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Hippolytus
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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.
[2018] [Here follows the text, Rev. 2.10, transposed above.]
Hippolytus on the Twelve Apostles:
[2019] Or Albanum.
[2020] [The general tradition is, that he was flayed alive, and then crucified.]
[2021] [See Scrivener, Introduction, p. 282, note 1, and Lardner, Credib., ii. 494, etc.]
[2022] Μάργοις. Combefisius proposes Μάρδοις. Jerome has “Magis.”
[2023] The text is ἐλακήδη ἐλογχιάσθη, ἐλακήδη being probably for ἐλάτῃ.
[2024] Καλαμήνῃ. Steph. le Moyne reads Καραμήνῃ.
[2025] Αἰδεσινοῖς.
[2026] ὁ Κανανίτης.
The same Hippolytus on the Seventy Apostles.
[2027] In the Codex Baroccian. 206. This is found also, along with the former piece, On the Twelve Apostles, in two codices of the Coislinian or Seguierian Library, as Montfaucon states in his recension of the Greek manuscripts of that library. He mentions also a third codex of Hippolytus, On the Twelve Apostles. [Probably spurious, but yet antique.]
[2028] ἀδελφόθεος.
[2029] ἐξελθών.
[2030] The text is, οὖτοι οἱ Β᾽ τῶν ό τυγχανόντων διασκορπισθέντων. It may be meant for, “these two of the seventy were scattered,” etc.
[2032] εὐαγγελίζεσθαι, perhaps = write of that Gospel, as the Latin version puts it. [But St. Mark’s body is said to be in Venice.]
[2033] Magus.
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