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Archelaus
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Introductory Notice to Archelaus.
[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.
[1462] At this point begins the portion of the work edited by Valesius from the Codex Bobiensis, which is preserved now in the Ambrosian Library.
[1463] The Codex Bobiensis reads Adda Turbonem. This Adda, or Addas, as the Greek gives it below in ch. xi., was one of those disciples of Manes whom he charged with the dissemination of his heretical opinions in the East, as we see from ch. xi.
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