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Memoirs of Edessa and Other Ancient Syriac Documents
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[3179] Those who officiated at a “quæstio,” or examination by torture.—Tr. The Latin “quæstionarii.”
[3180] i.e., Heb. אֱלוּלּ from the new moon of September to that of October. [See p. 666, supra.]
[3181] Lit. “to be a plea.”—Tr.
[3182] Or “thou art not the avenger of.”—Tr.
[3183] Lit. “candles of fire.”—Tr.
[3184] The passage from this place to “in the eyes,” below, is lost in A., and supplied from B.
[3185] Or “dealer in fables,” if the word employed here, which is a foreign one, be the Latin “fabularius,” which is not certain.
[3187] So Cureton. Dr. Payne Smith remarks: “Cureton’s ‘chest’ is a guess from ***. The only sense of *** with which I am acquainted is cadus, a cask.” The word occurs again in the Martyrdom of Habib. In both places it seems to refer to some contrivance for holding fast the person to be scourged. The root appears to be ***, custodivit, retinuit (Castel).—Tr.
[3188] The martyr Minias, about a.d. 240, had the same torture inflicted on him: “ligneis verubus præcutis sub ungues ejus infixis, omnes digitos ejus præcepit pertundi.” See Surius, Sanctt. Vit.
Not “the same,” perhaps.—Tr.
[3189] Or “bitterly.”—Tr.
[3190] Here a few lines have been torn out of A., and are supplied from B.
[3191] “Which” is not in the printed text.—Tr.
[3192] The word used looks like a corruption of the Latin craticula. Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. v. 1, uses the Gk. word for this (τήγανον) in describing the martyrdom of Attalus, who “was set in the τήγανον, and scorched all over, till the savour of his burnt flesh ascended from his body.”
[3193] [St. Paul’s Stigmata. Gal. vi. 17; Phil. iii. 11.]
[3194] Or “bitter.”—Tr.
[3195] Or “beam.”—Tr.
[3197] Lit. “of confessorship.”—Tr.
[3198] Lit. “of confessorship.”—Tr.
[3199] The Latin “velum,” or rather its plur. “vela.”
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