mf^mmmmmm ifiliiliiiiliiiilliiilii THE ■I[IITISH MUSEUM gg "WITH ■!tIBLE ir^HAND ■liiiPiiillli _ _ _ -saw. iiiiiir Ho PnH ^ tm :H —-co H Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2008 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/britishmuseumwitOOjannuoft 4CS1MILE OF LETTER RECEIVED FROM SiR FREDERIC G. KENYON. K.C.B. LL.D.. etC. (Director and Principal Librarian of the British Museum.). BRITISH MUSEUM, LoNDOU : W.C.J. hu.ik'^il^i- J vu«7^^ ^*^" 'Wv^ -^A/< iiA^ ^u%-^ ec w^ ^Ao-^-G/^u/v ii*-^ ^'«^' y^^^ '^Wc 'U'V/' 7<**^*^ U^' 4rv ^^ iLu ^ ^ J ^^-^^ ^^' Author's Preface Altliougli this Handbook has received a hearty welcome from the British Museum Authorities, it has not been compiled for Egj-ptologists or Assyriologists, but for Bib]e-loving visitors to the Museum ; therefore, I am not troubled because the Directors have not removed the " III " after " Tiglath Pileser"; or the " lY " after " Shalmaneser "; or at their spelling " Khu-en-Aten " thus. iVIy sA'mpathies are ^vith Sam Weller, who, so long as his friends knew he was Sam AVeller, didn't cure whether the)' spelt his name " n'Jih a double U 01 a Wee." Therefore, I leave those Avho do care, to consult such eminent authorities as Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, Dr. H. R. Hall, and others. Many thanks are tendered to the B. M. Authorities, and the Oxford University Press, for permission to reproduce their illustrations. Especial gratitude is felt to Sir F. G. Kenyon for his help and encouragement — better felt than expressed : also, to his very able staff from whom I have received much valuable afc^sistance. FBANK G. JANNAWAY London, SAW Q Memoranda HOW TO GET TO THE BRITISH MUSEUM FROM THE PRINCIPAL LONEON RAILWAY TERMINI. The British Museum can be reached follows : — CHARING CROSS (S. E. & C.) EUSTON (L. & N, W.) KING'S CROSS (G. N.) LIVERPOOL STREET (G.E.) MARYLEBONE (G.C.) PADDINGTON (G. W.) ST. PANCRAS (Mid.). VICTORIA (L. B.&S. C, & S. E. WATERLOO (L. & S. W.) from the various London Termini as Tube to Tottenham Court Road Station. Tube to Tottenham Court Road Station. Tube to Holborn Station. Tube to British Museum Station. Tube to British Museum Station, changing at Oxford Circus. Ditto. Tube to Holborn Station. & C) Bus to Tottenham Court Road- Tube to Tottenham Court Road Station, changing at Charing Cross. ! Phcenician Phoenician Hebrew Hieroglyphic. Hieratic. (Moabite stone). (Siloam Inscription). (square cliaracter). a eagle . . . . 1^ ^^ <-c ft » b crane ■\ A ^0 n g bowl . . . . ^-_-* ^ 1 d hand . . . .-^ ■^ <;^ -a^ n h plan of house I ra n ^^ ^^ n f,v rr \'\ 1% cerastes . . . . '^^^^ / t'(tch,z) duck .. . • h a =c =3=t 1 X(kh) sieve . . . -.1] tin ^^ n th tongs ; loop . *^6 V i leaves . . . ■ fli \u =1^1 ^S i> k throne . . . • o z. 17 JJ 7 1 lioness . . . ^:a, li U /^ h m owl ■ k } yy u >aB n water Vi >~v> )1 V M s door belt -> ^^^ 0 a weapon . . . 0-=^ -rf* o o V P door . . . • 0 ^ Jl J ^ t(ts) snake ■ ^ P r r- '-='--, 1 q knee? .. . Z] A rr? T? 1? r nicuth .. . . \ On each of its four sides are five rows of sculpture depicting scenes in the various expeditions engaged in by Shalmaneser II. during his thirty-five years reign (B.C. 860 — 825). On the second row from the top, on the side facing us, we see " Jehu the son of Omri " paying tribute. In the cuneiform inscription thereon we have "the tribute of Yana" (Jehu) expressly detailed. Hazael, another Bible character * Tha bttginning of the came is lost. (Page 23 r-i^':-^3,„_^ The Black Obelisk. {Sec page 22). Page 24) Colossal Human-Headed and Winged Bull (See pa^c 16). WITH BIBLE IN HAND. 25 is also mentioned. In connection with the pictorial, and written evidence, contained on this monument it will be found both interesting and profitable, at one's leisure, to turn up and read the following Scripture : I Kings xvi. 23; xix. 15 — 17; 2 Kings viii. 7 — 15; ix. •:— 6; x. 31, 32; xiii. 3, 22, 23. To the right of this obelisk will be noticed what is not unlike a headstone of a grave, with a rounded top. It is described in the Museum Catalogue as Tfe Stele of Shalmaneser II. (b.c. 860 — 825). On it^ in cuneiform writing, are recorded Shalmaneser's conquests. The names of both Ahab, Kmg of Israel, and Benhadad, King of Syria, are included, details by no means unimportant in view of the facts recorded in I Kings xx. 34 which reads " And Benhadad said unto him (Ahab), The cities which my father took from thy father, I will restore ; and thou shalt make streets for thee in Damascus, as my father made in Samaria. Then said Ahab, I will send thee away with this covenant. So he made a covenant with him and sent him away." Also in i Kings xxii. i we have the matter referred to thus, "And they continued three years without war between Syria and Israel ". So that, in both the divine history and the monumental record on the slab, we have the war and covenant between Syria and Israel testified to. But what is still more interesting, and equally important in connection with this slab, is the fact that it affords overwhelming evidence that Assyrian scholars are able, without the slightest doubt, to correctly decipher these cuneiform writings or inscriptions. When this slab was excavated at Kurkh, on the bank of the Tigris, and brought to the Museum, 26 THE BRITISH MUSEUM Sir Henry Rawlinson read from the inscription that Shalmaneser II. had set it up by the side of a similar monument which had been erected by his father and predecessor, Asliur-nasir-pal. Orders were at once issued to the excavators to proceed with the work and make thorough search for the missing stele, with the result that the monument erected by Ashur-nasir-pal was discovered and conveyed to London, and is now on view as you see in the gallery, adjoining the stele of Shalmaneser. How the cuneiform inscriptions came to be deciphered I will explain upstairs later on. By now turning right-about-face we are confronted with two statues of" The god Nebo. Note how upright he is. In view of the fact the cuneiform inscriptions depict him as "the lofty inteUigence and the lord of tablets", and that in the monuments he is always erect as you now see, it is very interesting to read in the divine prophecies, that the day was to come when " Nebo stoopeth" (Isaiah xlvi. i). How expressive! In the inscriptions on these statues, Nebo is associated with Bel, another Assyrian god, and so, too, we find they are associated in the Bible, " Bel boweth down, Nebo stoopeth" (Isaiah xlvi. i). The names of these two gods occur in many Babylonian and Assyrian names, for instance Nebuchadnezzar, Nebuzaradan, Nabopolasser, Belshazzar, Belteshazzar, Bel-Merodach, etc. The first Assyrian king mentioned in the Bible (2 Kings XV. 28*, 29 ; xvi. 7 — 18) is Tiglath Pileser III. (B.C. 745 — 727), and he is very much in evidence on * Pul. — "He overthrew the old dynasty and usurped the throne under the name of Tiglath-Pileser." — Prof. Sayce. (Page 27 The Assvkian god Nebo. (See page 26). Page 28) Sennacherib before Lachish. {Sec page JO J. WITH BIBLE IN HAND. 29 the Assyrian monuments in this saloon, especially in these Wall Sculptures on the east and west walls. Note the armour, the shields, particularly battering ram and lorry. Here we see what is considered by many to be the origin of the Tanks, which played such an important part in the latter part of the great European War — read also i Sam. xvii. 41 ; Deut. XX. 20 ; Jer. vi. 6 ; Ezek. iv. 2 ; xxi. 22, 27. Also note in the sculptures, the prisoners impaled on stakes before the enemy's wall, and then read Josh. X. 26 ; Deut. xxi. 22 ; Josh. viii. 29. Wending our way between the colossal lion and bull we enter the Niraroud Gallery, and turning immediately to the right, we pass through the glass-panelled door and find ourselves in the Assyrian Saloon Turning immediately to the left, let us make a tour of the gallery and note The Wall Sculptures. These all depict scenes in the hves of Tiglath Pileser III. (B.C. 7AS—7V) \ Sennacherib (B.C. 705 — 681); and Ashur-bani-pal (B.C. 668 — 626). These bas-rehefs came either from one or the other of the palaces in the vicinity of Nineveh. The lion-hunting illustrated on the slabs is not only interesting as hunting scenes, but additionally so because of what we read in the Bible about Daniel's experience in one of the royal dens at Babylon, for the details of which read Daniel vi. 7, 16, 17, IQ, 22, 24 and 27). How vividly too, the^e sculptures illustrate Ezekiel xxiii, 12 — 15 which tells 30 THE BRITISH MUSEUM us how God's chosen people " Doted upon the Assyrians her neighbours^ captains and rulers clothed most gorgeously, horsemen riding upon horses, all of them desirable young men pourtrayed upwa the wall, the images of the Chaldeans ", etc. Upon reaching the fourth side of the gallery, we see oh the north wall, facing us, the celebrated bas-relief depicting The Assault and Capture of Lachish, by Sennacherib, B.C. 701. We observe the King Sennacherib seated on his throne, close by which are seen vines and hg-trees. Officers are reporting to the king details of the Siege of Lachish, and behind him are seen representatives of the defeated peoples, standing and kneeling. A little in front of the king is an inscription^ in cuneiform letters, which reads " Sennacherib, king of hosts, king of Assyria, sat upon his throne of state, and the spoil of the city of Lachish passed before him ". What a remarkable confirmation and illustration of the Bible accounts which read " After this did Sennacherib, king of Assyria, send his servants to Jerusalem (but he himself laid siege against Lachish and all his power with him) unto Hezekiah, king of Judah, and unto all Judah, saying, etc." (2 Chron. xxxii. 9) ; " And Hezekiah, king of Judah sent to the king of Assyria to Lachish, saying, I have offended, return from me : that which thou puttest on me will I bear. And the king of Assyria appointed unto Hezekiah, king of Judah, three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold " (2 Kings xviii. 14). Let us turn to the right and go downstairs, where, among the many interesting exhibitSj we would WITH BIBLE IN HAND. 31 especially direct attention to the little bas-reliet on the left hand wall depicting A Banquet Scene (No. 121). In this we behold the Assyrian monarch reclining on a couch, under a vine, and from one of the adjoining trees we see hanging the head of the King of Elam, who it appears, had been slain in battle. This sculpture illustrates many texts in the Bible ; to wit, the reclining, which custom, the Jews took on during their captivity in Babylon ; see Luke xxii. 27 (R.v. marg.) ; John xiii. 23 ; xxi. 20 (r.v.) ; Esther i. 6 ; Mark vii. 4 (marg.) As to dwelling under one's own vine, read i Kings iv. 25, and compare with the many prophecies of a good time coming for the whole world, Micah iv. 4 ; Zech. iii. 10. And as to the custom of hanging up the heads of slain prisoners, we read in i Chron. x. 10 that the Phihstines hung Saul's head in the temple of Dagon. To the left of the slab we have just been examining we note a large wall Inscription of Sargon. This exhibits the largest cuneiform writing in the British Museum, possibly the largest extant in the world. On it are found mentioned both Judah and Hamath, and as illustrating what we are told in the Inscription, we may profitably read 2 Kings xvii. and Isaiah x. Ascending the staircase we pass out of the Assyrian Saloon into The Nimroud Gallery On our right, we have on the walls a scries of sculptures arranged just as they stood originally in the 32 THE BRITISH MUSEUM Assyrian Palace of Ashur-nasir-pal (B.C. 885 — 860). In slab numbered No. 2, we behold The ^jacred Tree of the Assyrians. It is thought by many that this is the god "Asherah", translated " grove " in i Kings xvi. 33, and many other places in Holy Writ. These groves were formerly understood to be places after the character of the Druidic worshipping grounds, but such texts as 2 Kings xxiii. 6, 7 justify us in concluding that " asherah " was an idol in the form of a tree. The text just named, says Josiah " brought out the grove (asherah) from the house of the Lord, without Jerusalem, unto the Brook Kidron, and burned it at the Brook Kidron, and cast the powder thereof upon the graves of the children of the people ". It is noteworthy that in the R.V. the revisers have inserted " Asherah " in lieu of the " grove " of the A.V. The Hebrew word rendered " grove " in Genesis xxi. 33 is a different word {eshd — a tamarisk) and is only found there. Compare also Deut. xvi. 21 ; Judges vi. 25 — 30. On the opposite side of the Gallery, in No. 35, we have a sculpture of The goddess Istar. In i Kings xi. ^^ it is termed " Ashtoreth, the goddess of the Zidonians " ; and is claimed as the wife of Tammuz (see Ezek. viii. 14). In No. 33 on the same wall we see The god NisroCH. It was in the Temple of this eagle-headed deity that Sennacherib was murdered by his two sons as recorded in 2 Kings xix. 37, which reads, " And it came to pass, as he (Sennacherib) was worshipping in the house of Nisroch his god, that Adrammelech and Sharezer his sons smote him with {Page 33 The Siege of Lachish. {See page 30). The Assyrian Sacred Tree. {See page 32). Page 34) Assyrian Altar AND Sculptured Slab. (See page 17). WITH BIBLE IN HAND. 35 the sword ; and they escaped into the hnd of Armenia. And Esarhaddon his son reigned in his stead". (This is the Esarhaddon whose sculpture and inscription we looked at in the Nineveh Gallery — see page 22). The murder of Sennacherib in the house of Nisroch is ^Iso recorded in Isaiah xxxvii. 38. In exhibit No. 30 on the same wall we see The god DaGON. This fish-headed deity was worshipped by the Philistines, and even a cursory glance at the sculpture enables us the better to appreciate what we read in i Sam. v. 4, " And when they arose early on the morrow morning, behold Dagon was fallen upon his face to the ground before the ark of the Lord ; and the head of Dagon and both the palms of his hands were cut off upon the threshold ; only the stump (fishy part — marg.) of Dagon was left to him." That happened in the Temple dedicated to the worship of Dagon at Ashdod. There was also a Temple of Dagon at Gaza, and it was in that Temple that Samson did so much damage, as the result of the Philistines making sport of him — see Judges xvi. 21 — 30. Now let us leave the Nimroud Gallery, and by turning to the left and creasing the Assyrian Transept wc find ourselves in the Southern Egyptian Gallery On entering the Southern Egyptian Galler}-, facing us in the centre is the world famous ROSETTA Stone. Tliis is the key which enabled Egyptologists to unlock the hitherto undeciphered 36 THE BRITISH MUSEUM hieroglyphic inscriptions which abound on the monuments we are about to examine. For centuries and centuries they had been enigmas. Even so late as the i8th century, the hieroglyphics had been looked upon as mere pictures, although some learned men had come to the conclusion that the signs within the cartouches, or oval frames, on the monuments contained the name of a monarch, or some other royal personage. That was the first step in the decipherment of Egyptian inscriptions, and when this Rosetta Stone was discovered it v/as not long before Egyptologists Were able to read the monuments as easily as you and I can read the Bible. It was in the year 1798, that a French officer in the course of excavations oil the bank of tlie Nile, at a place called Rosetta, came across this stone, and it was seen, as you can see, that it contained three sets of writing, which proved to be — on the top Egyptian hieroglyphic, or writing of the priests ; in the middle Demotic, or writing of the people ; and on the lower part Greek. The value of the stone was at once seen, and it was handed over to the National Institute at Cairo. On the defeat of the French by the British, the stone came into British possession, and was deposited in the Museum in 1802. Copies were sent to all the learned Societies, and from the translations of the Greek portion, which language was Well understood, it was seen to be a Decree of the Egyptian Priests drawn up in the year B.C. 195 in honour of the Pharaoh, Ptolemy Epiphanes, for the great things he had done for his kingdom. Among the great tinngs he was credited with according to this stone were the following : WITH BIBLE IN Hx\ND. 37 Brought peace to Egypt Removed heavy taxation. Extinguished debts. Liberated prisoners. Increased the Army. Strengthened the Naxy. Exempted the priestsfrom taxation, and, above all^ provided Uie latter with free hohdays. No wonder the pnests smothered him with honours. Here are a few of the titles and descriptions they gave him, and which are also recorded on thia memorial stone : Superior to his adversaries. Like the resplendent sun. Bom of the gods. Always living. Beloved of Ptah. The god Epiphanes. The last lines on the Inscription read : " That this Decree be engraved on a tablet of hard-stone in hieroglyphics, enchorial (or demotic), and Greek characters and place it in every Temple of the first, second, and third class, near the image of the everhving king". From the foregoing it was evident that the Decree contained in the Greek language, was but a repetition of what was contained in the hierogl>T>hics of the upper part of the inscription ; and so it proved to be. " The method by which the greater part of the Egyptian alphabet was recovered is this : It was assumed correctly that the cartouche always contamed a royal name. The only cartouche on the Rosetta stone was assumed to contain the name of Ptolemy. 38 THE BRITISH MUSEUM An obelisk brought from Phils about that time, contained a hieroglyphic inscription and a translation of it in Greek, which mentioned two names, Ptolemy and Cleopatra, and one of the cartouches was filled with hieroglyphic characters, which were identical with those in the cartouche on the Rosetta stone. Thus there was good reason to believe that the cartouche on the Rosetta stone contained the name of Ptolemy, written in hieroglyphic characters. Here is the cartouche which was assumed to represent the name PtolEMAIOS, or Ptolemy, the hieroglyphics being numbered ^^ .AA vH"^ (:°'fl::^'^^p and here is the cartouche which was assumed to represent the name Cleopatra A \\ r ) ^ .i\ "^ i)^il'°'4 ^^ Sol ^^ 8. ?l5(l«?5B!f>» _jT5s;gr:ttl2£)siyKn(*«ws®*wtT=?f5.=r«iii=ffi*iwi fe:M*3rytist;'i:;5Hrvj-i<'vi-<-rs-:£B£i-:a;s;iiii:?i>a:> ^..i.Ti^B;t^i2£f"KttBrroU'^uUsT^l^■?T.=;i((i;*Ktvs3:i/>5^5'>-'E!,::::;ence " (or denarii). This, too, was the coin the Lord asked to be shewn, when he was questioned by the Pharisees, as to their duty about paying the Roman Tribute — " They brought unto him a penny " (Matt. xxii. 9 — a denarius). Now turn to Table Case K. In No. 22 E>dnbit we see a SCOURGE with its lash loaded with bronze beads, and which scourge was frequently used for the punishment of slaves. As we look at this instrument of torture which was used by tlie Romans we think of Matt, xxvii. 26, where we read that Pilate " scourged Jesus" ; also of 2 Corinthians xi. 24, where Paul states that no less than five times he received " forty stripes save one ". (Under Roman Law no man could be given more than forty stripes). In Wall Case 97, on the second shelf is seen AN ALTAR dedicated to THE UNKNOWN GOD CGreek) ' — see Acts xvii. (also p. 20 ). In Wall Case 109 are samples of Greek Armour (made of brass), but none of Roman, for the simple reason that the latter having been made of iron, it has long since perished. In stating these facts we are reminded of the fact that in the divine dream of Nebuchadnezzar, God foretold the Greek and Roman Empires under the symbols of Brass and Iron — the Image's belly and thighs of brass and the legs of iron (Dan. li). Even historians, too, write of the " brazen- coated Gieeks ". 84 THE BRITISH MUSEUM Before leaving this flo-or let us pay a passing visit to the Room of Gold Ornaments and Gems In Case X. we see some beautiful little Cameos and Intaglios, portraits of (46) Titus, Vespasian^ Nero and Hadrian ; (47) Commodus, Septimus Severus and Trajan; (52) Nero; (53) Tiberius, Augustus and Claudius. Coming out of the Gem Room we turn to the left and then to the right, and walking through the Room of Terra Cottas into the Room of Greek and Roman Antiquities, we turn immediately to the left, and descend the Principal Staircase. Arriving on the Ground Floor, we cross the Main Entrance Hall, and walking through the Grenville Library we reach the Manuscript Room Here we find much to interest us as Bible students. Let us turn our attention to Case G. No. i Exhibit is The Pentateuch (or Five Books of Moses) in Hebrew. Its date is the Ninth Century A.D., and it is claimed to be the old MS. now in existence of any substantial part of the Holy Scriptures in Hebrew. No. 2. The Codex Alexandrinus ; the Bible in Greek, dating back to the middle of the Fifth Century A.D. It is one of the three earliest and most important WITH BIBLE IN HAND. 85 MSS. of the Holy Scriptures containing both the Old and the New Testaments. (Photographic specimen pages of the other two oldest — the Codex Vaticanus and the Codex Sinaiticus — are shewn in the same case. The originals thereof are respectively in the custody of the Vatican Library, at Rome, and in the Imperial Library, at Petrograd, each of which it has been the author's privilege to inspect). No 6. The Septuagint Version, the Old Testament Scriptures in Greek. This copy was written in the 13th Century A.D. This version of the Hebrew Scriptures, was made by order of Ptolemy Philadelphus (see page 41 of this Guide). No. 9. The Pentateuch in Syriac, also called, The Peshitto. This copy was made in A.D. 464, and is the earliest known MS. of the Bible in any language of which the date is known. Now we will turn to Case D., where there are several Latin Bibles known as the Latin Vulgates, the work of Jerome (Saint Jerome as some prefer to call him). This version formed the basis of Wycliffe's Bible, which we also can see a copy of in Case I. It is the first English Version of the Holy Scriptures, and bears date of the 14th Century A.D. An interesting exhibit is to be seen in Case V. No. 38. The Bull of Pope Innocent III. ratifying the grant by King John ot " England and Ireland " to the Holy Roman Church in return for " the protection of St. Peter and himself ". It is attested by the " sentence " of the Pope — viz., " Fac 86 THE BRITISH MUSEUM mecum, domine^ signum in bomim " (Psalm Ixxxv. 17).* Case VII. No. 2'6. An agreement by Edward Gibbon, the historian^ for the sale of his work the " His/or y of the Docline and Fall of the Roman Empire'' dated i6th August, 1787. And now, last but not least, there is something we must look at in the Room of Inscriptions This way please — to tlie Entrance Hall, in between which and the Reading Room, just behind where some of you left your umbrellas, is a Cast of an Inscribed Stone. The original, which is m the Museum at Constantinople, was dug up by excavators on the Temple Area in Jerusalem. It contains 7 lines of Greek, forbidding Gentiles, on pain of death, to go within the Sanctuary. The Greek word (on this stone) for sanctuary {heiron) is the same as translated '' Temple " in Matt. xxi. 12 and Acts xxi. 28, and the same as used by Titus and Josephus (see " Wars of the Jews ", v. v. 2 ; v. xi. 4 ; and "Antiquities of the Jews'\ xv. xi. 5). After looking at this stone you will enjoy reading Paul's exciting adventures with Trophimus (Acts xxi. 29) ; also compare with Ephes. ii. 11 -16. Who now will say the British %:J _ Museum is a dry place to visit ? * That is, in the Latin Vulgate; in the A. v. it is Pfahn Ixxxvi. 17, the first six words of which read, "Shew me a token for (Page 87 The Denarius ok Penny, Matt, xvii, 24. (Sec page SJ) . The AssAKiON or Fakthinc;, matt. x. 29. The Emperor Titus. (See page 16). The Emperor Tiberius as a young man. (Seepage 15), Page 88) tTpucvcj)oiir yat 19' mxmjfflv^nyvc lm\v am cncti^ ii^t? grtt? vot^fei^T^t ct)cmtt2:()tiD ie:ii/vgoD.nn?5oO*^ m}i p2ij^i}^t)a{t vcnr fefaucii in t r^tCifme of mm (tonOfgc ftt^otrte* IjcrtynstrCfj^tra/ loo i/ertqj:); •help/ fo)?U oon m!Kngrt:Attji>n3rfl{|jpiT ge ^uiV \n|hrg^ t Vtrttffft nt^oiitt tc fi itctr/^ancijitn DiyiMfC)ni\sc/(ii( frc?cr^fttifec;if ijel;; njmrfintpto l)rfn CDtl/fotfovtitfr* nsixrt? voir? fcBtc otrfcrDpett oifcntotitycl^iccy, ivcwl opvttemplc t^liit m totitio. fro re Vfmfr tlto »tT/5;t:^J!^^ ctntiino icmjgerf iei^ri)c(tote eiifti vvtlj> rt^mmi \ijftrgoOOitfoiie/fovl^ ^er wncn tor Wjhncn.lnljoliJjnise nu ft ft! re motigc. itn;tcl)eABarniar(f' iimivlclQni vi-tnftnr of ^ftincs r^lcflh tuiomr of ^ofq)l) tfaHom^/t^ftljant i^fpiufts m eaiiicrvn fo^nmtmMn • tm;>nvftntcntolnin%^nimTK^tBp^ ntw VRt^togpo' TO5rtcniq)i9tr]nln Wvcliffe's Bible, MARK XV. 33 — 41. {See page 85). Comprehensive Index PAGE Abu Simbel 51 Abydos 47 Acropolis 20 Ahab 25, 22, 80 Altar to Unknown God 20 Amen — the god 75 Amenophis 111 47, 74 Amenophis IV' 74 Am-mit 53 Amraphel 68, 74 Ani 53 Anubis 53 Apis 59 Areopagus 20 Armour 83 Ashdod 35 Asherah 32 Ashtoreth 32 Ashur-bani-pal 29 Ashur-nasir-pal ... 26^ 32 Askelon — Tablet from. 75 Assarion 82 Assyrian Altar 17 Atea — the god 75 Athene 19 Augustus Cassar ... 15, 84 Babel Tablets 67 Babylon— Fall of 76 Banqueting Scene 31 Barcochba 16 Behistun 70, 74 Bel 26 Bel Merodach 26 Belteshazzar 26 Benhadad 25 Bible— My New 67 Black Obelisk 22 Boundary Stones 69 Brass Armour.(Grecian) 83 Bricks — Babylonian ... 69 ^0 Index Continued. PAGE Bricks — Egyptian 60 B.ull— The Sacred 58 Calves and Bulls 58 Canopus — Decree of 36, 41 Cartouche 38, 41 Claudius Caesar ... 15, 84 Cleopatra 38 Codex Alexandrinus... 84 Codex Sinaiticus 85 Codex Vaticanus 85 Coins 82 Commodus 84 Creation Tablets 67 Cuneiform Inscrip- tions 25, 69 Cylinder — Sennacherib 67 Cyrus 70, 76 Cyrus Cylinder 76 Dagon 31, 35 Darius 7^, 73 Deluge Tablets 67 Demotic 36 Denarius 82 Diana — Goddess 18 Diana — Temple of 18 Earthenware 62 Elam 3i> 69 Elgin Marbles 19 Elwend 7^ Embalming 5^ Enemies under feet ..57 Esar-Haddon ... 22, 35,69 Eye Paint 61 Farthing 82 Flood Tablets 67 Frescoes 4^, 59 German Higher Criticism 75 PAGE Gaza 35 Gibbon the Historian... 86 Granary 59 Grotefend 69, 70 Habershon — Miss A. ... 67 Hadrian 16, 84 Hamath 31 Hand Mirrors 61 Hapi 42 Hazael 22 Hezekiah ... 16, 30, 62, 81 Hezekiah Cylinder 62 Hieroglyphics 36 Higher Critics ...17, 67, 75 Hittite Remains .... 81, 82 Hophra 41 Horus 53 Hystaspes 70, 73 Innocent III. — Pope ... 84 Iron Armour (Koman) .. 83 Isis 53 Istar 32 Jehoiakim 42 Jehu 22 Jerabes 81 Jeroboam 43 Jerome 85 Jerusalem 22, 30 Judah 30 Judgment Scene 53 Juhus Caesar 15 Kha-em-Uast 43 Kenyon — ^^Sir F. G 42 Khammu-Rabi 68, 74 Khepera 44 Khu-en-Aten 75 Lachish 3° Lamps 79 Index Continued. 91 Latin Vulgate 85 Layard— Sir H 16, 17 Lions — Colossal 17 Lion-Hunting 29 Looking-Cjlasses 61 Mariette, M 58 Mars Hill 20 Memphis— Priests of... 36 Menephtha 54 Menkau-Ra 52 Merodach Baladan 69 Mesha 79 Mesopotamia 79 Minerva 19 Mirrors 61 Moabite Stone 79 Morgan — M. de 68 Moses and the Higher Critics 68 Mummied Animals 5^ Mummies 51. 57 My New Bible 67 Nabopolassar 26 Nebo 26 Nebuchadnezzar 26, 69, 76 Nebuzaradan 26 Nepthys 53 Nero 15. 84 Nineveh 21 Nisroch 32 Obehsk— Black 22 Omri 22 Osiris 53 Papyrus 62 Parthenon 19 Penny — Roman 82 Pentateuch 84 Pentateuch in Syraic ... 85 Peshitto 85 Petrie-Flinders — Prof. 54 Pharaoh Hophra 41 Pharaoh of the Exodus 54 Pharaoh of the Oppres- sion 43 Philae 38 Pontius Pilate 15 Ptolemaios 38 Ptolemy Epiphanes .... 36 Ptolemy Philadelphus... 41 Pul 26 Rawlinson — Sir H. 16, 26, 48, 70, 74 RamesesII. 43, 44, 5 1. 54 Rehoboam 42 Rosetta Stone 35 Samson 35 Sandals 60 Sargon 17, 31, 67, 69 Sayce — Professor 17, 26, 68 Schick— Dr 80 Scourge 83 Sekhet 42 Sennacherib 21, 29, 30, 35, 67, 6q Septimus Severus 84 Septuagint 41, 85 Serapeum 5^ Sesostris 54 Setil 54 Shalmaneser H. 25, 26, 69 Shalmaneser IV. ... 17, ^7 Shekel 82 Shishak 42 Signet Rings 60 92 Index Continued, PAGE Siloam Inscription 80 Soanes (Sir J.) Museum 54 Stater 82 Strabo 58 Susa (Shushan) 69 Tablets (Babylonian) 67 Tammuz 32 Taylor Cylinder 62 Tear Bottles 79 Tel-el-Amarna ...47, 68, 74 Temple Inscription 86 Thoth 53 Thotmes III 47 Ti Princess 85, 74 Tiberius Caesar 15, 84 Tiglath Pileser III. 26, 29 PAGE Titus 16, 84 Toilet Apparatus 61 Trajan 84 Tree (Sacred) 32 Tyre — Tablet from ... 75 Uah-ab-Ra 41, 42 Unknown God 20, 83 Vespasian 84, 16 Vulgates — Latin 85 Wall Paintings 48, 59 Wilkinson — Sir G 48 Writing Materials 59 Wycliffe's Bible 85 Xerxes 73 Zedekiah 42 Zimrida 75 Printed in Great Britain by The Maran-athallPress, 66-68 Union Street, London, S.E.l. P5 to iO I •-3 E-) o 9 University of Toronto Library DO NOT REMOVE THE CARD FROM THIS POCKET Acme Library Card Pocket Under Pat. "Re(. Index File" Made by LIBRARY BUREAU