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A05059 A briefe description of Hierusalem and of the suburbs therof, as it florished in the time of Christ Whereto is annexed a short commentarie concerning those places which were made famous by the Passion of Christ, and by the actes of holye men, confirmed by certeine principall histories of antiquity. Verie profitable for Christians to read, for the understanding of the Sacred Scriptures and Iosephus his Historie. Hereunto also is appertaining a liuely and beawtifull mappe of Hierusalem, with arithmeticall directions, correspondent to the numbers of this booke. Translated out of Latin into English by Thomas Tymme minister.; Jerusalem sicut Christi tempore flourit. English Adrichem, Christiaan van, 1533-1585.; Tymme, Thomas, d. 1620. 1595 (1595) STC 152; ESTC S100442 70,773 138

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being expulsed hee reedified the same rounde fortified it with a castle dwelt therein and made it the Metropolitan cittie of the whole prouince of Iudaea and the heade of all the kingdome and from thence foorth called it Ierusalem as it were Iebussalem the letter b. to make the better sounde tourned into r. Notwithstanding there are some which write that it is called Ierusalem of the magnificent temple which Salomon builte therein as it were Hieron Salomonis For the Greekes call a temple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In continuance of time Salomon and other kings of Iudaea greatly enlarged the same and so fortified it with most strong gates towers walles and trenches and so adorned it with a temple with pallaces and with most exquisite buildings that among other citties it was a miracle of the whole world and is therefore more honoured with silence then with all that can be said concerning the same In this glory and excellency Ierusalem florished foure hundred seuenty and seuen yeares as if it had beene an earthly paradise being in compasse round about sixe miles and two hundred and fifty paces And by the wall and circuit of the cittie there was a stony trench or vaulte threescore foote deepe and in bredth two hundred and fiftie wherein was abiding about one hundreth and fiftie thousand men But when the wickednesse of the Princes and people not only had profaned the temple with the abhominations of Idols but also had filled the cittie euen to the full with innocent bloud most cruelly shed the cittie together with the temple Princes and people by the iust vengeance of God was by Nabuchodonoser kinge of Babilon but Gods whip so vtterly ouerthrowne and desolated threescore and ten yeares that Sion was plowed vp like a field and Ierusalem was become as a heape of stones and the mountaine of the temple as it were the height and top of woods so as in the meane time as Hierom witnesseth that neither so much as a bird nor a beast could flie or passe through the same Afterwards the temple only being with much a do and very hardly builded wanting gates towers and walles was inhabited againe by the Iewes retourning out of the captiuity of Babilon threescore yeares Moreouer within the space of two and fitie dayes Nehemia inclosed it in compas three miles and seuen hundred and fity paces with gates towers a strong wall and afterward the same being bewtified by the Machabees by Herod and by others very stately with publique and priuate buildings recouered the former dignity being very famous and populous by the space of fiue hundred and foure and twentie yeares hauing in it many narrow streetes by reason of the exceeding nomber of houses therein At what time there as in a Theater Iesus Christ wrought our saluation and from thence as from a center the apostles spred forth the Euangelicall doctrine throughout the world But Titus Emperour of Rome being brought by the iust iudgement of God to take vengeance for the Death of Christ the thirtie and eight yeare after his passion besieged it round casting a banke about it shut vppe the Iewes in the Cittie as in a prison which came out of euerie Tribe to cellebrate the feast of pasouer there Wherevpon that Cittie the woonder of the world was made a denne of theeues and a sepulcher of dead men For by reason of ciuill murders famine pestilence and sword there perished in the same eleuen hundred thousand Iewes And as for the Citty it selfe Titus did so vtterlie subuert it that men which came vnto it would scarse beleeue that euer it had beene inhabited Neuerthelesse hee left three principall Herodian Towers that is to say Hippic Mariam and Phasel which were more notable than the rest aswell for greatnesse as for beawtie and that part of the Citties wall which compassed them from the West vnshaken to the ende that both it might bee a Castell for the Romane souldiers which should be left there for a Garrison and also to shewe vnto posteritie what manner of Cittie how well fortified the force of the Romans had subdued But after threescore and fiue yeares the Iewes rebelling againe A Elius Adrianus the Emperour slue many thousands of them and vtterly subuerted those Towers with the remainder of the wall and commaunded the Cittie to bee strewed with salt whereby it came to passe according to the prophesie of Christ that there was not left one stone of the Cittie vpon a stone And building the Cittie againe in lesse compasse hee excluded mount Sion with the pallace of Salomon and that of the Queene and the house of the forrest of Libanus also the gate of the North corner and the tents of the Assyrians and all the north parte euen to the dounge gate and to the gate of Ephraim but the mount of Caluary and the sepulcher of the Lord which were aforetime without the walles hee inclosed with the North walles of the cittie and set the picture of a sow cut in Marble vpon the forefrunt of that gate by which men go to Bethleem thereby giuing to vnderstande that the Iewes subiect to that law of swines flesh were vnder the power of the Romaines whom by an Edict he forbad neuer more to enter into that cittie or looke into the same from the top of any higher place and from thenceforth commanded it to be called AEliam Capitoliam after his owne name But after this being inhabited of the Christians and dignified with a Patriarchall seate receiuing againe in continuance of time the name of Ierusalem florished fiue hundred yeares in Christian religion And in the yeare after the birth of Christ sixe hundred thirty and six it was taken by the Saracens which raigned in Egipt and so possessed foure hundred three score and three yeares After this in the yeare of Christ 1099 the cittie Ierusalem was recouered by the Christians hauing for their Captaine Godfrey of Bullion who was the firste that entred vpon the wall of the cittie with great courage and most fierce assalt the Ides of Iuly the very same day and houre wherein Christ died And so greate slaughter was made throughout al the streetes lanes and corners of the cittie that no man coulde passe but ouer the deade bodies of the slaine and so exceeding was the effusion of bloud that men went ouer their shooes in the bloud of the dead insomuch that the conquerers themselues were from the sole of the foote to the crowne of the heade imbrued with bloud Who when they enioyed the cittie putting off their armour and clensing themselues from their bloud visited the places of Christs passion resurrection and ascension which the faithful that dwelt in Ierusalem shewed vnto them and beheld them with reuerence The eight day after with one conssent they elected Duke Godfrey and
and the other AGRIPPAS 6. THE PARLOVR OF SION was scituate about the middest of mount Sion being large paued and verie faire wherein Christ in his last supper did eate the paschall Lambe with his disciples washed their feete and instituted the sacrament of his most blessed body and bloud In the fame on the day of his resurrection when he was entered the dores being shut standing in the middest of his disciples he shewed vnto them the wounds of his side of his hands and feete and did eate before them after that breathing vpon them he gaue them the holy ghost and therewithall power to remit and reteine the sinnes of all manner persons The eight day after this here he offered vnto Thomas the Apostle the prints and scarres of the speare and nailes to see and feele Here after the Lords ascension Matthias was by lot chosen into the Apostleship of Iudas the traitour Here on the day of Pentecost the holy Ghost came downe in a great sounde and in the forme of fierie toonges lighted vppon one hundred and twenty beleeuers and at the first sermon of Peter three thousand Iewes were conuerted and baptized In this place Iames the Lordes brother sirnamed Iust was by the Apostles created the first Bishop of Ierusalem and Stephen with six more were ordained Deacons Heere the Apostles entered into the first consultation or councell and set downe the twelue Articles of Christian faith 7. THE CYPRES trees of Mount Sion which were very excellent whereof the booke called Ecclesiasticus maketh mention 8. THE HOVSE OF Annas the chiefe priest the father in law of Caiaphas wherein Christ was examined of Annas concerning his Disciples and his doctrine at what time he aunswered that he had taught openly before all men for the which he receiued a blow on the cheek by a seruant 9. THE HOVSE OF THE WOORTHIES wherin the strong men and valiant peeres of king Dauid dwelt where also as in a wrestling place the cheefe wrestlers and champions for exercise sake vsed to try maisteries 10. THE HOVSE OF THE VIRGIN MARY wherin after the death of her sonne she dwelt with Iohn the Apostle 11. THE HOVSE OF VRIA one of the most valiant souldiors of Dauid whose wife Bethsabe bathing her selfe in a fountaine of her Garden which also is to be seene in the map by her beautie allured Dauid to adultery beholding her from a gallerie of y e kinges house 12. THE VPPER MARKET by reason whereof the vpper cittie also was called sometimes the vpper market 13. THE STAIRES OF THE CASTLE or prison whereon the Apostle Paule stood when hee made aunswer for himselfe 14. THE STAIRES OF SION by which men went vppe to the cittie of Dauid 15 THE KINGES GARDEN the which also was called the garden of Oza wherin Manasses and Amon kinges of Iuda were buried 16 MELLO a valley or dale very deepe and wide which lay betwene mount Sion and the lower citty and extended it selfe from the water gate to the fish gate Dauid builded and compassed mount Sion round about from this valley the concauity and bottome whereof Salomon did make leuell and plaine that it mighte bee a conuenient streete and from thence forth it was called the streete of the water gate He also bewtified the same with buildings which being decaied was repaired by Ezechias In this place it was that Ioas king of Iuda was slaine by his seruants in the way downe to Sela. But in Iosephus time this valley was called Tyropoeon and was very large and full of dwelling houses At this day this valley is so filled vp with earth and stones that there remaineth only a small shew of the former concauity depenes 17 THE PALLACE OF CAIPHAS belonging to euery high prieste large and square wherein somtime dwelled Eliasib the cheef priest In this pallace the princes of the people being gathered together consulted among themselues what pollicy they might vse to catch Iesus and to kill him to whome he was there soulde by Iudas for thirty peeces of siluer Afterwards also he was thrise denyed by Peter and was by false witnesses of the Iewes accused before Caiphas in the counsell of the priestes and elders to whom when hee answered nothing beeing straightly charged by the high priest to tell whether hee were Christ the sonne of God the which when he confessed hee was conuinced as it were of blasphemy the cheefe priest calling for the sentence of the counsell threescore and six elders condemned him to be worthy of death and aunswering said He is worthy to die Wherevpon the seruants and souldiors did presently spit in his face they blinde-folded him buffeted him with their fistes commaunding him to prophesie scorned him all the night with sundry mockes and vexed him with many blasphemies and that I may speake much in few words no mortall man in this life is able to expresse what and how much hee endured this night And in the morning following the rulers of the Iewes assembled together in this place againe to deliuer him vp to death and leading him bounde they deliuered him to Pilate the deputie 18. THE FOVNTAINE OF SION the which was made with great labour and cost 19. THE BRIDGE OF SION by which men went through the valley out of the vpper cittie vnto the Temple 20. THE GATES OF SION which the Lord loueth more than all the Tabernacles of Iacob 21. THE VPPER GATE by which Ioas when he was crowned king of Iuda in the Temple and guarded with the princes of the Iewes was led into the pallace of the kings of Iuda 22. THE SEPVLCHER OF DAVID together with the field wherin the kings were buried the which verie stately was placed aloft in the citty of Dauid wherein Dauid himselfe Salomon and other kings of Iuda also Ioyada the chiefe priest were buried Into this monument of Dauids sepulture Salomon brought great treasure at his burial The which Hircanus y e high priest captain opening brought from thence 3000. talents of siluer Not long after this Herod the Ascalonit king of Iewes went about also to bring much treasure out from thence but a flame of fire breaking forth and consuming two of his souldiors he left off his enterprise and to make satisfaction for himselfe hee adorned the same monument with faire shining Marble which continued there a long time after Where y e Saracens afterwarde builded a church for themselues which standeth as yet which place they greatly reuerence and suffer not any christiā to enter into y e same 23. THE SEPVLCHER OF STEPHEN the first Martyr of Nichodemus and of Gamaliel Paules schoolemaister 24. THE TABERNACLE OF SION couered with skinnes which king Dauid made and placed the same in the little hil of Mount Sion
PRINCE OF THE PHARISEIES in the which Christ touched the man sicke of the dropsie and healed him 42. THE HOVSE OF THE FORREST OF LYBANVS in length one hundred cubits in breadth fiftie and in heigth thirtie cubits the which Salomon builded most braue and glorious of polished marble of Cedar trees garnished with siluer and gold hauing a flat roofe with walkes and galleries according to the fashion of Palestine and within liuely counterfeits of sundry trees and plants most artificially made that the leaues thereof seemed in some sort to shake And neere vnto the same hee planted a groue and a greene arbor made of all manner of trees and watered with fountaines also hee made parkes and fishe pooles wherein it is like were all manner of wilde beastes birds and fishes This house was a storehouse of meate an armorie for weapons of warre a house wherein ointments paintings and sweete perfumes were laied vppe and preserued Beside these two hundred shields of golde for horssemen and three hundred large targets of golde for footemen which Salomon made were in this house by him laide vppe Al other vessels also of this house were of gold To this house the king and his peeres came when the weightie affaires of the Common wealth were ended and recreated their mindes with banquets with plaies and with pleasant walkes 43 THE HOVSE OF SIMON THE PHARISIE which is at this day to bee seene wherein Christ sitting at the Table forgaue vnto Mary Magdalen the sinfull woman bewailing her sinnes and washing his feet with her teares wiping them with her haire kissing them annointing him and much louing him many sinnes 44 THE HOVSE OF THE COMMON PEOPTE wherein they exercised themselues with dartinges other exercises of the arme and with feastes with plaies and walkes refreshed their mindes 45 THE GREAT MARKET which was in the midst of the cittie and neere adioyning to the Castle Antonia wherein Alexander the king of the Iewes and the chiefe priest crucified eight hundred Iewes killing also the Wiues in the presence of their husbands and the children in the sight of their mothers the which spectacle himselfe with his Concubines beheld at what time they were banqueting in the castle Antonia For the which crueltie he was sirnamed Crucida In the same market place Herod the greater fought a great battell with the Parthians which went about to bring againe Antigonus into the kingdom Furthermore when the famine through the Romane siege was exceeding great in Ierusalem in such wife that it consumed whole families and replenished the toppes of houses with fainting women and children and the waies with the dead carcases of olde men in which extremitie they did eate leather their girdles their shooes hay and mothers their owne children then a man might haue seene lusty yoong men which afore time were most flourishing passe through this market place like shadowes of dead men And when those which remained aliue were not able to burie the dead by reason of theyr exceeding multitude and could not endure the stinke of the bodies vnburied they cast them ouer the wall into the vallies of the cittie The which when Titus sawe as hee went about the wals full of dead bodies much putrified he fetcht a great sigh and houlding vppe his handes to GOD protested that it was not his deed for the obstinate Iewes refused peace to them often times offered 46. THE MARKET OF WARES the which was in the vpper part of the lower cittie in the which fish and sundry other things were folde In this market S. Iames the greater the brother of Iohn suffered his martyrdome by the tyranny of Herod Agrippa 47. THE VPHOLSTERS MARKET wherein all maner of olde garments that had beene worne aforetime of others were to be sold 48. THE SCHOLE OF GENTILLITIE which Iesus the false high priest of the Iewes who after the manner of the Gentiles would be called Iason and other Iewes apostatas by the permission of Antiochus Epiphan set vp euen vnder his castle oueragainst the temple wherein the people were taught the lawes and fashions of the Gentils the youth instructed in the studies and disputations of the Greeke philosophers Where they being naked and annoynted with oile exercised themselues in feates of actiuity in martiall actions and in enterludes Furthermore in the same place the sayde Apostatas set vp EBHEBIAM that is to say a Stewes of faire young boyes wherein they committed most filthie thinges against nature By reason thereof many fell from the lawe of God to the manners and abhominations of the Gentiles being as it were sould to commit monstrous wickednes insomuch that some of the priests forsaking the temple and worship of God gaue themselues to the exercise of feats of actiuity here hence also there sprang vp among the Iewes diuers sects namely the Pharisies the Saduceis the Esseies c. 49 THE HOVSES OF THE PRIESTES and of the Leuites whose houses were shut vp by the outward parte of the wall but from the former parte they had a prospect toward the temple 50 THE HABITATION OF THE TARGET BEARERS was builded before the west gate of the temple where first the Iewes then the Romaine soldiors vpon the solemne feast days had the stations for the guarde of the temple 51 THE LYSTES OR TYLT which was placed oueragainst the South parte of the Temple wherein horsses by running agillitie and swiftnesse were exercised And the wrastlers and champions did contend before the people who should rnnne swiftest on foot with chariots diuersly drawne who shoulde breake most speares and in other masteries and feares of valiencie Where Herod the kinge for the honour of Augustus Caesar ordeined the game and prise of fiue yeares continuance appointing vnto the victors greate rewards the same Herod when he should die called all the more noble sorte of the Iewes of al places within his dominion by an Edict threatning death to such as should not obey and caused them to be shut vp in the Lystes to the ende that after his death they all being there slaine euery house might haue cause to waile euen in despight of all Iudaea 52. THE MOVNTAINE MORIA the which in another place is called the lande of vision and the mountaine of the temple and the mountaine of the daughter of Sion lying neere vnto the easte wall of the cittie being very high stoany and very steepe rounde about In this mountaine Abraham being ready to offer vp his sonne Isaac in steede of him offered vp a Ramme which was taken by the hornes in a thicket This was the very same mountaine which Dauid bought of Streuna or Ornan the Iebusite for six hundred sicles of goulde and erecting an alter in his threshing flower he offered a burnt offering vnto the Lorde which the fire from heauen consumed Afterward in the same mountaine Salomon builded vnto
old 62 Fountaine in the temple 82 Fountaine 128 221 Fountaine dragon 184 Fountaine of Silo 199 Fountaine Gihon the lower 230 Fountaine Gihon the higher 231 Frutefull wood 265 Fullers field 115 Figge tree withered 183 G The Garden belonging to the king 15 and 188 Gardens inclosed 260 Garden on mount Oliuet 187 Garments of Christ parted by lot 252 Gates of Sion 20 Gate called the vpper gate 21 Gate of Warders 64 Gate called the horsse gate 65 Gate belonging to the Essenes 66 Gate the first 67 Gate called the new gate 93 Gate called the middle gate 137 Gate called holy gate 94 North Gate 104 Gate South 105 Gate in the West 106 Gate of the corner 154 Goulden Gate 155 Gate of Ephraim 156 Gate called the water gate 157 Gate Genath 158 Gate of the kings garden 159 Gate of the high priests pallace 160 Gate called the fish gate 161 Gate called the dung gate 162 Gate of womens towers 163 Gate called the Valley gate 164 Gate called the old gate 165 Groue of Moloch 189 H The House of Annas 8 House of the Worthies 9 House of the Virgin Mary 10 House of Vria 11 House of Ananias 36 House of S. Anne 37 House of the rich glutton 38 House of Mesa 39 Houses of the Nathinaeans 40 House of the prince of Phariseis 41 House of the forrest of Lybanus 42 House of Simon the pharisei 43 House of the common people 44 Houses of the priests 49 Houses of the target bearers 50 House of counsel 90 House of Mary the mother of Iohn 126 House of Olda the prophetesse 127 House of Elias 219 Hill Garee 258 Hole where the crosse stood 250 Hill which is little 182 Herods parke 143 Hospital 144 Holy place 79 Holy of holyest 75 I The ILe of the Iewes 86 Ile of the Gentiles 100 Isaias martyred 223 Iudas hanged on a tree 232 L The Lystes or tyltyard 51 Lauer of brasse 89 Lofts of the singers 97 Lake 131 Lake Amigdalon 125 Lake of Serpents 266 M The MArketplace 12 45 46 47 69 129 Mary and Iohn beholde Christ as he passeth by with his cros 122 Mello 16 Moloch his Groue 189 Mount Sion 3 Mount Moria 52 Mountaine Bezetha 147 Mount of offence 190 192 Mount oliuet 191 Mountaine Eroge 220 Mount of Caluary 233 Mount Gihon 234 Mountaine in the north part 262 Monument of Alexander 133 Monument of Iohn 134 Monument of the Fuller 193 Monument of Absolom 225 Monument of Anani 235 Monument of Herod 263 N The NOrth mountayne 262 North gate 104 New Citty 146 O The Ophel 54 Oliuet 191 P PArlour of Sion 6 Parlour in the corner 33 Pallace of Caiphas 17 Pallace of the Machabees 55 Pallace of Pilate 56 Pallace of the Queene 57 Pallace of Solomon 58 Pallace of Queene Bernice 70 Pallace of Grapte 71 Pallace of Helen 72 Pallace of Herod 136 Pallace of Monobaz 73 Passage of the temple from Salomōs pallace 113 Palme trees 194 Peare trees 236 Place of zacharias death being slain 98 Place where the Iewes woulde haue stoned Christ 99 Place where the woman taken in adultery was absolued 109 Places of Christs fall 121 Place where the three Apostles sate while Christ prayed 208 Place where the 8. Apost tarried 209 Place where Iudas betrayed Christ with a kisse 210 Place where Christ preached of the destruction of Hierusalem 211 Place where Mary with others stood at Christ his death 251 Porch of pillars 68 Porch of the temple 95 Prison called the kings prison 4 Prison common belonging to the citty 32 Poole called Probatica 61 Priest called the high priest 84 Propitiatory or mercy seat 78 R The REchabites habitation 130 Rock of the West Wall 166 Riuer of the vpper fountaine 226 S The SApha 264 Sion 3.26 27 Sepulcher of Dauid 22 Sepulcher of Stephen 23 Sepulcher of Christ 237 Sepulcher of Helen 261 Sepulcher of the virgin Mary 197 Of zacharias 227 Stayres of the castell 13 Stayres of Sion 14 Schoole of Gentility 48 Sea of brasse 92 Seate appertayning to the king 96 Singers seats aloft 97 Solomons throne 112 Simō of Cyren beareth the cros 132 Second citty 124 Stephen stoned 200 T The TAbernacle of Sion 24 Temple of the Lord 74 Table of Gold 83 Tents of the Assyrians 218 Tents of Herod 229 Tents of the Chaldeans 256 Tents of the Romanes 257 Theater 111 Throne of Salomon 112 Tribunal seat 114 Towers of the trumpetters 108 Tower Strato 115 Tovver in the middle 132 Tovver Hippic 140 Tovver Mariamme 141 Tovver Phaselus 142 Tovver Ananael 167 Tovver in the corner 168 Tovver of Dauid 169 Tovver called the high tower 170 Tovver called the Lanterne 171 Tovver called the great tower 172 Tovver Meah 173 Tower Psephina 174 Tovver of Siloe 175 Treasory 102 V The VAlley called the deep valley 176 Valley of Iosaphat 202 Valley of Siloe 203 Valley of dead carcases 240 Valley of the riuer Gihon 241 Valley of Cedron 116 Valley of Raphaim 242 Vaulted caue 34 Vaile of the temple rent 85 Village nere to Ierusalem 268 Vria his house 11 W The Wine presse belonging to the K 25 Wals first 53 second 135 the thirde 149 Way of the crosse 117 Way of entrance for the horses 118 water issuing forth of the temple 177 Way of the Fullers field 104 Way of the captiuity 205 Way to Anathot 206 Way to Iericho 207 Way to Siloe 244 and to Bethlehem 243 Way to Samaria and Galile 267 Well 181 Whipping of the buyers and sellers 110 A Wood 138 Z Zacharias place where he was slayne betweene the temple the Altar 98. Hier. to 1. Epist 28. ad Lucinium Cant. 3. Lament of Ieremy 3. Exod. 25. Heb. 8. Ambrose in Luc. ca. 23. Iohn 19. Luk. 23 Hier. to 1. Epist 13. ad Paulinum Mar. 15. Chrisost in Mat. ca. 27. Heb. 6. 10. Exod. 15. August in lib de virgi nitate The originall places frō whēce this commentary is taken and where more is to be red Psalme 47. and 86. Math. 4. 5. Psalm 73. Ezech. 5. Ioseph lib. 3 de bello Iudaico cap 2. Deu. 16. 17 Psal 47. Tren 2. Gen. 14. Ios l. 7 an Iud. cap. 7. l. 7. Bell. Iud. ca. 18. Gen. 10. Iosua 10. 15. 18. Iudg. 1 19. 2. kings 5. 1. Cron. 11. Ios l. 7. an cap. 3. Hier. to 3. de loc Heb. lit 1. Eus Euāg praep li. 9. 3. Reg 3. 5. 6. 9 10. 7. Iosep lib. 8. Ant. cap 2 5. Ios con Api on lib 1. Strabo geograph li. 16. 4 Reg 16. 21. 24. 25. 2. Cron 28. 33. 36. Mich. 3. Ierem 25. 26. 29. Hier. tom 3 trad Heb. in 2 par 15 1. Edr. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Neem 1. 2. 3 4 5 6 7. 1 Mach. 12. 13 14. Ios 6. be 6. Ios be 13. ce Psal 37. Isai 2. Mich. 4. Acts. 1. Mar. 16. Psal 18. Ios 6. bel 13 and 7. be 14. 17. and 18. Luk. 19 Eu. in Cronic et hist Eccle. lib. 4. cap. 6.