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Apologetic
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[66] Epist. ad Eustochium de Custodia Virginitatis, p. 37, tom. iv. Opp. ed. Bened.; adv. Jovin. i. p. 157, tom. iv. Opp. ed. Bened.
[67] In the Catal. Scrippt. Eccles.
[68] “Mendacem” is his word. I know not whether he intends to charge Pamelius with wilful fraud.
[69] Doctor of the Sorbonne, said by Bossuet to have proved himself “a semi-Pelagian and Jansenist!” born in 1603, in Normandy, died in 1678.
[70] Jer. de Vir. Illust. c. 74.
[71] B. 470, d. 560.
[72] He must not be confounded with the still more famous John Albert Fabricius of the next century, referred to in p. xv. above.
[73] Whole of these metrical fragments.
[74] Lardner, Credibility, vol. iii. p. 169, under “Victorinus of Pettaw,” ed. Kippis, Lond. 1838.
[75] See Lardner, as above.
[76] See Migne, who prefixes this judgment of Rig. to the de Judicio Domini.
[77] [Great diversity exists among the critics as to the date of this Apology; see Kaye, pp. xvi. 48, 65. Mosheim says, a.d. 198, Kaye a.d. 204.]
[78] Elucidation II.
[79] [For chronological dates in our author’s age, see Elucidation III. Tertullian places an interval of 115 years, 6 months, and 15 days between Tiberius and Antoninus Pius. See Answer to the Jews, cap. vii. infra.]
[80] Another reading is “ut Deo,” as God.
[81] [A reference in which Kaye sees no reason to doubt that the Apology was written during the reign under the emperor. See Kaye’s Tertullian, p. 49.]
[82] [Elucidation IV.]
[83] As = 2-1/8 farthings. Sestertium = £7, 16s. 3d.
[84] Slaves still bearing the marks of the scourge.
[85] Anubis.
[86] Fabulous monsters.
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