69 ([return])
[ As at Sidon in the pier wall, and at Aradus in the remains of the great wall of the town.]
610 ([return])
[ M. Renan has found reason to question the truth of this view. Bevelling, he thinks, may have begun with the Phoenicians; but it became a general feature of Palestinian and Syrian architecture, being employed in Syria as late as the middle ages. The enclosure of the mosque at Hebron and the great wall of Baalbek are bevelled, but are scarcely Phoenician.]
611 ([return])
[ See Renan, Mission de Phénicie, Planches, pl. vi.]
612 ([return])
[ Compare the enclosure of the Haram at Jerusalem, the mosque at Hebron, and the temples at Baalbek (Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de l’Art, iii. 105, No. 42; iv. 274, No. 139, and p. 186, No. 116).]
613 ([return])
[ See Perrot et Chipiez, iii. 108, 299, &c.]