his grave (according to Mohammedan tradition) at Ṣâliḥiyyâ, suburb of Damascus, [280];
figure of the Dark Sky, [111];
Jabal another form of the same, [111–2]
Abraham denotes the Heaven at Night, [32];
myth of his sacrifice of Isaac, [45–47];
his journey to Egypt on account of a famine, when Jahveh plagued Pharaoh—a type of the later residence in Egypt, [275];
his grave at Hebron, [278–280];
at Berze near Damascus, [280]
Abram (‘High Father’) originally denoted Heaven, [91];
changed into Abraham, [230]