14152 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 132.]
14153 (return)
[ Ibid.]
14154 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 132, l. 14; p. 136, ll. 14, 19. “Tubaal” is probably for Tob-baal,
“Baal is good,” like “Tabrimon” for Tob-Rimmon, “Rimmon is good” (1 Kings
xv. 18), and “Tabeal” for Tob- El, “God is good” (Is. vii. 6).]
14155 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 132, ll. 15, 16.]
14156 (return)
[ Ibid. ll. 19, 20.]
14157 (return)
[ From the fact that
Abd-Milkut is king of Sidon at the accession of Esarhaddon (Records of
the Past, iii. 111).]
14158 (return)
[ Abd-Melkarth is one
of the commonest of Phoenician names. It occurs, either fully, or in the
contracted form of Bod-Melkarth, scores of times in the inscriptions of
Carthage. The meaning is “servant of Melkarth.”]
14159 (return)
[ Records of the
Past, iii. 112.]
14160 (return)
[ Ancient
Monarchies, ii. 186.]
14161 (return)
[ Rec. of the Past,
iii. 111, 112.]
14162 (return)
[ Eponym Canon
pp. 139, 140.]
14163 (return)
[ Ibid. p. 140,
Extract xxxviii. ll. 1-3.]
14164 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 140, Ext. xxxviii. ll. 4-9.]
14165 (return)
[ Ibid. p. 141, Ext.
xl.]
14166 (return)
[ Ibid. p. 142, ll.
12, 13.]
14167 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 142, l. 14.]
14168 (return)
[ See Ancient
Monarchies ii. 193.]
14169 (return)
[ Ibid. p. 195.]
14170 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 143, Extr. xli. l. 3.]
14171 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
pp. 143, 144. Six names are lost between the eleventh line and the
eighteenth. They may be supplied from the broken cylinder of Esarhaddon (Records
of the Past, iii. 107, 108.)]
14172 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
pp. 144, 145, ll. 84-98.]
14173 (return)
[ Ibid. p. 139, l.
17.]
14174 (return)
[ Records of the
Past, vol. i. p. 100.]
14175 (return)
[ Records of the
Past, i. 66; ix. 41.]
14176 (return)
[ Ibid. iii. 67, ll.
116, 117.]
14177 (return)
[ Ibid. i. 67, 68.]
14178 (return)
[ See Judg. xix. 29;
Eponym Canon, p. 132, l. 9.]
14179 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
pp. 149, 149.]
14180 (return)
[ Eponym Canon,
p. 70.]
14181 (return)
[ Herod. i. 103. B.C.
633 was, according to Herodotus, the year of the accession of Cyaxares.
His attack on Nineveh seems to have followed shortly after.]
14182 (return)
[ Herod. l.s.c. and
iv. 1; Ezek. xxxviii. 2-16; Strabo, xi. 8, § 4; Diod. Sic. ii. 34, § 2-5.]
14183 (return)
[ Ancient
Monarchies, ii. 221.]
14184 (return)
[ Stanley, Lectures
on the Jewish Church, ii. 432, 433.]
14185 (return)
[ Herod. i. 105;
Strabo, i. 3, 16; Justin, ii. 3.]
14186 (return)
[ Herod. l.s.c.;
Hippocrat. De Aëre, Aqua, et Locis, vi. § 108.]
14187 (return)
[ Herod. i. 73.]
14188 (return)
[ Strabo, xi. 767;
Arrian, Exp. Alex. iii. 8, § 4.]
14189 (return)
[ Polyb. v. 70, § 4.]
14190 (return)
[ Ancient
Monarchies, ii. 228, note.]
14191 (return)
[ Ancient
Monarchies, ii. 232.]
14192 (return)
[ Herod. ii. 157; and
compare the author’s History of Ancient Egypt, ii. 467, note 6.]
14193 (return)
[ Ezek. xxvii. 8.]
14194 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 11.]
14195 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 9.]
14196 (return)
[ Ibid. xxviii. 2-5.]
14197 (return)
[ Ezek. xxvii. 3-6,
and 25.]
14198 (return)
[ See the author’s History
of Ancient Egypt, ii. 472, note 1.]
14199 (return)
[ Herod. ii. 159; 2
Kings xxiii. 29; 2 Chron. xxxv. 20-24.]
14200 (return)
[ Herod. ii. 157.]
14201 (return)
[ See Jer. xlvii. 1.
Gaza, however, may not have been taken till the campaign of B.C. 608.]
14202 (return)
[ Herod. i. 105
raises the suspicion that Askelon, which was nearer Egypt than Ashdod, may
have belonged to Psamatik I.]
14203 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 159.]
14204 (return)
[ 2 Kings xxiii. 19;
2 Chron. xxxiv. 6.]
14205 (return)
[ History of
Ancient Egypt, ii. 228.]
14206 (return)
[ Judg. iv. 15; v.
19.]
14207 (return)
[ 2 Chron. xxxv. 21.]
14208 (return)
[ See Jer. xlvi. 2.]
14209 (return)
[ Berosus, Fr. 1; 2
Kings xxiv. 7.]
14210 (return)
[ Herod. iv. 42.]
14211 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 112.]
14212 (return)
[ Berosus, l.s.c.]
14213 (return)
[ Habakkuk, i. 6-10.]
14214 (return)
[ Jer. xlvi. 3, 4.]
14215 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 5.]
14216 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 6.]
14217 (return)
[ Jer. xlvi. 10.]
14218 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 16.]
14219 (return)
[ Ibid. verse 21.]
14220 (return)
[ Stanley, Lectures
on the Jewish Church, ii. 455.]
14221 (return)
[ Ibid.]
14222 (return)
[ Berosus, l.s.c. The
extreme haste of the return is indicated by the fact, which is noted, that
Nebuchadnezzer himself, with a few light troops, took the short cut across
the desert, while his army, with its prisoners, pursued the more usual
route through the valley of the Orontes, by Aleppo to Carchemish, and then
along the course of the Euphrates.]
14223 (return)
[ See History of
Ancient Egypt, ii. 480.]
14224 (return)
[ Habak. i. 6.]
14225 (return)
[ Menander ap.
Joseph. Contr. Ap. i. 21.]
14226 (return)
[ Ezek. xxvii. 8, 9,
11.]
14227 (return)
[ So Joseph. l.s.c.
Mr. Kenrick disputes the date on account of Ezek. xxvi. 2, which he thinks
must refer to the final siege and capture of Jerusalem; but the
reference may be to the breaking of the power of Judæa, either by Neco in
B.C. 608 or by Nebuchadnezzar in B.C. 605.]
14228 (return)
[ 2 Kings xxiv. 2; 2
Chr. xxxvi. 6.]
14229 (return)
[ Ezek. xxviii.
21-23.]
14230 (return)
[ Menander, l.s.c.]
14231 (return)
[ Ezek. xxvi. 8-12.]
14232 (return)
[ Isaiah xliii. 14;
Æschyl. Pers. l. 54.]
14233 (return)
[ As Kenrick (Phoenicia,
p. 390).]
14234 (return)
[ See especially, ch.
xxviii. 2, 12.]
14235 (return)
[ Ibid. verses 2-10,
17, 18.]
14236 (return)
[ Ezek. xxvii. 26.]
14237 (return)
[ Herod. vii. 44, 96,
100, 128.]
14238 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 161; vii.
98; Ezra iii. 7.]
14239 (return)
[ Menander, Fr. 2.]
14240 (return)
[ Herod. ii. 182.]
14241 (return)
[ Ibid. i. 201-214;
Ctesias, Ex. Pers. § 6-8.]
14242 (return)
[ Herod. i. 177;
Arrian, Exp. Alex. iii. 27.]
14243 (return)
[ Herod. i. 201-214;
Ctes. Ex. Pers. l.s.c.]
14244 (return)
[ Ezra i. 1-11.]
14245 (return)
[ Kenrick, Phoenicia,
p. 393.]
14246 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 19,
34.]
14247 (return)
[ Ezra iii. 7.]
14248 (return)
[ Ezra iii. 7.]
14249 (return)
[ Herod. i. 153.]
14250 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 177.]
14251 (return)
[ See Berosus, ap.
Joseph. Ant. Jud. x. 11, § 1.]
14252 (return)
[ Hence the sacred
writers speak of the Assyrians and Babylonians as “God’s northern
army,” “a people from the north country.” (Jer. i. 15; vi. 22;
Ezek. xxvi. 7; Joel ii. 20, &c.)]
14253 (return)
[ See Herod. iii. 5.]
14254 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 159.]
14255 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 161.]
14256 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 182.]
14257 (return)
[ Herod. ii. 150,
154; iii. 11.]
14258 (return)
[ Ibid. iii. 19.]
14259 (return)
[ Ibid. vii. 98;
viii. 67, § 2; Diod. Sic. xvi. 42, § 2; xvii. 47, § 1; Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 13, 15, &c.]
14260 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 19.]
14261 (return)
[ Ezek. xxix. 10.]
14262 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 17.]
14263 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 19.]
14264 (return)
[ Ibid.]
14265 (return)
[ Kenrick, Phoenicia,
p. 394.]
14266 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvi.
41.]
14267 (return)
[ Kenrick, p. 391,
note 3.]
14268 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 91.]
14269 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvi. 41,
§ 2.]
14270 (return)
[ Herod. v. 52.]
14271 (return)
[ See the author’s Herodotus,
iv. 30, note 1.]
14272 (return)
[ Herod. vii. 28.]
14273 (return)
[ Ibid. iv. 166.]
14274 (return)
[ Herod. v. 37-104.]
14275 (return)
[ Phoenicia could
furnish 300 triremes, Cyprus 150, Ionia at this time 283 (Herod. vi. 8),
Æolis at least 70 (ibid.), Caria the same number (ib. vii. 93)—total,
873. Against these Darious could only have mustered 200 from Egypt (ib.
vii. 89), 100 from Cilicia (ib. 91), 50 from Lycia (ib. 92), and 30 from
Pamphylia (ib. 91)—total, 380.]
14276 (return)
[ Herod. i. 28, 176;
Appian, Bell. Civ. iv. 80.]
14277 (return)
[ Herod. iii. 14-16,
27-29, 37, &c.]
14278 (return)
[ Ibid. v. 108.]
14279 (return)
[ Ibid.]
14280 (return)
[ Ibid. v. 112.]
14281 (return)
[ See the author’s Herodotus,
i. 268, 269, 3rd ed.]
14282 (return)
[ Herod. vi. 9.]
14283 (return)
[ Ibid. ch. 6.]
14284 (return)
[ Herod. ch. 8.]
14285 (return)
[ Ibid. chs. 9-13.]
14286 (return)
[ The Lesbians and
most of the Samians (Herod. v. 14).]
14287 (return)
[ Ibid. ch. 15.]
14288 (return)
[ Ibid. chs. 31-33.]
14289 (return)
[ Herod. v. 41.]
14290 (return)
[ Ibid. iii.
135-138.]
14291 (return)
[ Herod. vi. 43-45.]
14292 (return)
[ See the author’s Herodotus,
iii. 494, note 3.]
14293 (return)
[ The fleet which
accomponied Mardonius lost nearly three hundred vessels off Mount
Athos (Herod. vi. 44), and therefore can scarcely have fallen much short
of 500; that of Datis and Artaphernes is reckoned at 600 by Herodotus (vi.
95), at a thousand by Cicero (Orat. in Verr. ii. 1, § 18), and
Valerius Maximus (i. 1).]
14294 (return)
[ So Herodotus (vi.
95).]
14295 (return)
[ Herod. vi. 118.]
14296 (return)
[ Herod. vii. 23.]
14297 (return)
[ Ibid. vii. 34-36.]
14298 (return)
[ Ibid. viii. 117.]
14299 (return)
[ Æschyl. Pers.
l. 343; Herod. vii. 89.]
14300 (return)
[ Herod. vii. 89-95;
Diod. Sic. xi. 3, § 7.]
14301 (return)
[ Herod. vii. 44.]
14302 (return)
[ Ibid. vii. 100,
128.]
14303 (return)
[ Ibid. viii. 85.]
14304 (return)
[ Ibid. viii. 17.]
14305 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xi. 13,
§ 2: {’Aristeusai Phasi para men tois ‘El-lesin ‘Athnaious, para de, tois
barbarois Sidonious}.]
14306 (return)
[ Herod. viii. 84;
Æschyl. Pers. ll. 415-7.]
14307 (return)
[ Herod. viii.
86-90.]
14308 (return)
[ Ibid. ch. 90.]
14309 (return)
[ Ibid. ch. 90.]
14310 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xi. 19,
§ 4.]
14311 (return)
[ Herod. ix. 96.]
14312 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xi. 60,
§ 5, 6.]
14313 (return)
[ So Diodorus (xi.
62, § 3); but the mention of Cyprus in line 6 renders this somewhat
doubtful.]
14314 (return)
[ Thucyd. i. 110.]
14315 (return)
[ See Ancient
Monarchies, iii. 501.]
14316 (return)
[ See the Corpus
Inscriptionum Semiticarum, i. 139-148.]
14317 (return)
[ Nos. 115, 116, 117,
119, 120.]
14318 (return)
[ Ibid. No. 118.]
14319 (return)
[ Corp. Ins. Sem.
i. 132, 145.]
14320 (return)
[ Dionys. Halicarn.
De Orat. Antiq. “Dinarch.” § 10.]
14321 (return)
[ Corp. Ins. Sem.
i. 145, No. 119.]
14322 (return)
[ See the Corpus
Inscriptionum Græcarum, i. 126, No. 87.]
14323 (return)
[ Nefaheritis or
Nefaa-ert. (See the author’s Story of Egypt, pp. 385, 386, and
compare Ancient Monarchies, iii. 481, 482.)]
14324 (return)
[ Isocrates, Paneg.
and Evag.; Theopompas, Fr. 111; Diod. Sic. xiv. 98; Ctesias, Exc.
Pers. Fr. 29, § 63.]
14325 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xv. 9, §
2. (See Grote’s Hist. of Greece, x. 30, note 3.)]
14326 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xv. 9, §
2.]
14327 (return)
[ Isocrates, Paneg.
§ 161; Evag. §§ 23, 62.]
14328 (return)
[ See Diod. Sic. xiv.
98; xv. 2; Ephorus Fr.; 134 Isocrates, Evag. §§ 75, 76.]
14329 (return)
[ Kenrick, Phoenicia,
p. 405.]
14330 (return)
[ See Ancient
Monarchies, iii. 504.]
14331 (return)
[ Ancient
Monarchies, iii. 505, 506.]
14332 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xv. 90,
§ 3.]
14333 (return)
[ Ibid. xv. 92, § 5.]
14334 (return)
[ Ibid. xvi. 41, §
1.]
14335 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvi. 42,
§ 2.]
14336 (return)
[ Ibid. xvi. 41, §
5.]
14337 (return)
[ Ibid. xvi. 32, §
2.]
14338 (return)
[ Ibid. § 5.]
14339 (return)
[ Ibid. xvi. 40, § 5,
ad fin.]
14340 (return)
[ Ibid. xvi. 44, § 6,
ad fin.]
14341 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvi. §
5.]
14342 (return)
[ Diodorus is our
authority for all these facts (xvi. 45, § 1-6).]
14343 (return)
[ See the author’s Story
of Egypt, pp. 396-401.]
14344 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvi. 42,
§ 6; 46, § 3.]
14345 (return)
[ Scylax, Periplus,
§ 104.]
14346 (return)
[ Ibid.]
14347 (return)
[ See Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 13, sub fin.; 15, sub fin.; 30, sub init.]
14348 (return)
[ See Encycl.
Brit. xviii. 809.]
14349 (return)
[ Quint. Curt. iv. 4;
Justin, xi. 10. Diodorus by mistake makes Strato II. king of Tyre (xvii.
47, § 1).]
14350 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. i. 1, § 2.]
14351 (return)
[ See Grote, History
of Greece, xii. 102.]
14352 (return)
[ Ibid. pp. 29-51.]
14353 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
7.]
14354 (return)
[ Four hundred were
actually brought to the relief of Miletus a few weeks later (Arrian, Exp.
Alex. i. 18, § 5).]
14355 (return)
[ Ibid. § 4.]
14356 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
22; Arrian, Exp. Alex. i. 18-20.]
14357 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
23-26; Arrian, Exp. Alex. i. 20-23.]
14358 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
29, § 2; Arrian., Exp. Alex. ii. 1, § 1.]
14359 (return)
[ See the remarks of
Mr. Grote (History of Greece, xii. 142, 143.)]
14360 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
29, § 4.]
14361 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. i. 20, § 1; Diod. Sic. i. 22, § 5.]
14362 (return)
[ Arrian, ii. 8-13.]
14363 (return)
[ Arrian, ii. 13, 87;
Diod. Sic. xvii. 40, § 2.]
14364 (return)
[ As Ger-astartus,
king of Aradus (Arrian, l.s.c.); Enylus, king of Byblus (ibid. ii. 20, §
1); and Azemileus, king of Tyre (ibid. ii. 15, ad fin.)]
14365 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 13, ad fin.]
14366 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 15, § 6.]
14367 (return)
[ Arrian, l.s.c.]
14368 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 15, § 7;
Q. Curt. iv. 2, § 3.]
14369 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 16, ad fin.; Q. Curt. iv. 2, § 5; Justin, xi. 10.]
14370 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
40, § 2.]
14371 (return)
[ See Diod. Sic. xv.
73, § 4; 77, § 4.]
14372 (return)
[ In point of fact,
he only obtained, towards the fleet which he collected against Tyre,
twenty-three vessels that were not either Cyprian or Phoenician (Arrian,
Exp. Alex. ii. 20, § 2).]
14373 (return)
[ Herod. viii. 97.]
14374 (return)
[ Compare Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 15, § 7, with ii. 24, § 5.]
14375 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
41, § 3.]
14376 (return)
[ Ibid. § 4.]
14377 (return)
[ Q. Curt. iv. § 20;
Diod. Sic. xvii. 41, § 1, 2.]
14378 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
40, § 5.]
14379 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 18, § 3.]
14380 (return)
[ Arrian, Exp.
Alex. ii. 18, § 3.]
14381 (return)
[ Diod. Sic. xvii.
42, § 1; Arrian, Exp. Alex. ii. 18, § 5.]
14382 (return)
[ Arrian, ii. 18, sub
fin.]
14383 (return)
[ Ibid. ii. 19, § 1.]
14384 (return)
[ This seems to be
Arrian’s meaning, when he says, {ai keraiai periklastheisaiexekhean es to
pur osa es exapsin tes phlogus pareskeuasmena en} (ii. 19, § 4).]
14385 (return)
[ Grote, History
of Greece, xii. 185, 186.]
14386 (return)
[ Kenrick, Phoenicia,
p. 418.]
14387 (return)
[ Q. Curt. iv. 3, §
8.]