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Book 6 Minor Writers
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Translator’s Biographical Notice.
[1337] Erga illum providentiam.
[1338] The manuscript gives ordinando adnuntias, for which is proposed ordinandi. Adnuntiamus.
[1339] Reading studeas for studetur.
The Conclusion of the Epistle of the Bishops.
[1340] Cupiditatem.
[1341] Ut cogniscatur concupiscentia Meletii.
[1342] The text is—Commendans ei occasionem Meletius, separavit eos, &c.; on which see especially Neander, iii. p. 311 (Bohn).
[1343] This epistle is given elsewhere. [This volume, infra.]
Translator’s Biographical Notice.
[1344] [Another glorious product of the school of Alexandria.]
[1345] Απολ. χοντρ. Ρυφ., βοοκ ι. νυμ. 9, Ωορκσ, ιι. π. 465.
[1346] Proprii operis nihil omnino scripsit, exceptis epistolis quas ad amicos forte mittebat; in tantum se humiltate dejecerat.
[1347] Bibl. Cod., cxviii. p. 295.
[1348] Ibid., vi. 32.
[1349] Ibid., vii. 32.
[1350] Ibid., viii. 13.
[1351] [Evidently he impressed Eusebius as an extraordinary man in an age of colossal minds, and we must lament the loss of his writings.]
An Exposition of the Chapters of the Acts of the Apostles.
[1352] This ἔκθεσιςwas edited under the name of Euthalius, Bishop of Sulce, towards the end of the preceding century, by Laurentius Zacagnius, in the collection of Monumenta Vetera, p. 428, published at Rome. Fabricius also compared the edition of Montfaucon with the Roman. This collation is added here.—Migne.
[1353] The text is νέοι χρόνῳ τε καὶ μαθημάτων, ἑκάστου, &c.; for which Euthal., χρόνων τε καὶ μαθημάτων παρ᾽ ὑμῶν ἑκάστου.
[1354] συμπεριφορὰν κομιζόμενοι.
[1355] But Euthal., διὰ μὲν τοῦ μέλανος…διὰ δὲ τοῦ κινναβάρεως, i.e., by the different colours of black and vermilion.
[1356] These marks are wholly wanting in the Coislin Codex, from which Montfaucon edited the piece. But they are found in the Vatican Codex.—Tr.
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