his grave at Hebron, [278–9]
Isâf and Nâʾilâ, two Arabian idols (Soil and Rain), [182–3]
Isaiah, the second, the Prophet of the Captivity, [307]
Isis, the horned, [179]
Islâm not favourable to Nomadism, [86]
Israel, i.e. the Hebrew nation, created by Jahveh, [299]
Issachar, called an Ass, a Solar figure, [177] note, [181]
Istar, Babylonian goddess, is the Moon, [158–9]
Jacob, the ‘Follower,’ i.e. the Night, the Dark Sky, [97];
fights with a man who cannot conquer him (the Dawn), [140];