[1124] Usener, Götternamen p. 122 ff.; L. R. Farnell, "The Place of the 'Sonder-Götter' in Greek Polytheism" (in Anthropological Essays presented to E. B. Tylor).
[1125] Farnell, op. cit.; cf. T. R. Glover, Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire, p. 12.
[1126] Roscher, Lexikon, s.v.
[1127] Augustine, De Civitate Dei, vii, 22; cf. bks. vi, vii, passim.
[1128] Cf. Wissowa, Religion der Römer, pp. 15, 145 ff.
[1129] Judg. viii, 33.
[1130] The name occurs only once, in 2 Kings, i, 2. It is incorrectly adopted in the English Version of the New Testament.
[1131] Found only in the Synoptic Gospels, Mk. iii, 22; Matt. x, 25; xii, 24, 27; Luke xi, 15, 18, 19.
[1132] Isa. lxiii, 15.
[1133] On these Semitic titles see articles "Baal" and "Baalzebub" in Hastings, Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics; article "Beelzebul" in Cheyne, Encyclopædia Biblica; various articles in Brown, Driver, Briggs, Hebrew and English Lexicons.