[96] Fabricius, i. p. 33.

[97] Ferdinand de Troilo, Orientale Itinerario. Dresd., 1667, p. 323.

[98] Selden, De Synedriis, ii. p. 452.

[99] Hottinger, Historia Orientalis, lib. i. c. 8.

[100] Jacobus Vitriacus, Hist. Hierosol., c. lxxxv.

[101] As King Charles’s Oak may be seen in the fern-root.

[102] Fabricius, i. p. 84.

[103] Neue Ierosolymitanische Pilgerfahrt. Würtzburg, 1667, p. 47.

[104] Stephanus Le Moyne, Notæ ad Varia Sacra, p. 863.

[105] Abulfeda, p. 15. In the Apocryphal book, The Combat of Adam (Dillman, Das Christliche Adambuch des Morgenlandes; Göttingen, 1853), the same reason for hostility is given. In that account, Satan appears to Cain and prompts him to every act of wickedness.