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Archelaus
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Introductory Notice to Archelaus.
[1441] Geogr., book. ii. ch. 7.
[1442] Book xviii. 23, and xxv. 20, 21.
[1443] Hist. Misc., xxii. 20.
[1444] Church History, ii. p. 165, ed. Bohn.
[1445] De Mensur. et Pond., ch. 20.
[1446] Cateches., vi. p. 140.
[1447] Chronicon, lib. post., p. 177.
[1448] In ch. 24.
[1449] Catech., vi. p. m. 147.
[1450] As in the 12th, 25th, and 28th chapters.
[1451] [Compare Routh, Reliquiæ Sacræ, vol. v. pp. 4–206, and his everywhere learned notes.]
[1452] Church History, ii. pp. 165, 166, ed. Bohn. [Compare Robertson, vol. i. pp. 136–144.]
The Acts of the Disputation with the Heresiarch Manes.
[1453] Of Archelaus, bishop of Caschar in Mesopotamia.
[1454] Treasury.
[1455] In Epiphanius, Hæres., lxvi. 10, it is Marsipus.
[1456] Pietatis pretia.
[1457] Nec numero aliquo nec discretione ulla distinguit. For distinguit, some propose distribuit.
[1458] Reading commonentur, as in the text. Commoventur is also suggested, ="were deeply moved.”
[1459] On the attitude of the Christians of the primitive Church towards warfare, see Tertullian’s De Corona Militis, ch. 11, and the twelfth canon of the Nicene Council.
[1460] [The similar institution of the Rogation fasts in the West is referred to the fifth century. Pellicia, p. 372; Hooker, book v. cap. xli. 2.]
[1461] Reading cervicibus degravatis et laxis, demisso capite, frontem genibus elidit. The text gives demerso.
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