The Hittites Their Inscriptions And Their History volume 1
The Hittites Their Inscriptions And Their History volume 1
Campbell John
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Its Basque equivalent is the verbal termination tatu, tatsen, as in bec/is-tatu, saris-tutu, to look, to reward, literally, to set an eye, to set a reward. What is the anka that was set up by this people ? There is reason to think that it was the palm tree. The region between Hebron and the Dead Sea, where Amorites and Hittites contended in the days of Abraham, bore two names, Hazezon Tamar and Engedi. The first word is Semitic and means " the pruning of the palm "; and Aingedi, if Semitic, mea...ns "the fountain of the kid. " Js Engedi necessarily Semitic? There is a spring or fountain there, but so there is in almost every place that men have chosen for habitation. In the time of Jerome, Engedi was a place of some note, and, three centuries before, Josephus mentioned it as the seat of one of the chief toparchies of Judaea. 25 Pliny, however, who completed his Natural History soon after the fall of Jerusalem, says nothing of the fountain of the kid, but speaks of " the town of Engadda, once only inferior to Jerusalem in fertility of soil and groves of palms; now, like it, a heap of ashes.
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