38
Rabboth, fol. 20 b.
39
Eisenmenger, i. 830.
40
Weil, pp. 17, 18.
41
Tabari, i. c. xxvi.
42
Talmud, Tract. Berachoth, f. 61; Bartolocci Bibl. Rabbin., iv. p. 66.
43
Bartolocci, Bibl. Rabbin., iv. p. 67.
44
Bartolocci, Bibl. Rabbin., iii. p. 395.
45
Ibid., p. 396; Eisenmenger, t. i. p. 365.
46
Bhagavat, iii. 12, 51.
47
Colebrooke Miscell. Essays, p. i. 64.
48
Bundehesch, p. 377.
49
Bartolocci, Bibl. Rabbin., iv. p. 463.
50
Mendez Pinto, Voyages, ii. p. 178.
51
Bhagavat, iii. 12, 25.
52
Ibid., iv. 15, 27.
53
Ovid, Metamorph., x. 7.
54
Hesiod, Works and Days, 61-79.
55
Gen. i. 27.
56
Ibid., ii. 18.
57
Ibid., 23.
58
Abraham Ecchellensis, Hist. Arabum, p. 268.
59
Talmud, Tract. Bava Bathra.
60
S. Epiphan. Hæres., xxvi.
61
Tho. Bangius, Cœlum Orientis, p. 103.
62
S. Clementi Recog., c. iv.
63
Lafitau, Mœurs des Sauvages Amériquaines, i. p. 93.
64
Pallas, Reise, i. p. 334.
65
Hodgson, Buddhism, p. 63.
66
Upham, Sacred Books of Ceylon, iii. 156.
67
Mémoires Chinois, i. p. 107.
68
Bundehesch in Windischmann: Zoroastrische Studien. Berlin, 1863, p. 82; and tr. A. du Perron, ii. pp. 77-80.
69
So also Abulfeda, Hist. Ante-Islamica, p. 13.
70
Weil, pp. 19-28.
71
Tabari, i. p. 80.
72
Diod. Sicul., 14 et seq.
73
Ausland für Nov. 4, 1847.
74
W. Smith, Nouveau Voyage de Guinée. Paris, 1751, ii. p. 176.
75
Bowdler, Mission from Cape Coast to Ashantee. London, 1819, p. 344.
76
Cranz, Historie von Grönland. Leipzig, 1770, i. p. 262.
77
Humboldt, Pittoreske Ansichten d. Cordilleren; Plate xiii. and explanation, ii. pp. 41, 42.
78
De la Borde, Reise zu den Caraiben. Nürnb. 1782, i. pp. 380-5.
79
Allg. Hist. der Reisen, xviii. p. 395.
80
Eisenmenger, i. pp. 827-9.
81
Weil, p. 28.
82
Basnage, Histoire des Juifs. La Haye, iii. p. 391.
83
Tract. Avod., f. 1. col. 3; also Tract. Pesachim, f. 118, col. 1.
84
Eisenmenger, i. pp. 376, 377.
85
Eisenmenger, i. pp. 377-80.
86
Talmud, Avoda Sara, fol. 8 a, and in Levy, Parabeln, p. 300.
87
It is a popular superstition among the lower orders in England that a woman who dies in childbirth, even if she be unmarried, cannot be lost.
88
Weil, pp. 29-38.
89
Dillman, Das Adambuch des Morgenlandes; Göttingen, 1853. This book is not to be confounded with the Testament of Adam.
90
Tabari, i., capp. xxviii. xxix.
91
In More Nevochim, quoted by Fabricius, i. p. 5.
92
Gen. v. i.
93
Fabricius, i. p. 11.
94
Adv. Hæresi, c. 5.
95
Eusebius Nierembergius, De Origine S. Scripturæ. Lugd., 1641.
96
Fabricius, i. p. 33.
97
Ferdinand de Troilo, Orientale Itinerario. Dresd., 1667, p. 323.
98
Selden, De Synedriis, ii. p. 452.
99
Hottinger, Historia Orientalis, lib. i. c. 8.
100
Jacobus Vitriacus, Hist. Hierosol., c. lxxxv.
101
As King Charles’s Oak may be seen in the fern-root.
102
Fabricius, i. p. 84.
103
Neue Ierosolymitanische Pilgerfahrt. Würtzburg, 1667, p. 47.
104
Stephanus Le Moyne, Notæ ad Varia Sacra, p. 863.
105
Abulfeda, p. 15. In the Apocryphal book, The Combat of Adam (Dillman, Das Christliche Adambuch des Morgenlandes; Göttingen, 1853), the same reason for hostility is given. In that account, Satan appears to Cain and prompts him to every act of wickedness.
106
Tabari, i. c. xxx.
107
Jalkut, fol. 11 a.
108
Yaschar, p. 1089.
109
Targums, ed. Etheridge, London, 1862, i. p. 172.
110
Eisenmenger, i. p. 320.
111
Liber Zenorena, quoted by Fabricius, i. p. 108.
112
S. Methodius, jun., Revelationes, c. 3.
113
Eutychius, Patriarcha Alex., Annales.
114
Pirke R. Eliezer, c. xxi.
115
Historia Dynastiarum, ed. Pocock; Oxon. 1663, p. 4.
116
Ad Antiochum, quæst. 56.
117
Fabricius, i. p. 112.
118
Eisenmenger, i. p. 462.
119
Targum, i. p. 173.
120
Jalkut Cadasch, fol. 6, col. i.
121
Pirke R. Eliezer, c. xxi.
122
Ibid.
123
Ibid.
124
Eisenmenger, ii. p. 8.
125
Ibid., p. 428.
126
Ibid., p. 455.
127
Tract. Avoda Sara.