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  • Nov. 1, 1878
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1878: Page 41

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    Article ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 41

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Assyrian Discoveries.

further passage , they turn inland ancl double it . Thence only one road , Wady Taiyebeh , Avhich , Avith their baggage , the Israelites coidd have taken towards Sinai , AA'ith two halting-places by the AA'ay . Here Mr . Holland has traced Eephidim , and beyond the pass the old circular huts of an extinct race , the Ainalekitos , Avith then * hearthstones ancl remains of bones and charred wood . In the open space Ave find every condition required for the delivery of the laAv from Sinaiancl also for the details of the battle of Eephidim .

, Eastward from Sinai , again , at a distance of three days' journey , Professor Palmer discovered a piece of ground covered for many acres AA'ith the stone circles Avhich mark the site of camps , but of a different shape from any UOAV in use . The hearthstones were still there and pieces of charcoal beneath the surface . Stretching to a great distance round the camps AA'ere numbers of grave inounds , said by the Arabs to be the remains of a A'ast pilgrim caravanAA'hich pitched here ages agoand Avas afterwards lost in the

, , desert of the Tib . No doubt remained on the mind of the explorers that they were actually on the site of Kibroth Hattaavah , ancl that their fingers , as they turned the stoneheaps , AA'ere grimed Avith the dust of them ¦ that lusted . Exactly a day ' s journey further on they discovered the wells ancl romantic oasis of Ain Hudherah , the Arabic equivalent for Hazeroth . If beyond this each halting-place prior to the thirty-eighth year of the wanderings has not been traced and identified it is simply because from the

nature of the case it is most unlikely that names , probably given at the time by the travellers themselves to featureless camping grounds , should have been preserved . But the latter part of the wanderings has been traced Avith the same accuracy as the earlier . The discovery by Mr . Holland , only this year , of a labyrinth of valleys , slopes , roads , and hilly country in the north of the desert of Tih , in the region just south of Ain Gades , recognized as Kadesh Barnea , solves the difficulties connected Avith the protracted sojourn of a vast host for many years in this region . Proceeding from the Avatershed of Jebel el Tih northward through Jebel Mugrah , Mr . Holland found AA'hat seems to have afforded the road knoAvn as " the AA'ay of the spies , " a wide region full of traces of ancient

habitations and cultivation . West of this region he has traced an easy , direct , ancl Avell-AA'atered route to Egypt , AA'ith Avells and ancient ruins , and numbers of flint flakes , and arroAv-heads , proving that it AA'as a road much used in very early times , while large tracts of lands are still cultivated . The pass of Akkrabim , the mountain of the Amorites , Zephath , ancl Horinnh—none of these are noAv mere traditional names , but actual recognized sites , where the march of Israel can be most distinctl y traced . I need not

further trace the later history of Numbers ancl Deuteronomy , the minute details of all the moA'ements of Israel round Edoin , through Moab , and to the plains of Shittim , or the hi gh places of Balak and Balaam , as on a former occasion I have been permitted to bring the explorations of myself and others before the notice of the Congress . Thus , entering into Palestine itself , with the Book of Joshua in our hands , Ave scarcely need a further guide . The officers of the Palestine Exploration Fund have laid CIOAATI in that

ordnance map , AA'hich in a feAV AA'eeks Avill be in your hands , 2 , 770 names , AA'here previousl y only 450 AA'ere laid CIOAAII . Of all the long catalogues of Joshua , there is scarce a village , hoAvever insignificant , which does not retain for its desolate heap or its modern hovels the Arabic equivalent for the name Avritten CIOAVU b y Joshua 3 , 300 years ago . But it is uot merely the continuance by an ' occult Providence' of the names in the rery places where they ought by the record to be ; it is the little touches AA'hich often startle

by the AA'ay in which they carry conviction of the time ancl p lace of the sacred penman . Thus Avhen we read that Abraham ' s second encampment' was on a mountain east of Bethel , ancl that he pitched his tent , having Bethel on the Avest ancl Hai on the east , and then he budded an altar , ' ancl Avhen between the site of Bethel and the desolate heap , the ' Tell' of Ai , we obseiwe a valley , and in its centre a lofty hill AA'ith uutlecip herable ruins on its summitwhence ancl AA'hence alone view of the Jordan valley

, a and the head of the Dead Sea is obtained , AA- ' 6 know exactly where Abraham stood ancl where the writer placed him . Thus is proof and illustration rapidly accumulating , and one definite result is certainly this , that hostile criticism must for the future be subjective and not objective . If there be a corroborated ancl illustrated history in the world , Ave have it here . The solvent of unbelief cannot dissolve the sculptured stones and burnt

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-11-01, Page 41” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111878/page/41/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE LOCKE MS. Article 2
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE PLATT MEMORIAL.—OLDHAM. Article 6
AUTUMN. Article 8
BEATRICE. Article 9
DO THY DUTY BRAVELY. Article 11
AN ELEGY. Article 12
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 13
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 19
FAITHFULLY. Article 22
SOMETHING FOUND. Article 23
THE BROOK-SIDE. Article 24
LOST AND SAVED ; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 25
FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Article 30
THE BETTER PART. Article 34
THE BENI MZAB. Article 35
LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Article 36
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 38
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 42
THE WORDS OF STRENGTH. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Assyrian Discoveries.

further passage , they turn inland ancl double it . Thence only one road , Wady Taiyebeh , Avhich , Avith their baggage , the Israelites coidd have taken towards Sinai , AA'ith two halting-places by the AA'ay . Here Mr . Holland has traced Eephidim , and beyond the pass the old circular huts of an extinct race , the Ainalekitos , Avith then * hearthstones ancl remains of bones and charred wood . In the open space Ave find every condition required for the delivery of the laAv from Sinaiancl also for the details of the battle of Eephidim .

, Eastward from Sinai , again , at a distance of three days' journey , Professor Palmer discovered a piece of ground covered for many acres AA'ith the stone circles Avhich mark the site of camps , but of a different shape from any UOAV in use . The hearthstones were still there and pieces of charcoal beneath the surface . Stretching to a great distance round the camps AA'ere numbers of grave inounds , said by the Arabs to be the remains of a A'ast pilgrim caravanAA'hich pitched here ages agoand Avas afterwards lost in the

, , desert of the Tib . No doubt remained on the mind of the explorers that they were actually on the site of Kibroth Hattaavah , ancl that their fingers , as they turned the stoneheaps , AA'ere grimed Avith the dust of them ¦ that lusted . Exactly a day ' s journey further on they discovered the wells ancl romantic oasis of Ain Hudherah , the Arabic equivalent for Hazeroth . If beyond this each halting-place prior to the thirty-eighth year of the wanderings has not been traced and identified it is simply because from the

nature of the case it is most unlikely that names , probably given at the time by the travellers themselves to featureless camping grounds , should have been preserved . But the latter part of the wanderings has been traced Avith the same accuracy as the earlier . The discovery by Mr . Holland , only this year , of a labyrinth of valleys , slopes , roads , and hilly country in the north of the desert of Tih , in the region just south of Ain Gades , recognized as Kadesh Barnea , solves the difficulties connected Avith the protracted sojourn of a vast host for many years in this region . Proceeding from the Avatershed of Jebel el Tih northward through Jebel Mugrah , Mr . Holland found AA'hat seems to have afforded the road knoAvn as " the AA'ay of the spies , " a wide region full of traces of ancient

habitations and cultivation . West of this region he has traced an easy , direct , ancl Avell-AA'atered route to Egypt , AA'ith Avells and ancient ruins , and numbers of flint flakes , and arroAv-heads , proving that it AA'as a road much used in very early times , while large tracts of lands are still cultivated . The pass of Akkrabim , the mountain of the Amorites , Zephath , ancl Horinnh—none of these are noAv mere traditional names , but actual recognized sites , where the march of Israel can be most distinctl y traced . I need not

further trace the later history of Numbers ancl Deuteronomy , the minute details of all the moA'ements of Israel round Edoin , through Moab , and to the plains of Shittim , or the hi gh places of Balak and Balaam , as on a former occasion I have been permitted to bring the explorations of myself and others before the notice of the Congress . Thus , entering into Palestine itself , with the Book of Joshua in our hands , Ave scarcely need a further guide . The officers of the Palestine Exploration Fund have laid CIOAATI in that

ordnance map , AA'hich in a feAV AA'eeks Avill be in your hands , 2 , 770 names , AA'here previousl y only 450 AA'ere laid CIOAAII . Of all the long catalogues of Joshua , there is scarce a village , hoAvever insignificant , which does not retain for its desolate heap or its modern hovels the Arabic equivalent for the name Avritten CIOAVU b y Joshua 3 , 300 years ago . But it is uot merely the continuance by an ' occult Providence' of the names in the rery places where they ought by the record to be ; it is the little touches AA'hich often startle

by the AA'ay in which they carry conviction of the time ancl p lace of the sacred penman . Thus Avhen we read that Abraham ' s second encampment' was on a mountain east of Bethel , ancl that he pitched his tent , having Bethel on the Avest ancl Hai on the east , and then he budded an altar , ' ancl Avhen between the site of Bethel and the desolate heap , the ' Tell' of Ai , we obseiwe a valley , and in its centre a lofty hill AA'ith uutlecip herable ruins on its summitwhence ancl AA'hence alone view of the Jordan valley

, a and the head of the Dead Sea is obtained , AA- ' 6 know exactly where Abraham stood ancl where the writer placed him . Thus is proof and illustration rapidly accumulating , and one definite result is certainly this , that hostile criticism must for the future be subjective and not objective . If there be a corroborated ancl illustrated history in the world , Ave have it here . The solvent of unbelief cannot dissolve the sculptured stones and burnt

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