The Southern Review, Band 4A. E. Miller., 1829 |
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Seite 14
... doubt the Egyptians were in early times , notwith- standing the modern fancy of bepraising the learning and culti- vation of a people , who have not left one book as a testimony that they possessed knowledge of any kind , nor any ...
... doubt the Egyptians were in early times , notwith- standing the modern fancy of bepraising the learning and culti- vation of a people , who have not left one book as a testimony that they possessed knowledge of any kind , nor any ...
Seite 20
... doubt that it was known to them ; and this removes many great and serious difficulties to the credibility of the historical accounts of the colonization of these western coun- tries . " Telescopes and Gunpowder known to the Druids ...
... doubt that it was known to them ; and this removes many great and serious difficulties to the credibility of the historical accounts of the colonization of these western coun- tries . " Telescopes and Gunpowder known to the Druids ...
Seite 24
... doubt ? Sir William Drummond , in his Treatise on the Zodiacs of Esne and Dendera , adopts the Septuagint chronology , which makes the age of the world 7210 years in the year 1820 of our common era . Mr. Higgins promises to shew that ...
... doubt ? Sir William Drummond , in his Treatise on the Zodiacs of Esne and Dendera , adopts the Septuagint chronology , which makes the age of the world 7210 years in the year 1820 of our common era . Mr. Higgins promises to shew that ...
Seite 40
... doubt : except that as we know the Samaritan character and language to be more affianced to the Phoenician than the comparatively modern Hebrew , a quære may suggest itself , why was this passage not rendered in Samaritan instead of the ...
... doubt : except that as we know the Samaritan character and language to be more affianced to the Phoenician than the comparatively modern Hebrew , a quære may suggest itself , why was this passage not rendered in Samaritan instead of the ...
Seite 45
... doubt . In the following version , the first line is the Punic of Plautus ; the second line is the Irish of O'Connor ; the third line is his English trans- lation . 1 . Pl . Nith al o nim ua lonuth sicorathissi ma com syth O'C . An iath ...
... doubt . In the following version , the first line is the Punic of Plautus ; the second line is the Irish of O'Connor ; the third line is his English trans- lation . 1 . Pl . Nith al o nim ua lonuth sicorathissi ma com syth O'C . An iath ...
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