FOOTNOTES
[1] Hiram I. reigned from 980 to 947 B.C.
[2] Sidon, or Zidon, in the Phœnician tongue means "fishery."
[3] Bostra, or Bozrah; hence Byrsa, the citadel.
[4] Carthage, or Kart-Khadecht, the new city.
[5] Tarshish, the Tartessus of the Greeks, Spain.
[6] Suffect, or choupheth (plural chophettim), the Hebrew and Phœnician magistrates preceding the monarchy.
[7] The silver shekel was the standard money of the Phœnicians, and was worth about 2s. It was a tenth part of a shekel of gold.
[8] Astarte. The Aphrodite of the Greeks; the goddess of navigation, and the national deity of the Sidonians.
[9] The stars in the constellation of Ursa Major were also tutelary deities of navigation; the pole-star by the Greeks being called "the Phœnician."
[10] Gaoul, a round ship, employed in merchant service.
[11] Kitonet, a short tunic, worn by Phœnician sailors.
[12] Baal Moloch, the sun god.
[13] Nergal, the Chaldean god of fire and war, always represented with a cock's head.
[14] Zeraas, small copper coin.
[15] For details of the construction of these galleys, [see notes] at the end of the Volume.
[16] The common cubit is about 16 inches.
[17] Nisan; part of March and April.
[18] Chittim, the classical Citium, a Phœnician colony in Cyprus.
[19] Nectar; the sweet and perfumed wine of the Phœnicians, said by the Greeks to be the drink of the gods.
[20] Senir, in Libanus, now Djebel Sannin.
[21] The Grecian Tamith; according to the Phœnician legend, she was the inventor of sails.
[22] The Mediterranean.
[23] Baaltis, feminine of Baal, lord.
[24] Melek was the title of the Kings of Judah, as Pharaoh was that of the Kings of Egypt.
[25] [See note on Chap. II.] at end of Volume.
[26] Jam Souph, the Red Sea.
[27] I am guilty of an anachronism here for the mere satisfaction of introducing the name of the great historian.
[28] Now Ras-el-Abiad.
[29] That is, 32½ geographical miles, the rate given by Herodotus.
[30] The Minos, Eacus, and Rhadamanthus of the Greeks.
[31] The god of subterranean fire and of the hammer. Compare Phtah with the Hephaistos of the Greeks.
[32] Italia, from ἰταλός, vitulus.
[33] South of the Adriatic.
[34] The description of Utica is from M. Daux's admirable book, 'Fouilles executées dans le Zeugis et Byzacium.'
[35] Karth, the town; later Cirtha, the actual Constantine.
[36] The Canaries.
[37] Now Cape Palos.
[38] The ancient name of ferrets.
[39] The Guadalquivir.
[40] The Hittites of the Bible. Kheta was the general name given by the Egyptians to the Semitic tribes.
[41] B.C. 1070.
[42] The Scilly Islands, the Cassiterides, or Tin islands of the ancients.
Transcriber's note
- Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.
- Original spelling was kept.
- Variant spellings were made consistent when a predominant usage was found.
- Blank pages have been skipped.
- Illustrations have been slightly moved so that they do not break up paragraphs while remaining close to the text they illustrate.
- Illustration captions have been harmonized and made consistent so that the same expressions appear in the text and in the List of Full Page Illustrations.