, 41
- Typhon’s couch, what it means, 66, 98
- The atlantic islands, where, 14
- Of Solomon’s temple, 38, 39
- The astonishing tumulus of Silbury, 41, 42, 43
- Of british chariots, 42
- Why antient temples regarded the east, 50, 51
- Origin of animal-worship, 55
- Origin of the Phallus, 60
- The Roman road, Runway, Via Badonica, 26, 30, 32, 43
- A demonstration that ’tis later than our works, 26, 27, 43
- A demonstration that ’tis later than the Wansdike, 27
- King Divitiacus founder of Devizes, 27
- Cunetio Marlborough, 19, 26
- Verlucio Hedington, 27
ETYMOLOGY.
- Abl, Hal, Healle, 19
- Au, Aux, Awy, ibid
- As, Ata, Atys, 100
- Atlas, 9
- Apher, 77
- Avim, Hevæus, 81, 98
- Athamanes, 71
- Belenus, Baal, Bel, Belus, 100
- Bratanac, 77
- Beth, 5
- Canopus, 94, 96
- Cnephtha, 93
- Cronius, 97
- Cneph, 92
- Cromlechen, 49
- Dionysus, 11, 98
- Efi, 100
- Esar-haddon, ibid.
- Elohim, 71
- Elagabalus, 24
- Gilgal, 11
- Genessa, Geneva, Gnaphalus, Gnavus, 96
- Gable, Gaveloc, 9, 24, 29
- Hesus, 100
- Har, 67
- Hakpen, 16, 31, 32, 75, 76
- Hycsi, 71, 78
- Javelin, 9, 24, 25
- Kibla, ibid.
- Kist-vaen, 12, 49
- Knave, Knap, 96
- Kneph, 62
- Magus, 38, 55, 69
- Neptune, 94
- Nebula, Nebulo, 96
- Nahas, 67
- Nesi, 72
- Ogmius, 73
- Parnassus, Larnassus, 67
- Ptha, 62, 93
- Rhwl drwyg, 11, 12
- Rhode, Rod, 97
- Sarsens, 16, 48
- Sarephtha, 82
- Scianach, 97
- Taramis, Thoth, 101
- Themis, 67
- Titans, 71
- Tempe, Temple, 7, 25
- Knowledge of the nature of the deity, the most valuable, 7, 85, 90, 100
- Of divine geniture, a metaphysical discourse, 49, 50, 85, 99
- Of divine procession, 100
- This doctrine is discoverable by reason, 85, 99, 100
- The Druids came from Phœnicia, 38, 42, 51, 73, 78
- The Druids were not idolaters, preface, 24, 51, 85
- They were a great and learned people, 38, 49, 76
- They were disciples of Abraham, 5, 35, 73, 74, 76, 85
- Of the patriarchal religion, 11, 37, 51, 55, 62, 69, 85, 102
- They observ’d the sabbath, 6, 35
- A proof that the patriarchs observ’d the sabbath, 68
- Tithe paid by the patriarchs, 68
- Baptism and sponsors in the patriarchal religion, 76
- The Druids built our temples of stones untouch’d of tool, 20, 21, 39
- Groves not their only temples, 5
- They bore a celt on a staff ordinarily, 27
- Abaris a hyperborean Druid, 96
- Chyndonax a gallic arch-druid, 49
- They believ’d a future state, and resurrection of the body, 13, 40, 41, 46, 82
- They knew Messiah was to be born at the end of the year, 72
- The yule festival then, 76
- They knew the mysterious nature of the deity, 6, 7, 9, 90
- As the patriarchs, the ancient priests and philosophers, 4, 6, 9, 85, 89, 94, 100
- They believ’d the unity of the divine nature, 100
- All this deducible from reason, 6, 85, 100
- They had knowledge of the cross, 101
- They knew alphabet-writing, 56
- Notions of the magic of the Druids, 21, 38, 69
- Druid houses, 12, 27, 47, 48, 94
- Druid celt or hatchet, 27
- Sharp flints, 33