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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1856
  • Page 18
  • VOICES EEOM DEAD NATIONS. BY KENNETH R. ...
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 1, 1856: Page 18

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Voices Eeom Dead Nations. By Kenneth R. ...

to think what ^ the results might be , or he w as unable from early education to take such a stride forward ; at any rate , twenty years after Scaliger s time Petavius dismissed Egyptian dynasties with a mingled sneer and sigh . Gover took up the question where the death of Scaliger had left it . " . Syiicellus " was edited and published by the latter scholar in 1652 ,

and the lists of Manetho , according to Eusebius , being also published , they could be collated with the lists now known of Eratosthenes and Apollodorus . Manetho ' s lists , we may here stay to remark , are the more valuable , as far as native authority goes , as there is a strongprobability that Eratosthenes knew not " a word of Egyptian , or at any rate could not himself read the hieroedvphics . His learning :, as

I said before , probably exceeded that of all his contemporaries , but his genius was that of a Grecian encyclopedist , rather than that of an accurate scientific archEeologist . "He wrote , " said Hipparchus , " mathematically about geography , and geographically about mathematics . " The Alexandrian age , however extraordinary for erudition , was somewhat slipshod , and how can anv one escape a slight . taint

from his age ? But there the matter rested for a while . War , famine , dissensions of every kind , set aside historical investigation , as far as outward practical controversy was concerned . " Philosophical science , indeed , " observes Bunsen , * found a refuge in Holland and England ; but the previous spirit of genial research , and ardent zeal for original investigation , had now given place to the mechanism of servile commentary , and an uncritical parade of scholastic learning .

Ihe consequence was , that the precious gems , which lay concealed in the rubbish of" Syncellus , " remained unnoticed ; while , on the other hand , the synchronistic system of that author , and of Eusebius , with their whole train of wilful or unconscious falsehood and confusion , passed for well-established canons of chronology . Even those wholly valueless impostures , the so-called Old Chronicle , with the pseudo-Manetho of the Dog-star , and the later list of kings , which first came

to light in "Syncellus , " met with consideration , at least for the time being , whenever they seemed to square with some favourite chronological theory , some theological or philological whim . Even before the year 1070 , in which the great war of Egyptian chronology broke out , the pioneers and out-skirmishers had done much to complicate the difficulties of the campaign . Unable to extract , sift , and set

apart from the promiscuous materials at their disposal , the practical and tangible elements for future inquiry and illustration , they arbitrarily mixed up the whole in one confused and undistinguishahic mass . "

Marsh am ' s " Canon Chronicus , " founding itself upon the spurious Manetho and the false Old Chronicle , was published in 1070 , and the author ingeniously tried to induce others to bow to his system , which he farther improved by taking from the fabrications of Syncellus whatever fitted with his plans , leaving Syncellus to answer for * Egypt ' s Place , vol . i . p . 233 .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-01-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01011856/page/18/.
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Title Category Page
THE FBEEMASONS' MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 1
JAIUARY 1, 1856. Article 1
TIME. Article 1
NOTES OE A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 6
VOICES FROM DEAD NATIONS. BY KENNETH R. H. MACKENZIE, F.S.A., Ph.D. Article 13
THE SIGNS OE ENGLAND. Article 19
MASONIC REMINISCENCES. Article 24
TIME AND HIS BAG. Article 31
REVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS. Article 32
NOTES AHD QUERIES Article 39
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 40
THE MASONIC MIRROR Article 42
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 42
METROPOLITAN. Article 46
INSTRUCTION. Article 53
PROVINCIAL. Article 56
ROYAL ARCH. Article 65
SCOTLAND. Article 68
SUMMARY OF HEWS FOR DECEMBER. Article 70
NOTICE. Article 72
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 72
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Voices Eeom Dead Nations. By Kenneth R. ...

to think what ^ the results might be , or he w as unable from early education to take such a stride forward ; at any rate , twenty years after Scaliger s time Petavius dismissed Egyptian dynasties with a mingled sneer and sigh . Gover took up the question where the death of Scaliger had left it . " . Syiicellus " was edited and published by the latter scholar in 1652 ,

and the lists of Manetho , according to Eusebius , being also published , they could be collated with the lists now known of Eratosthenes and Apollodorus . Manetho ' s lists , we may here stay to remark , are the more valuable , as far as native authority goes , as there is a strongprobability that Eratosthenes knew not " a word of Egyptian , or at any rate could not himself read the hieroedvphics . His learning :, as

I said before , probably exceeded that of all his contemporaries , but his genius was that of a Grecian encyclopedist , rather than that of an accurate scientific archEeologist . "He wrote , " said Hipparchus , " mathematically about geography , and geographically about mathematics . " The Alexandrian age , however extraordinary for erudition , was somewhat slipshod , and how can anv one escape a slight . taint

from his age ? But there the matter rested for a while . War , famine , dissensions of every kind , set aside historical investigation , as far as outward practical controversy was concerned . " Philosophical science , indeed , " observes Bunsen , * found a refuge in Holland and England ; but the previous spirit of genial research , and ardent zeal for original investigation , had now given place to the mechanism of servile commentary , and an uncritical parade of scholastic learning .

Ihe consequence was , that the precious gems , which lay concealed in the rubbish of" Syncellus , " remained unnoticed ; while , on the other hand , the synchronistic system of that author , and of Eusebius , with their whole train of wilful or unconscious falsehood and confusion , passed for well-established canons of chronology . Even those wholly valueless impostures , the so-called Old Chronicle , with the pseudo-Manetho of the Dog-star , and the later list of kings , which first came

to light in "Syncellus , " met with consideration , at least for the time being , whenever they seemed to square with some favourite chronological theory , some theological or philological whim . Even before the year 1070 , in which the great war of Egyptian chronology broke out , the pioneers and out-skirmishers had done much to complicate the difficulties of the campaign . Unable to extract , sift , and set

apart from the promiscuous materials at their disposal , the practical and tangible elements for future inquiry and illustration , they arbitrarily mixed up the whole in one confused and undistinguishahic mass . "

Marsh am ' s " Canon Chronicus , " founding itself upon the spurious Manetho and the false Old Chronicle , was published in 1070 , and the author ingeniously tried to induce others to bow to his system , which he farther improved by taking from the fabrications of Syncellus whatever fitted with his plans , leaving Syncellus to answer for * Egypt ' s Place , vol . i . p . 233 .

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