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Lactantius
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Introductory Notice To Lactantius.
[1948] Credib., part ii. vol. vii. p. 94.
[1949] The Père Lestocq, tom. ii. pp. 46–60.
[1950] This word is italicized by Gibbon.
[1951] Vol. ii. cap. 20.
[1952] Inst., i. 1 and vii. 27.
[1953] Vol. ii. cap. 20.
[1954] Now (1880) a thousand years old.
[1955] Diarium Italicum, p. 409.
[1956] “Except Isæus,” says Gibbon, who refers to the edition of our author by Dufresnoy, tom. i. p. 596.
Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died.
[1958] [Not “the persecutors,” but only some of them. This treatise is, in fact, a most precious relic of antiquity, and a striking narrative of the events which led to the “conversion of the Empire,” so called. Its historical character is noted by Gibbon, D. and F., vol. ii. 20, n. 40.]
[1959] [See cap. 16, infra.]
[1960] [Let any one who visits Rome stand before the Arch of Constantine, and, while he looks upon it (as the mark of an epoch), let him at the same time behold the Colosseum close at hand, and there let him recall this noble chapter.]
[1961] 23d of March.
[1962] [Elucidation, p. 322.]
[1963] [St. Peter, as a Jew, could be thus dealt with; St. Paul, as a Roman, was beheaded. See p. 120, note 7, supra.]
[1964] [Note the incredulity of Lactantius. But see vol. iv. p. 219.]
[1965] [See especially vol. iv. p. 141 for the intermediary pauses of persecutions, while yet in many places Christians “died daily.”]
[1966] [Most noteworthy in corroboration of the earlier Fathers.]
[1967] [Jer. xxii. 19 and xxxvi. 30.]
[1968] [See p. 12, note 1, supra.]
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