Si, j t " HOR.E BEING A CONNECTED SERIES OF MISCELLANEOUS NOTES ON THE KORAN, THE ZEND-AVESTA, THE VEDAS, THE KINGS, AND THE EDDA. Accipe, fed facilis ! Buchanan ad Mar, Scot. Reg. " All our hiftorical refearches have confirmed the ' Mofaic account of the primitive world." Sir W. Jgnti's %tb Anmv. Dif. PRINTED IN THE YEAR 1802. QUARE quis tandem me reprehendat, fi quantum caeteris ad feftos dies ludorum celebrandos, quantum ad alks voluptates, et ad ipfam requiem animi et corporis conceditur temporis : quantum alii tempeftivis convivUs, quantum aleae, quantum pilze, tantum mibi egomet, ad haec ftudia recolenda, fumpfero. Cic fra drcbia. Luke Hansard, Printer, Great TurnftUe, Lincoln's-Inn Fields. Sfar Ann " 0" .5-1 09 TQ THE EIGHT HONORABLE SIR WILLIAM SCOTT, KNIGHT, JUDOS or HIS MAJESTY'S HIUH COVRT OF ADMIRALT?, IS INSC&IBED, BY HIS MOST OBEDIENT SERVANT, CHARLES BUTLER. Liacoln't-Inn. In the cwrje of next Winter will It publified, BY THE SAME AUTIIO-R, A connected Series of Mifcellaneous Notes, giving a Chronological Account of the GRECIAN, the ROMAN, the CIVIL, the CANON, and the FEUBAL LAW. R^E BIBLIC^E, PART THE SECOND. WI T H a view to imprefs on the memory, the refult of fome miscellaneous reading on different fubje&s, relating to the ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY of the countries con- quered by MAHOMET AND HIS DISCIPLES, the following fheets were committed to paper. They may be found to give, I. A fhort view of the antient hiftory of thofe countries, (hewing their ftate at the time of that event ; under this head will be given fome account of the antient hiftory, ift, of Syria; 2dly, of Perfia } and 3dly, of Africa ; connecting the aeras, men- tioned in the account of Syria, with the rife and fall of Nineve, Babylon, Rome, and Conftantino- ple, to which Syria was fucceflively fubjeft ; and the jeras, mentioned in the account of Perfia, with the leading events of Greece and Rome, antece- B dent 2 HOR^EBIBLTC^. dent to the fame period ; and in the account of Africa, fhortly pointing out the principal occur- rences in the hiftory of that country, before its invafion by the difciples of Mahomet: II. Some mention will then be made of the events which fa- cilitated the conque~ft of tile eaft by the religion and arms of Mahomet; thefe are, ift, the political weaknefs of the weftern and eaftern empires ; arid 2dly, tlie religious difputes among the chriftians of the eaft : III. Some account will then be given of the rife and firft progrefs of the Mahometan reli- gion ; containing a view, ift, of the Geogra- phy, 2dly, of file Eftrly Hiftory of Arabia ; gdly, of the Hegif a and the mode of computing it ; and 4thly, of the extent of the conquefts made by Mdhom,e-t and his immediate fucceffbrs : IV. Mention will then be made of the principal Ma- hometan ftates ; containing an account, ift, of the dynafties and fortunes of the Universal Caliphs ; 2dly, of the Sultans and Sophis of Perfia ; 3dly, of the Sultans and Marnlouc Governors of Egypt; 4thly, of the Caliphs and Sheriffs of Morocco, and the St&tes of Barbary ; Jthly, of the Caliphs of Spain ; 6thly, of the Mahometan Dynafties, which have reigned in Hinduftan ; and ythly, of the Ot- toman Empire : V. The irruptions of the Mogul Tartars under Gengifkhan and Timour into the Afiatic territories, conquered by the difciples of Mahoitietj will then be mentioned : VI. Notice 3 will HOR^BIBLIC/E. 3 will then be taken of fome of the principal at- tempts of the princes of Chriftendom to repel the Mahometans ; under this head an account will be given, I ft, of the Crufades ; adly, of the military orders eftabliflied for the defence of Chriftendom againft the Mahometans ; and 3dly, of the moft important victories which have been gained by the Chriftians over the Mahometans fince the cru- fades : VII. A view will then be given of the religious tenets and literary hiftory of the Maho- metans ; comprifing an account, ift, of the creed, opinions, and rites of the followers of Mahomet ; 2dly, of the Koran ; 3dly, of the Sedls of the Ma- hometans ; 4thly, of the Turkifh. Language; and 5thly, of Turkifli Literature: VIII. A fhort view will then be offered of the actual extent and ftate of the countries where the Mahometan Religion is profefled: IX. Mention will then be made of the principal authors, from whofe writings thefe (heets have been compiled : X. A mifcdlaneous article will be added, containing fome account of the Books held Sacred in the Infidel Coun- tries fubdued or made tributary by the Maho- metans : thefe are the Zend-Avefta, the Vedas, and the Sacred Books of the Chinefe : mention alfo will be made of the Edda, the book fuppofed to have been held facred by the Scandinavian nations. B BTBLIC^E; I. WITH refpedr. to the Antient Hiftory of the countries, where the Religion and Empire of Mahomet took their rife : I. i. The modern word, anfwering to the country called Syria, is Earr-el-fham, or the coun- try to the left, with a reference to Mecca. It is bounded by the Mediterranean on the weft, by the defert of Arabia on the eaft, and from north to fouth it fills the fpace between Cilicia and Mount Amanus, to a line which may be fuppofed to be drawn from Gaza to the defert. A chain of mountains runs through it from north to fouth, with many ramifications ; its mofl elevated point is the Lebanon. Under the Roman Empire it was di- vided into 4 parts, Commagene, Seleucis, or the Syria Propria, Ccele-Syria, or the hollow Syria, from its being inclofed between the Lebanon and the Antilebanon, a mountain that runs parallel with it, and Phoenicia. Ccele-Syria contains Da- mafcus, and the ruins of Palmyra ; Paleftina was added to Syria in later times. . . Before The fcnpture informs us that Achaz, the Chrift. king of Judah, being powerfully attacked by Razin the king of Syria, and by Phaceas, fon of Romelias, the king of Ifrael, invited Theglatphalafar, the king of AfTyria or Nineve r HOR^BIBLIC^E. 5 Before Ctirift. Nineve, to his afliftance, and that he poflef- fedbimfelf of the greateft part of Syria. - 742 Hisfon Salmanazar conquered Judaea, and carried the 10 tribes into captivity to Nineve. Major Rennell, (Geography of Heredotus, fe&ion 15), has produced flrong arguments to prove, that they were afterwards dif- tributed in Media. - - 721 The Chaldaeans or Babylonians, under Afaraddon, who was the grandfon of Sal- manazar, and who united in him the em- pires of Babylon and Nineve, completed the conqueft of Syria, and fent the Cuthites, a people of Aflyria, to inhabit that part of Paleftine called Samaria; from it they took the name of Samaritans. - - 677 Syria was conquered by Cyrus. - - 540 It continued part of the Periian empire, till its overthrow by Alexander the great. - 330 On his deceafe, it fell to Seleucus Nicator, the moft powerful of his fucceffors. From him a long line of fovereigns of Syria, called the Seleucidag, proceeded : it ended in An- tiochus Afiaticus. He maintained an un- fuccefsful war with Lucullus, and was total- ly conquered by Pompey. The kingdom of Syria, was part of the B 3 conqueft, 6 HOR^E BIBLIC^E, Before conqueft, and thereupon made a province of Chrift. the Roman empire. 63 On the divifion of the Empire between Aftd flourished, the Empire of Nineve was founded; the ages, which Varro termed fabulous, expired ; and towards die end of it, the empire of Rome, began. The Pilhdadian dynafty was Succeeded by the Caianian family in 600 It began with Cai-Caus, from whom it takes its name ; he is called by our writers, Darius the Mede ; his fon Cai Khofru, is our Cyrus. The territory, known at that time, by the name of Perfia, filled the fpaee between Media, tlue Perfic gulph, 5uiiania, B 4 and 8 and Caramania. Cyrus fubdued the king- Befors doms of Nineve and Media, and almoft all Afia Minor. Thefe with Perfia, formed what is called in antient hiftory, the Perfian empire : it extended from the Hellefpont to the Indus ; and its northern limits were the Euxine, Cafpiari, and Aral feas. - 568 The Piftidadian family ended with the battle of Arbela, when Daraor Darius the the younger was conquered by Alexander the great, and the monarchy of the Caia- nians was transferred to the Greeks. - 230 This period includes the Babylonifh. cap- tivity, the return of the Jews under Cyrus, the decree of Artaxerxes, permitting the Jews to rebuild the temple, the confirma- tion of their rights by Alexander the great ; the battles of Marathon and Pla- tosa, the Peloponefian war, the conquefts of Alexander the great, the hiftory of Rome from its beginning to the expuliion of the Tarquins. After this, a race of Perfian monarchs, called Afhcanians from Afliac the founder of the race, is fuppofed to have reigned in the eaftern parts of Perfia, till about a cen- tury after the birth of Chrift. To this period muft be referred the un- fortunate difputes among the Jews refpecl:- jne the priefthood, the atchieveme.nts of the Afmonaeans, BIB LI C^. 9 Afmonaeans, die intercourfe of the Tews Before Chrift* with their Afiatic and African neighbours, the verfion of the feventy, the fubjeclion of the Jews to the Romans and the Idumaean fovereigns appointed by them ; the divifion of Alexander's empire among his principal generals, their wars with the Greeks, the firft and fecond Punic war, the conquefts of the Romans , Marius, Sylla, Pompey, and Caefar. During this period, Perfia loft much of A ftr its territory, the Romans conquered from them the country on the well of the Tau- rus, and the Parthians drove them from Up- per Afia. The Saffanian dynafty fucceeded the A(h- canian. It began about the beginning of the 3d century, by the revolt of Ardefher Babegan, our Artaxerxes, the fon of Saflan, a man in alow fituation of life, but of royal extraction : from SafTan, the dynafty had its appellation. The princes of it reigned in Perfia till the Mahometan invafion ; and fpeaking generally, the boundaries of Perfia, were, during that dynafty, nearly the fame as they are at prefent. - 2Q2 Under Shapor, Mani broached his errors, and thereby fowed the feed of the Mani- chaean herefy. Its principal object was to reconcile, ge- nerally, 10 HOR^SBIBLIC^. nerally, with the tenets of the chriftian rclL ,,,.,-, , , , , , Chrjft. gion, the belief that the world ana its phoe- nomena, proceeded from two eternal and necefTary caufes ; one eiTentially good, the other eflentially evil. - - 242 Nufliirvan the great, known in Europe by the name of Cofroes, the laft of this dy-r nafty, began his reign in - 530 During his reign Mahomet -was born. - 569 I. 3. Africa, another of the earlieft conquefU of the Mahometans, lies between the i8th degree of weft, and the 5- thage. - - 868 The hiftory of Carthage may be divided into three periods : during the firft, the ce- lebrated circumnavigation of Africa was performed, by Phcenician mariners, em- ployed by Pharaoh Necho. They failed from the red fea, and, in the 3d year of their voyage, pafled the columns of Hercules, and returned to Egypt. - 6iQ To this period Mr. Falconer, (who, on the age of the Periplus of Hanno, has invincibly refuted the contrary opinion of Dodwell), afligns the voyage of Hanno. Major Ren- nell recognizes, in Hanno's account, the capes Bianco and De Verd, the rivers of Senegal and Gambia, the ifland of Cerne, the bay of Biflago, anfwering to Hanno'* Weftern Horn, the mountain of Sangaree, anfwering to his chariot of the Gods, and Sherbro' Bay, anfwering to his Southern: Horn, where the fecond voyage terminated. 570 To the fame period, the Baron de St. roix (Hiftoire de 1' Academic des Infcrip- tions* 12 tions, Tom. 43), fixes the voyage of Scy- Before lax. By the command of Darius Hyftafpes, he failed with a fquadron, from Pactya the modern Pehteley : and, in two years and fix months, reached the Arabian gulph. - 462 Thevfirft period of the hiftory of Car- thage ends with the invaiion of Sicily by the Carthaginians ; The fecond, with the commencement of the conflict between Rome and Carthage ; The third, with the deftruclion of Car- thage. - The next memorable event in the hiftory of Africa is the Jugurthan war. - 107 The only other event of confequence, in its hiftory, before the birth of Chrift, is the war of Caefar in Africa. - 45 Genferic, who reigned over the Vandals chri". in Spain, conquered Africa from the Romans. 428 It was reconquered by Belifarius, and from that time continued fubjeft to the Emperor of the weft, till it was invaded by the Saracens. Such was the Geography, and fuch were the outlines of the Hiftory of the countries we have mentioned at the period under confideration. HOR-ffi BIBLIC^. 13 II. WITH refpeclrto the events which facilitated the conqueft of them by the arms and religion of Mahomet : * II. i ft. Both the Weftern and Eajlcrn Empire were then in their lowcjljlate of political Imbecility. The Vandals, Suevi and Alani, who inha- A fr bited the countries bordering on the Baltic, made an irruption into Gaul, about the year 408 ; and from Gaul advanced into Spain. - - 408 About the year 415, they were driven from Spain by the Vifigoths, and invaded Africa, where they formed a kingdom. - 41 r Between the year 401 and the year 420, the Franks, the Allemanni, and the Bur- gundians penetrated into Gaul. Of thefe nations, the Franks became the moft power- ful, and, having either expelled or fubdtied the others, made themfelves m afters of the whole of thofe extenfive provinces, which from them, received the name of France. - 420 Pannonia and Illyricum were conquered by the Huns ; Rhcetia, Noricum and Vin- delicia, by the Oftrogoths ; and thefe, fome time after, were conquered by the Franks. In 449, the Saxons invaded England. - 449 The H O R JE B I B L I C JE. Herulians, marched into Italy, After under the command of their king Odoacer, and overturned the empire of the weft. - 476 From Italy they were expelled by the Oftrogoths. - - 493 About the year 568, the Lombards, iffuing from the mark of Brandenburgh, invaded the Higher Italy, and founded an empire, called the kingdom of the Lombards. - 568 After this, little remained in Europe of the Weftern Empire, befides the middle and inferior Italy. Thefe, on the divifion of that empire between the fons of Theodofius in 395, had fallen to the (hare of the emperor of the eafl : he governed them by an officer called an Exarch, whole refidence was fixed at Ravenna, and by fome fubordinate officers called Dukes. In 743, the exarchate of Ravenna, and all the remaining pofleffions of the Emperor in Italy, were conquered by the Lombards. This, as it was the final extinction of the Roman empire in Europe, was the comple- tion, in that quarter of the globe, of thofe conquefts which eftabliflied the feudal law. 743 The nations, by whom thefe conquells were made, came, it is evident, from different countries, at different periods, fpoke different languages, and were under the command of feparate leaders ; yet BIBLIC^E. 15 vet they appear to have eftablilhed, in almoft every flate which they conquered, nearly the fame fyf- tem of laws. This fyftem is known by the appellation of the Feudal Law, and the eftabhfh- ment of it is one of the moft memorable events in hiftory. At the time of Mahomet's appearance,, all of them were in the utmoffc coafufion. They hau completed their conqueft over monarchy ; but neither the extent of their kingdoms, nor their forms of government were fettled; the fury which accompanied them in their conquefts was fpent, they had funk into a ftate of debility, and no bond of union connected them together. If the period of the chriftian sera were to be mentioned, when there was leaft of order, lead of power, lead of fcience, and leaft of intercourfe in Europe, it would be that century which imme- diately preceded, and that which immediately fol- lowed the commencement of the Hegira. The eaftern empire ftill contained Greece, Thrace, Alia Minor, Mefopotamia, Syria, Palef- tine, Egypt, Africa, and a part of Italy : but it had been exhaufted by a fucceffion of foreign wars and civil diflentions ; by repeated ravages of Barbarians, by oppreflion in the capital, extor- tion in the provinces, weak councils, lawlefs armies and a disorderly court. II. 2. To complete the calamity, both tlu church and Jlate^ were, at the time we f feck of* 16 equally weakened by religious controverfy and perfecu* tion. -The lad of thefe circumftances was, in a particular manner the caufe of the rapid fuccefs of Mahometanifm. Very foon after the introdu&ion of Chrif- Year tianity, a fondnefs for the philofophy of cimft. Plato and Pythagoras, led many to invefli- gate the myfteries of the trinity, and of the divinity and humanity of Jefus Chrift, with too much curiofity. Praxcas maintained, that there was but one perfon in the trinity, and that the Father was the fame as the Jefus who was crucified. - 193 The fame herefy, withfome modification, was adopted by Noetus. - 239 With a fimilar notion of preserving the unity of the divine fubftance, without giving up the trinity, Sabellius reduced the three perfons of the trinity to one and the fame being, manifefting himfelf by 'two diftin6t operations, or energies moving from himfelf, called the fon and the holy ghoft. - - 257 Arius, in avoiding the error of Sabellius, afferted Jefus Chrift to be a creature drawn out of nothing, by the father, and fubtifting by his will, but begotten before all other beings, and participating, by his father's gift, in his effence and glory. He was condemned by the general council of Nice. - - 325 To fupport the cortfubftantiality of the fo BIB LIC A 17 fort with the father,' Apollinaris contended Year of . . . -, ,- /~ii /< i i Chrift. agamft Anus, that Jefus Cnriit had not an human foul; he was condemned by the fixth council of Rome. - 377 In opposition to him, Theodore of Mop- fueftes maintained, that Jefus Chrift had a ibul tliitincl: from the word, and performed actions, which were only referrible to that foul. Without it, according to him, it would be neceflary to fuppofe, that, the divinity fu'ffcrcd,. the divinity increafed in tyifdoni. - 4.28 * Nefiorius carried the fyftem further ; lie aflerted the exigence of two diftin6l perfons in Chrift, that one was eternal, infinite, in- treate ; that the other originated in rime, was finite, and had been created. His doc- trine was condemned by the third council of Ephefus. 43,4 Eutyches fell into the oppofite extreme, affeiting, that, in Jefus Chrift, the divine nature only exifted; his humanity being ab- forbed by it, as a drop of water by the ocean. Thus it was the error of Neftorius to divide the perfon, the error of Eutyches to con- found the two natures of Chrift. The doc- trine of Eutyches was condemned by the council of Chalcedon, in - 451 In opposition to the Eutychians, fome C Monks ,8 HOR/EBlBLlC-ffi. After Monks of Scythia aflerted the- propofition , Chrift. " one of the trinity has fuffered for us." - 520 Pope John the 2d, in a letter to the em- peror Juftinian, approved of the propofition, it being explained to mean, that the fecond perfon of the trinity fuffered in the flefh. - 534 The' unity of god, the trinity of perfons, being thus eftabliihed in the godhead, and the two natures and unity of perfon being thus eftabliihed in the fon t>f God, a difpute arofe on the nature of his will. Theodore, the bifhop of Pharan in Arabia, aflerted, and Sergius, the patriarch of Conftantinople, adopted his aflertion, that, in Jefus Chrift, though there were two natures, there was but one will. This gave them and their adherents the name of Monothelites. Their herefy was finally condemned in the council at Rome, in - 649 Marcian, and Leo, his immediate fuccefibr in the throne of Conftantinople, enforced the decrees of the council of Chalcedon, with great rigor. The emperor Juftinian enacted many laws, againft Heretics, Pagans, Jews and Samaritans, and caufed them to be carried into execution with great feverity. To all of them he offered the alternative of orthodoxy or exile. The number of thofe who preferred the latter was <(vas p,reat; and the three Arabias offered them a fecure retreat : to thole therefore they fled. III. WITH refpel to the Rife and Firft Pro- grefs of the Mahometan Religion : III. i. Arabia, where it tuft took its rife, extends in longitude from the 51 ft to the yyth degree, and in latitude, from the iath to the 34th. It forms a peninfula, bounded by Syria and Paleftine on the north-weft, by the Perfian gulph and the weftern borders of the Euphrates towards the north-eaff, by the Indian fea on the fouth-eaft, and by the red fea on the fouth-weft. It is divided into the ftony, the fandy, and the happy Arabia. The mountains of Horeb and Sinai are in the ftony Arabia, the cities of Mecca and Medina are in the fandy Arabia. - " The Arabs," fays Mr. Sale^ " have preferved their liberty, of which few na- " tions can produce fuch antient monuments) " even from the very deluge; for, though very " great armies have been fent againft them, all " attempts to fubdue them were unfuccefsful." He {hews that, as a nation, they were always independent, as individuals, they always poflefled the higheft degree of domeftic freedom. III. 2. The inhabitants of Arabia have been divided into two clafles, the old and new. The C * old 20 HOR^BIBLICJE. old are wholly loft : the new are fuppofed to have fprung from two (locks, Kahtan, the fon of Heber* a great grandfon of Sem, and Adnan, a defcendant, in a dire6l line, from Ifmael, the fon of Abraham and Hager. The former are faid to be the genuine or pure Arabs, cr, as the natives call them, 'Arabs through Arabs ; the latter are the meilif or mixed Arabs. Ifmael, through whom thefe profefs to defcend, was a Jew : by his marriage with a daugh- ter of Mbrad, a defcendant from Kahtan, he in- grafted his pofterity on the Arabic flock. Mahomet defcen;:ed from Ifmael in a firait iine, from male to male, and from elded fon. td eldeft fon. In tracing his genealogy, three feries of defcenrs are diftinguifhed : the firft from Ifmael to Adnan, in which all is uncertainty ; the feconcl from Adnan to Fehr, furnamed the Koreiili ; the third from Fehr to Mahomet. The defcents from Adnan are afcertained with tolerable certainty ; from Fehr, the Koreifh, confefiedly the moft eminent of the tribes of the Arabs, originated. A traditionary account, which the Arabians hold lac red, has tranfmitted every name which enters into thk long pedigree ; and though we Jhoukl confider it fabulous, it is a fable adopted by the nation, and fables adopted by a nation are, like truths adopted by her, .the foundation of the rights of the families, of which (he is compofed. Beiides, it is well ; 2 known, HOR^EBIBLICJE. 21 known, with what care tht ancient nations- of the eaft preferved the memory of their deicents : their pedigrees make their hiftory. According to them, when Abraham expelled Ifmael and Agar from his houfe, limael wandered to that part of Arabia, where Mecca now ftands, and which then was a mere defert ; there, tormented with- thirft and worn down with fatigue, he miruculoufly- difco- vered the well, mentioned in the hock of Genefis. He remained in its neighbourhood till che death of Agar : then he proceeded to the northern parts of Arabia. He found them peopled witft the dfii- fcendants of the patriarch Heber. Soon after- wards, he married ; and having continued a con- fiderable time in the northern part or Arabia, he quitted it, and with a large family, and numerous flocks of fheep and herds of cattle, returned to Agar's well. Before his journey to Arabia, the tribe of the Gioramides had eftablifhed itielf in South Arabia: they advanced afterwards to the North, and fixed in a fpot, about 90 leagues diftant from Agar's well: there they laid the foundation of the city of Yatreb, to which Mahomet gave the name of? Medina. Thus, even as early as the days of Ifmael, the Mahometan writers find in Arabia, the- rival cities of Mecca and Medina, and the rival tribes by which they were inhabited. The Gioramides afterwards returned to the- C 3 South, South, and pofleffed themfelves of Agar's well ; Ifmael reclaimed it ; the diipute was fettled by an alliance between the tribes ; limael marrying Vaala,-the daughter of Modal, the chief of the Gioramides, and receiving with her, in marriage, the well and the territories adjacent. Ifmael built, in the middle of his poffeflions, the celebrated Caaba, or fquaie houfe, in honor ot the God of Abraham. The Mahometans aflert that, by the order of God, Abraham ailifted Ifmael in building it ; and that it was formed on the model of a limilar building, which Seth had creeled from a veprefentation, let down from heaven at the prayer of Adam, and which had been deftroyed by the deluge. A black ftone in it became an object of great veneration from the notion of its having been brought to Abraham by the angel Gabriel to reft upon, while he was directing the building, and on which Abraham had left the print of his feet. Agar's well is now called the Well of Zenrzem. Infenfibly, by the increafe of Ifmael's descendants, and a conflux of ftrangers, attracted by the celebrity of the place, the neighbourhood of the Caaba and the well became very populous. The descendants of Ifmael were the firft princes of the city and the .firft priefts of the temple. But the great graudfon of limael leaving, at his deceafe, two children of very tender years, the chief of the tribe of the Gioramides pofleffed him- felf bpth of the city and the temple. They were HOR.fl3BIBLIC.ffi. 13 Before were recovered by the Tfmaelites, about Chrift. three centuries afterwards. - I 343 The Gioramide prince, before he aban- doned Mecca, threw into Agar's well, the whole treafure of the temple, and the prin- cipal objects of devotion in it, and particu- larly the black ftone ; he then filled up the well with rubbifh. The Gioramides, thus driven back *o Yatreb, preferved for ten centuries its fo- vereignty. About 300 years before the chriftiaa aera, an inundation in the fouthern part of Arabia, forced many of the tribes into its northern parts. Two of them pof- feffed themfelves of Yatreb, another fixed their feat in a fertile valley at the diftance of a day's journey from Mecca, and built a town there, called Batenmor. - 312 Idolatry had long made great progrefs in Arabia ; it owed its origin to the aftrono- mical obfervations of the Arabians. Brought up as we are, from our eariieft infancies, in juft notions of the deity, we find it difficult to conceive how the mind can reft on any object in the univerfe, however fplendid or wonderful, without rifing to the fublime being, who called it into exiftence. In the earlier age of the world, the view of the heavens was a ilrong incentive to fuperfti- C 4 . tion. M- H G- IB. B I B L I lion. Job felt its force: -in the folemn pro- Before teftation made by him of his integrity in the obfervance of his duties, he calls God to witnefs, that, " as he beheld the fun, when !' it flamed, or the moon walking in bright- " nefs, his heart had never been fecretly ' enticed, his mouth had never luffed his " hand." In their journies through their immenfe deferts, the Arabians had no other guides than the ftars ; they obferved the regu- larity of their motions; they fuppofed them directed by intellectual beings inferior to God, but fuperior to man. This worfhip of the (tars led them to form ftatjes with their name, and to make talifmans, which they fuppofed of fufficient power to regulate their influence. They generally believed the fcriptural hiftory of the creation, and the deluge ; refpecled Abraham and other pa-^ triarchs ; read the book of the pfalms, and had other books which they accounted fa- cred, particularly a collection of moral dif- courfes which they called the book of Seth. Their .fuperftitious credence is known by the appellation of Sabaifm. In the midfl of this general idolatry, the defcendants of Ifmael, who united in them- felves, the titles of princes of Mecca and guardians of its temple, were depofitaries of the primitive worfliip. Among them, Caab is HOR^EBIBLIC^. 25 is particularly dhlinguifhed : on every fri- day, he aflembled the faithful, and difcourfcd 'to them on the unity of God. Yet idolatry gained ground, and, at the death of Kelab, the grandlbn of Caab, the worlhip of the true God is faid, by the Arabian writers,' to have been confined to the temple of Mecca. Caab left two fons; Kofa his eldeft fon was, for a time rfifpoffefieci of his fovereignty by Amrou, his younger brother : he intro- duced the worlhip of idols into the temple ; and Kofa had not fufficient influence with his tribe to remove them. His grandfon Hafchem fucceeded to the fovereignty, about the beginning of the fixth century of the chriilian acra. - 500 He was the great-grandfather of Maho- met, and the ableft of the Meccan princes. He introduced commerce into his ftate by the eftablifliment of two caravans, one for South Arabia, the other for Syria. - 577 Abdo'lmotalleb, his only fon, fucceeded his father, and purfued, with fuccefs, his views for the aggrandizement and wealth of his ftate. To him, according to the Maho- metan writers, the place of Agar's well was difcovered: he cleared it from its rubbifl), and dug up the black {lone. Abdollah, the eldeft fon of Abdo'lmotalleb, died in his father'% 26 H O R M 11 1 B L I C JR. ~ Befcr? father's life-time, leaving Mahomet his eldeft thrift. fon. - - 578 At the age of fix years, Mahomet loft his mother : at her deceafe, Abdo'lmotalcb, his grandfather, took him under his care, but he dying at the end of two years, Abu- taleb, the eldeft furviving fon of AbJo'lmo- taleb, and who, in that quality, fucccedcd to the dignities of prince of Mecca and priefr. of the temple, undertook the care of Mahomet's education : he made him his companion in the caravans he conducted, and the wars he carried on. This was the life Mahomet led, till he attained his twenty-fifth year ; when he married Kadija, who was his relation, and a widow in wealthy circum- ' fiances. - - - -602 - * All accounts of Mahomet agree that from his carlieft years, he was religiouily inclined, and fhcwed great zeal againft idolatry, and a ftrong wifli for its extirpation. It is faid, that Ser- gius, a Neftorian monk, remarked this difpa- fition in him, when, in his 1 3th year, he accom- panied his father to the monaftery in which Sergius refided- After his marriage, his leal redoubled, and he gave himfelf up to a myftic and contemplative life. Once a year, he fhut himfelf up for a whole month, in a cavern of q. mountain, about three miles diftant from Mecca, to HOR^EBI^LIC^E. 27 to meditate, without interruption, on religious fub- jecls. His temperance and ample chanties to the poor procured him univerfal refpe w ^^ ^ e tne : 2 loth year of the hegira." III. 3. The extent of the cenqttefts made by Atfa- homet, and his immediate fucceiTors in the caliphate, called his companions, is one of the moft furprizing events mentioned in hiitory. The three Arabias were fubdued by Mahomet ; Abubeker, his immediate fucceflor, aiTumed from refpe6l and in reference to him, the title of Caliph, or Vicar, and, in this, was followed by a long line of fucceffors. Very foon after Mahomet's deceafe, his difciples wer^ generally l^nown, among the chriftians, by the appellation of Saracem. Abubeker addrefled them a circular letter, in. which he fhortly acquainted them, that, " he " intended fending fome true believers into Syria " to take it out of the hands of the Infidels :" and " defired them to obferve, that fighting for " religion HORy"E BIBLIC^. zg ** religion was an act of obedience to God.'* This was a general declaration of war by the Mahometans againft all mankind, who fhould not feinbrace their religious principles. From the avowed object of the war, they called it the * holy war," and thus, to ufe theexpreflion of the author of 1'Efprit des Croifades, (Tom. I. p. 116), " It was the model and the juflification of the " crufadcs." Such was the fuccefs of their enter-, prize, that, in lefs than a century from the com- rnenfement of the hegira, they fpread the religion of Mahbiiiet, from the Atlantic Ocean, to India and Tartafy ; and his fucceflbrs reigned in Syria, Perfia, Egypt, Africa and Spain. Since that time, they have been expelled from Spain; but have conquered the kingdoms of Vifapour and Golconda in India, the illands of Cyprus and Rhodes and the Cyclades, and have made large territorial aequiiitions in Tartary, Hungary and Greece. Jerufalem was taken by the generals of Omar, the 2d Caliph. " The defcriptions," fays Monf. Anquetil, (Precis de 1'Hiiloire Univerfelle, Tom. V. p. 40), " which the hiftorians of the cam- " paigns of the Saracens in Jucla:a, give of their " fertility and their numerous towns, enriched by " commerce, agree with the defcriptions given of " them by the facred penmen, and lliew that they " have been unjuftly accufed of exaggeration, for " callmg it the land of milk and honey. W hat is " become. jo HOR^i BIBLIC^E. ** become, under the dominion of the Turks, of " the fields watered by the Tigris and Euphrates?'* IV. WITH refped to the Principal Mahometan States: IV. i. In the hiflory of Mahometaniftn the Dynafties and Fortunes of the Univerfal Caliphs fill a large fpace* The four firft of them are diftinguifhed by the appellation of Companions of Mahomet, and ca- liphs of the right line. They reirned from the death' of Mahomet, which happened in the eleventh year of the Hegira, or the 6^zd year of Chrift, to the 4s his look whew h fitays, and this fuppofed afpedi of it, they call She Ktbla. The other objedi of their Veneri- lion, is the temple at Medina, xvhere the prophet pfeaGhed aftd was buried, Sxich are the principal tenets aftd fites of the Mahometans, but the only fl66effafy article of faith* the only article required 16 be pfofeffed by a Muffiilrnan, is the unity of God, Snd fhe divine miffion of Mahomet. Har* itfg pronounced the words, " I believe in 6ft G0d, 4nd in Mahotnet the apoftlc of God,'* tha profelyfe is confidered to be a peffed MufluhrJfcn* They look on unbelievers -with contempt and ab* horrdnce j but the Magians fcs followers tif Abra- haitTj the Jews as followers of Moief, and the Chriflians as followers of Chrift, are ranked Iiy them, far above polytheifls, idolaters, and atheifts. In oppofition to thofe, they call the Magians, Jews, and Chriftans, from the written revelation^ (hey fuppofe to h*ve been made to them, by 3 Abraham, Abraham, Mofes, and Chrifl:, the people of the written iaw. The arly caliphs condemned the pojyiheiifts, idolaters and atheifts to die alternative of death, or Ifhe profeflion .of Eflamifm, but the people of biervMig that there was a great multitude of various rea4iag in the copies, caxrfed feveral F 3 copies 70 HOR^E BIBLIC-ffi. copies to be made, with extreme care^ of the ex- emplar depofited by Abu Becre with Hafsa. -'In imitation of the maforitical labours of the Jews, the Mahometans have computed every word and every letter of the koran, and introduced vowel points, which afcertain both its pronunciation and meaning. " The general doctrine of the koran," fays Golius, in Append, ad Gram. Erp. p. 176, (as he is tranflated by Mr. Sale), " feems to be to unite the profeffors of the three different veli- " gions, then followed in the populous country of *' Arabia, who, for the moil part, lived' prOmif- je6l of the Ottoman governmenr. In all gfeat towns each mofque has one, and fotns- tinae* two colleges belonging to it : they are called Medrefles, From thefe the principal officers of church and ftate are taken. Aloft of the rnofque^ in the great cities of the empire have public libra- ries ; Conftantinople alone, according to thd Che- valier D'OhiTon, contains 35: and each of them holds from 1000 to 2560 volumes, bound in red* greert or black morocco, inclofed in- a morocco cafe; each library isfurnifhed with a catalogue. The feraglio has two libraries. There is reafon to fdppofe, that, they contain many latin, greek and oriental manufcripts, Europe, at different times, has been nattered with the hope of discover- ing in them the original gofpel of St. Matthew in Hebrew, 78 HOR^ BIB LIC A. Hebrew, all the decades of Livy, and all the books of Diodorus Siculus. This, however, is mere conje6hire. About the year 1726, printing was introduced into -Conftantinople. The Muphti and the principal Oulemas folemnly pronounced it to be a lawful and ufeful inftitution, and a royal edi6t was publiflied authorising Said Eflendi and Bafmadjy Ibrahim, the former, a clerk in the cuf- toms, the latter, an Hungarian renegado, to print any works, except the koran, the hadis, (or oral laws of the prophet), the commentaries on them, and works of jurifprudence. The patentees printed jointly ten different works. Afterwards Bafmadjy Ibrahim printed ten, on his own account, and two great charts, one of the Black, the other of the Cafpian fea. He was a man of talents, and an en- thufiaft in his endeavours to introduce the arts and fciences of Europe among the Turks. He was patronized by the Porte, and was prefented with a military fief, and a penfion of 99 afpars, or half farthings of our money, a day. His death fuf- pended the labors of the Turkim prefs : it was re- vived by an edidl of the Porte in 1784, and was refumed by the publication of an hiftory of the Ottoman empire: that was completed in three volumes, and finimes with the death of Abdul Hamedin 1788. HORJE BIBLIC^E. 79 VIII. WITH refpeft to the extent of the -coun- tries where Mahometifm is profefled : On the north, it has been carried to the point, where the Ouralian ami Altai mountains meet : thence it may be traced, over little Bucharia,-to the fouthernmoft point of Hinduftan : and thence in a fouth-eafterly direction, to Goram, (a fmail iflafid between Ceram and Papua or New Guinea), in which there are not fewer than eight mofques. It is alfo ipread over every country from the Hel- lefpont to the Indus, and from the Arabian to the Perfian Gulph ; it is profefled on each fide of the Nile ; and in the weft of Africa, "the line between the Mahometans and Pagans, according to Mr. Park, extends up the river Senegal, to St. - Jofep'h or Galam, lat. 14. 20; and thence in a waving line, it proceeds to and includes Tombu6loo. . la- the eaft of Africa, it is profefled in part of Mada- gafcar, and the oppofite fhores. The Mahometans have loft Spain; and, on the north, their progrefs has been checked by the propagation of Chriftianity in Siberia; but, -in the middle and lower Ana., it . has always been gaining ground; fo that, fpeaking generally, from the commencement of the Hegira to the prefent time, Mahometanifm has always been on the- en-' creafe. Such go HO KM BIBLIC-dS. Such is the general view of the actual extent of Mahometanifm, it naturally leads to a view of its moft important part, the Ottoman Empire. That is divided into the portion of it, which lies in Afia; that, which lies in Africa, and that, which lies ii> Europe. Turkey in Afia lies between the 2yth and 46th degrees of eaft longitude, and the 28th and 45th of north latitude. It is bounded by the Black fea and Circaffia on the north, by the Red fea, Arabia, aud the Perfian Gulph on the fouth, and by the Archipelago, the Hellefpont and the Propontis on the weft. Turkey in Africa is confined to Egypt; that part of the Ottoman em- pire lies between the 2Oth and 32d degrees of north latitude, and the 2 8th and 36th degrees of eaft longtitude. It is bounded on the north, tby he Mediterranean fea, on the fouth, by Abyffinia, on the eaft, by the Red fea, and on the weft, by the defart of Barca, and by fome unknown parts of Africa. The European part of the Ottoman empire lies between the loth and 41 ft degree of eaft longitude, and between the 36th and ^oth degree of north latitude. It fills the fpace between Ruffia, Poland, and Sclavonia on the north, and the Mediterranean on the fouth ; the Auftrian and Venetian territories, and the Gulph of Venice front it on the weft, the Black fea, the fea of Marmora and the Archipelago, on the eaiU It contains many iflands ; the principal of them are Negropont HOR^E BIBLIC^. 81 J Negropont or the ancient Eubcea, Rhodes, Can- dia, Cyprus, Santorin, Samos, the Cycladesy and a clufter of iilands in the Ionian fea* among}. \vhich is the Kola del Compare, the antient Ithaca.; The prefent condition of this noble and ample- territory, once dignified by fcience and valour, and once the faireft portion of the Chriftiaa . world, is thus defcribed by Sir George Sandys, hi his dedication to his travels : " Large territories ~the con- clofion is obvious. IX. IT remains to make fame mention of the authors from wltofe writings the preceding JJtetts have been compiled. Not a page of them was written till all that M. de Guignes, M. d'Herbelot, and Mr. Gibbon have faid on the fubjefl of it, had been repeatedly cooiidered. The Hijioire Generate fies Huns, &c. by the firft of thefe writers, will be an eternal monument of the depth and extent of his refearches ; but it is lawful to exprefs a wifh, that, for the- information of his common readers, he had accompanied it with a particular account of the authors he had confulted, and his own opinion^ of their character and value : for want of this information, notwithstanding all the refpe& due to M. de Guignes, it is impoflible not to read parts of his work, without fome degree of fcep- ticiim. His valuable effays on various iubjedts of oriental HOR^BIBLICJE. 63 oriental literature in the Memoirs de P Academic d(s Infcrtptwns, are entitled to a high degree of praife. Of d } Herbert's Dictionary there is but one opinion. The merits and defedts of Afr. Gibbon's hi/lory are in no part of his work more difcernible, than in his account of the Saracens. Few of his readers come prepared, with much previous knowledge of the fubjeft, to the perufal of that part of his work, which, to ufe his own. exprefiion, gives an account of the fleeting dy- nafties of the caliphs. There, of courfe, his flyle of allufion, if it may be fo called, was fm- gularly improper ; and, in no other part of his work, his prejudices againft Chriftianity, are more frequently, or more boldly expreffed ; but his confummate knowledge of geography, his general and curious learning, his vigour and ex- quiiite felicity of expremon, occur in every page. In a note, (vol. v. p. 242, n. 55), he obferves, after Voltaire, the refemblance of the nrft Mof- lems and the heroes of the Tliad : between the rapid march of Iflamifm, and the rapid march of French Democracy, the refemblance is not lefs ftriking. In each may be found the fame zeal tp propagate the tenets of their feel, the fame thirft of plunder, the fame ardour of deftruclion, the fame enthufiafm, and the fame patient and adven- turous courage : in each, iraftead of waiting, like the Romans, to fubdue one enemy, before another was provoked, an attack was made, almoft in one G 2 inftant, 8 4 HOR^BIBLIC-ffi. inftant, on the greateft part of the civilized world ; in neither, the diflenfions of the chiefs retarded, for a moment, the progrefs of their foldiers. When we read Abubeker's circular letter, " In the " name of God. To all true believers ; this is to " acquaint you, that I intend to fend the true t{ believers into Syria, to take it from the hands of " the infidels," it is impoflible not to think of the Great Nation, fending forth her Sans-Culottes to plant the tree of liberty. On every fubjeft of geography, the author confulted cFAnville : the fupreme merit of that excellent writer is not too flrongly exprefled by Mr. Gibbon, when he calls him the Incomparable d'Anville ; yet it may be confidently aflerted, that, on fubjecls of antient geography, Cellarius may ftill be ufefully con- fulted ; and that England may juftly be proud of the geographical eminence of Major Rennell; his map of Hinduflan and the memoir which ac- companies it, are invaluable ; his Geography of Herodotus is ftill more curious, and only lefs ufeful, becaufe it illuftrates the antient, not the. modern world. The author has alfo to confefs great geographical obligations to the Hiftorical ' Difqui/ition concerning the Knowledge which the jfnticnts had of India, with which Doflor Robert/on, with fo much honour, clofed his literary career, and to DoSlor Former's Northern Traveh. In antient chronology he generally followed 4rch- bijliop UJIur ; in modern, the Benedidtine authors of BIBLICjE. 85 of the ^ft de verifier les dates, the work of the greateft learning which appeared in the laft cen- tury. In his account of antient Perfia, he availed himfelf of what has been written on the fubjecT:, by Sir William Oufeley and Sir William Jones: and on that, and many other occafions, he confulted the Antient Univerfal Hiftory^ a work of great merit, and perhaps not fufficiently valued : when the troubles in Flanders firft broke out, a tranflation of it into the French language was in contemplation, and gave rife to the Dif- coursfur I'Hiftoire Univerfelle^vQ. 1780, of Abbe Mann ; which, if a new edition of it fhould be thought of, will be found to deferve attention. In his account of Africa, the author found Cheniers Recherchcs Hiftoriqucs fur les Maures very ufeful : in his Ihort account of the irruptions of the Bar- barians into the Roman empire, he found much valuable information comprefled into a narrow fpace, in the Tableau des Revolutions de F Europe dans le moyen age, by M. Kock, Strajburgh, 1 790, 2 vol. 8vo. On the heterodox opinions on the fubjedlofthe Trinity and Incarnation he confulted the Dogmata Theologica of Pctavius^ a work which has extorted the praife of Mr. Gibbon. The author's account of the early ftate of Arabia, and the early part of Mahomet's life, was taken from Niebuhr^ from the Memoire fur Feta- bli(Jement de la religion et de f empire de Mahomet, of M. Brequigny, in the 32d volume of the G 3 Memoires 86 Memoires des Inscriptions, and from a Differta- tion of M* de Btiify, de Pldolcitrie d 'Abraham, avani fa vocation, publifhed with his other Dif- fertations in two o&avo volumes, Paris 1785. On ttafe fubjecis he alfo confulted Aft: Sale, in praife of whom too much cannot be faid ; Velnty and Savory have little more than copied or tranf- lared huti ; and he availed himfelf of Profeffbr While's elegant and eloquent fermons. What is faid on the conquefts made by Mahomet and his companions, is taken from Mr. Ocklcy's Hi/lory of the Saracens; that a perion, of fo much learning, fhould rwve been permitted to languish within the Walls of a prifon, was a difgrace to England, and a general misfortune to the republic of letters. The author's account of the univerfal caliphs, was extracted from Afarigny's Hi/hire des Arab\, SL \vork which anfwered the author's purpofe, but which would not fuffice for a writer, who fliould wilh to enter more fully into the fubjet. The mention of the caliph Welid's order, that the Arabic mould be fubftituted in the place of every other language through the whole territory of die caliphate, led the author to give fome atten- tion to a fubjeft, which opens a new and ample field of difcuffion,- the influence of conqueft on laftguage. Six events in hiftory will be found to deferve the particular confideration of any perfon who ihall engage in it ; the Macedonian, Roman, and Saracen conquefts ; the emigration of the Sclavonian 87 Sclav<3>niasi tribes ; die general ufe of the French language in confequence of the victories of Lewis the i^tfa, and the literary merit of the writers of his reign ; and the probability of the English becom- ing the popular idiom of the whole Weftern he- mifphere. What is faid on the Mahometan dvnafties in Perfia and Egypt is taken from D'Herbelot and Volney ; Mr. Gibbon obferves, we are amufed by Savary, and Jnfh ufited by Vomey ; bat over Volney, Sarary has die advantage of underftand- ing the Arabic original. The Hiftvire deTAfriyte ft d-e fEfpa^nsfcus la domination des Arabis, and the Rcchcrches hiftoriqucs fur les Afaurcs furnifhed the -author with what he has faid on the Maho- metan dynafties in Africa and Spain. The ac- count of the Mahometan oanqueftsin Hinduftan is taken from Colonel Dviv's Hiftory of Hincbtftau, Mr. Qrme's IntroduR'wt to hi* Hijiory of Hin4uftan, and JMajar RfwtWf infroduft'wtt to his Memoir : where the author fowd thele writers differ, he preferred the 1 aft, His .account of the Ottoman empire is chiefly rta'ken from the Abrege Chrwokgique tU J' 'fiiftffa-e Oitonutne, par M. de la Croix. Mr. ^e -Guignes and Mr. Gibbon left him little to .defore on the fubjetls of Gingbiskhan and Timour. On the Crufades, he did not look beyond L'Efprit afs "Gtmfadc^ and Feriot. A good hifto'ry of theai is miich wanted: that part of Mr. Gibbon's hif- tory wJiidU treats of .t]iem, is the worft executed G 4 portion 88 HOR^BIBLIC^E. portion of jiis work. The account of the literary liiftory of the Ottoman empire, is taken from the Abbe Toderinis View of TurkiJJi Literature^ and the Tableau Generals de I* Empire Ottoman of the Chevalier lyQhjJon, a fplendicl and ufeful work. X. T H'E preceding pages may be found to con- tain fome account of the religion of Mahomet, and of the coaquefts made by him and his dif- ciples : the following may be found to give fome notion of the books accounted facred, in the infidel countries conquered by them, and fome particulars refpecling the Edda, the book fuppofed to have been accounted facred by the ancient Scan- dinavians. X. i. - Following -the progrefs of the Mahometan arms in the E aft, we crofs the Perfian Gulph, and reach the country of the ZEND-AVESTA, the fuppofed Bible of the antient Perfians. The religion of the antient Perfians has been difcufTed by many modern writers f profound learning. One of the earlieft works on the fub- jecl, is Lord's Hi/lory of the Per fees, ^to. Lon- don, 1630. Mr. Thomas Stanley's valuable trea- tifcs on the Chaldaic, Perjian^ and Sabian dofirincs, form a part of his Hiftory of Philofophy, and have been printed feparately. The writings of Dr. Pocockc, particularly his Specimen Hiftorice Ara- bum, IBLIC^. 89 bum, and his edition of Abul-Ferajus, abound with much information on the fubjecl. But the moft learned work upon it, which has yet made its appearance, is Dr. Hyde's Hifloria Veterwn Per- farum, publiihed at Oxford, firft in one volume 4to. in 1700, afterwards, with additions, in two volumes 4txx 1767. A concife, but clear view of the fubject, is inferted by Dr. Prideaux, in the 4th book of the firft part of his Connexion of the Hijlory of the Old and Nezo Teftament : it gave rife to a learned correfpondence between him and Mr. Moyle his nephew, published in the fe- cond volume of the works of the latter. AJJe- manh Bibliotheca Orientals, and Brucker's Ffif- toria Philofophie?) throw much light on this, and every other branch of Eaftern literature. In the 25th vol. of the Hiftoire de F Academic Royale des Infcriptions* et Belles Lettres, may be found the firft of the Memoires, which compofe the Abbe Foucher^s Traite Hijlorique de la Religion des Perfcs ; the others appeared in the fubfequent volumes of that work. The year 1755-6 muft be reclamed a new jera in the ftudy of Perfian The- ology. M. Anquetil du Perron, happening to fee a fragment of one of the facred books of the antient Perfians, determined to enrich his country with a tranflation of it. With this defign he em- barked, in that year, for the Eaft Indies : he re- turned to Europe in 1761. The refult of his refearch.es appeared in 177 1, under the title, " Zend- go UOTiJE BIBLIC^ffi. *' T.tnd-Avcfla Guvrare de Zcroaftre, contctiant " Ics Idecs Theologirpus, Phyjitjues ft Morale " de cc Legijlateur; hs Ceremonies du Cuilt Religifux qu'il a ctab'i, tt pluftcurs traites im- << pet-tans rtlatif a foAcienttc Hi/I sire det Per/a : " Tr adult en Francois Jxr faiiginal Ztnd; avec " des Rtir.arqucs ft accompagnji de pkfifwt Traiiis propres a cclaircir Ics Matures, pjti en "font VebJft" ^ vol. qto^ generally bowod in diree. 1 he firft contains an account of his voyage and travels.; il is very interefting. Hi* wort was warmly attacked by Sir William Jwts in his Lettre a M. A * * dii P * * *, dam laqueik /i ccrtipris /' Examcn de fa Traduftim dfs iiw Ahriman was to prevail, till, at the end of them, Onnuzd was to gain the afcendant, and to obtain a complete victory over Ahriman and his powers. To protect the beings, he intended to create, from the attacks of Ahriman, Onnuzd created fix AmfliafyandS) or Celeftial Beings, through whole miniftry he ihould communicate his favours to man ; he alfo created a number of celetlial beings of an inferior degree called Izeds, of whom Mithra, the being of light, whofe habi- tation is between the fuil and the moon, is the moft illuftrious. Next to thefe, he created the Ferouers^ or that part of every created being which partakes of the divinity, anfwering to the wvj which the Greek philosophers called the fuperior or divine part of the foul, in oppofition to the iJ/t/x;T!, or its inferior or terrene part. Ormuzd alfo created the fun, moon, liars, and the four elements. In die mean time Ahriman was not inactive: he created a large number of evil and filthy beings called Dews or Dwes t P erics, Dareujes .and Darvands. H 4 With 104 uS BIBL With them Ahriman attacked Ormuzd, and maintained againft him, a fight of 90 days, at the end of which, Ormuzd pronounced the Honover, or Divine Word, and at the found of it they fled back ta their primaeval darknefs : then Ormuad created thefirji Ox ; it was deftroyed by Ahriman ; from him Kaiomorts^ or the fxrft man, proceeded ; the Dews flew him, a tree fprung out of his feed, from which a man and woman arofe, called Mef- chia and Mefchiane. At firft, they were pure be- ings, and obedient to Ormuzd : but Ahriman was envious of their happinefs : to feduce them, he affiimed the form of a ferpent, prefented them fruit, engaged them in converfation with him, and perfuaded them he was the creator of the univerfe ; they believed in him ; their nature was corrupted, and their corruption infe6ts all their pofterity. Ormuzd fupplies them with force fuflacient to refift the attacks of Ahriman ; at their deceafe, if the good overbalances the evil they have done, they are admitted to a paradife of fpiritual and tem- poral delights ; if their evil actions preponderate, they are condemned to unfpeakable fuffering : but all this is temporal ; at the end of the 12,000 years from the creation of Ormuzd and Ahriman, the harmony of the univerfe will be re-eftablifhed, and mankind reftored to virtue and happinefs. The Morality of the Zend-Avefta is entitled to praife ; purity of word, action, and thought, is repeatedly inculcated. To multiply the human fpecie, H 0~RM B I B-LICJE. 105 fpecies, " increafe its happinefs, and prevent evil, are the general duties inculcated by Zoroafter to his difciples. Agriculture is particularly re- commended them : " He," fays Zoroafter, " who ** fows the 'ground with diligence, acquires a " greater ftock of religious merit, than he could " gain by repeating ten thoufand prayers." On the other hand, too great an attention to gain is reprobated in the ftrongeft terms ; " There is not," fays Zoroafter, " a greater crime than to buy " grain and delay felling it, till it becomes dear, " that it may be fold for a greater price." The difciple of Zoroafter is enjoined to pardon injuries, to honour his parents, to refpect old age, to ob- ferve a general gentlenefs of manners, to practice univerfal benevolence. Fafting and celibacy are forbidden him ; if his wife be not barren, one wife only is allowed him ; a marriage with his coufin-german is recommended to him, as an at particularly pleafing to Heaven. The Religious Ceremonial of the Parfees muft.take up a confiderable portion of their time ; and, on many occurrences both of bufmefs and pleafure, muft inconveniently prefs upon them. The Pri- mitive Word addreffed by Grmuzd to Zoroafter partook of the divine effence ; to read and ftudy it inceflantly, is confidered by them a return due for fo great a favour. 1 he prayers of the Zend- Avefta often begin with an humble confeffion of fin or imperfection : they are addreffed to Ormuzd, the to6 HOR^S BIRLIC^E. the Amfhafpaijds, the Izeds, the Ferouers, *mour.) The Rajah ' of Anbair Ram Sing, from the important fervices ren- " dered by his father the Great Jayfmg, and his own at- " tachment to the Emperor efcaped, if not entirely, at " leaft a great part of that perfecution, which levelled to '' the ground all the Hindou places ofworfhipin the pro- " vinces, and caufed the deftruclion of all the religious ' books which could be found belonging to the Hindous. " In confequence I wrote to a correfpondent at Jaypour, ' ' and foon learnt from him, that the Baids were to be pro- f cured there, but that no copy could be obtained from the " Brehmans without an order or permifilon from Pertab " Sing, HO R^E BIBLIC^E. 117 Dhanur, and St'hapatya ; the firft treats of medicine, and is fuppofed to have been delivered to " Sing, who was then the Rajah of that place, and is the " fame Prince who has f'o lately been engaged in war wi;h " Saindheah and who is a grandlbn of that famous Rajah " Tay Sing (Mirzah Rajah) who built Jaypour clcfe to " Anbair, and was the founder alfo of the famous oblerva- *' tories at Jaypour and Delhy, &c. and the editor of fome " curious aftronomical tables which he gave to the world under " the name of Mohammed Shah then on the throne of Delhy. " Having a fmall knowledge of the Rnjah whom I had feen " a few years before, when he paid his court to Shah A/ut.i, " then encamped in the neighbourhood of Jaypour, I he- " fitated not in applying to him by letter for his permiflion " to have the copy I fo much wanted, and my friend Don " Pedro de Silva a worthy Portugueie phyfician in the fer- "' vice of the Rajah, undertook to deliver it, and to forward ' the application with his felicitations if receflary. " Pertab Sing on reading the ktter, fmiling, afked Don " Pedro, what ufe we Europeans could make of their holy " books, on which he reprefented that it was ufual with us " to collect and confult all kinds of viluable books, of " which we formed in Europe public libraries ; and that " the Baids, though much fought after, could not be met " with any where elle, and that without his permiflion the " Brehmans rofcfed to give a copy : on this the Rajah im- " mediately iflued an order, fuch as we wanted and in the " courfe of a year paying the Brehmen tranfcribers at a certain rate per every hundred AJhlok or ftanza, I obtained <' the books which form the fubjeft of this addrefs, and * which I had fo long wifhed to poflefs. continent antiquam et " arcanam of the Eaft India Company. Mr. Haftings's letter to Mr. Smith then follows! after it, comes a concifc but very in- ftrufctive preface by th tranflator, and then the tranflation, with notes. It is executed in that admirable ftyle of fevere fimplicity, which a confummate tafte alone can reach. From the geperal ignorance of the SiiV'crit language, few are capable of pronouncing on its fidelity : but we have a ftrong teftimony in its favour, in Mr. Halhed's preface to his translation of the Oupnekat, now depotited in the BritHh Mufeum. Mr. Haftings's letter does him the greateft honor ; it is a noble difplay of enlarged and virtuous views for the govern- ment of a great country : the following extract from it is evidence of bJs clafiical tafte and judgment. " Might I, an unlettered man, venture to prefcrihc " bounds to the latitude of critic! I'm, I fliould exclude, in " eftimatrng the merit of fuch production, all rules drawn " from the antient or modern literature of Europe, all re- " ferences to luch fentiments or manners as are become the " ftandards of propriety for opinion and action in cue own " modes of life, and equally all appeals to our revealed ft tenets of religion, and moral duty. I fhould exclude " them, as by no means applicable to the language, fenti- " ments, manners, or morality, appertaining to a fyftem of '* fociety with which we have been for ages unconnected, " and of antiquity preceding even the firft efforts of civiliza- * tion in our own quarter of the globe, which, in refpeit to the general diffufion and common participation of arts " and fciences, may be confidered as one community. " I would exact from every reader the allowance of ob- fcurity, i4 HOR^E BTBLIC^E. '* arcanam feu Theologicam et Phihfophicam doc- " tr'tnam^ e qaatuor facris Indorwn Libris, Rak Beid, ' Djejr Beid, Sam Beid, Arthrban Beid, ex- " ccrptam> ad verbum, et Perjico idiqmate Sanjkre- " ticis vocalulis inlermixto, in Latinum converfum, ' dijjertationibus et annotationibus difficiliora expla- " nantibus illuftratum^ jludio et opera Anquetil du " Perron^ Indicopleufta. Tom. 1 . 4*0. Argentorati etParifm:* A much more intelligible, and, perhaps, a muck abler tranflation of this work, made by Mr. Halhed, through the medium of a Perfian tranflation, *< fcurity, abfurdity, barbarous habits, and a perverted ' morality. Where the reverfe appears, I would have him ' receive it (to ufe a familiar phrafe) as fo much clear gain, " and allow it a merit proportioned to the difappointment of ' a different expectation. .< In effecl, without befpeaking this kind of indulgence, I could hardly venture to perfift in my recommendation of *' this production for public notice. " Many paffages will be found obfeure, many will feem " redundant; others will be found clothed with ornaments * of fancy unfuited to our tafte, and fome elevated to a " track of fublimity into which our habits of judgment will " find it difficult to purfue them ; but few which will fliock " either our religious faith or moral fentiments. Some- " thing too muft be allowed to the fubje6l itfelf, which is " highly metaphyfical, to the extreme difficulty of render- ' ing abftracl terms by others exactly correfponding with " them in another language, to the arbitrary combination of " ideas, in words expreffing unfubftantial qualities, and ' more, to the errors of interpretation." H-O R M B I B L I C J5E. 125 is depoilted in the Biitilh Mufeum. It is obferva- ble that in the Lettres Edlfiantes et Curieufes, Ed. 178.1, it is explicitly aflTerted, ift, that the Vedas were in the hands of the miflionaries : aclly, that a copy of them was in] the king of France's library : 3dly, that there was an Arabic tranflation of them. 13 vol. p. 394. 437. 14 vol. p. 6. 65. Father Pons's Letter, to which the laft of tliefe references are made, defcrves a ferious perufal/ Among the Dhermas or works of law, none are held by the Hindoos in fuch veneration, as the Injlitutes of Menu ; a fyftem of religious and civil duties which the Hindoos firmly believe to have been promulgated by Menu, the fon or grandfon of Brama. A tranflation of it has been lately ' publiflied by Sir William Jones. f Having mentioned this letter to Mr. Wilkin?, that able judge of Sanfcrit literature pronounced it omni exceptions majors it will not fuffer in a comparifon with Sir Wm. Jones's Difcourfes on Hindu Literature. La Porte diverts of Abraham Roger, is^ne of the moft curious works which has yet appeared on the Mythology of the Hindus, and de- ferves to be more generally known. Mr, Maui ice's valuable publications intitlehim to the thanks of all oriental fcholart: by publifhing his tranflation of ihe Mahabharar, Mr. Wilkins will confer on them a veiy great literary favor. The writer begs leave to mention, in this place, his obligations to Mr. Plai>ta, the principal librarian of the Britifli Mufeum, for innumerable fervices rendered him in the courfe of this publication. To a gentleman more ready to oblige, the care of that lirerary treafure could not have been configned : Jicjiti latantur lares, 5. Several ii6 H O R M B I B L I C M. 5. Several attempts have been made to difcove? the a:ra of the firjl foundation of th* Indian empire, and to fettle the different ages of the 'publications ivs have mentioned. The moft fpecious fyftem, on thefe fubjecls, which has yet appeared, is that of Sir William Jones. He traces the foundation of the Indian empire above 3800 years from the prefent time ; the higheft age of the Yajur Veda to 1580 -years before the birth of our Saviour, or roo years before the time of Mofes ; and the higheft ageof the Inftitutesof Menu, to 1280 years before the birth of our Saviour. The opinions of Mr. Freret and Mr. Bailly are nearly the fame : but Sir William Jones admits thefe to be the higheft pomble dates which can be affigned to the works in queftion ; and, in fixing the seras of the Vedas and the Inftitutes of Menu, he does not fpeak of them as exiftiug, at the period he afiigns to them, in the form we now have them ; he confulers them to have then been in a ftate of traditional exiftence. Such is the outline of Sir William Jones's fyftein ; but it is importable not to wim, that the facls upon which, on this and other occafions he builds his premifes, were efta- Wimed with more certainty, and that the conclu- fions he deduces from them were fupported by inferences and arguments lefs nicely fpun. The age of the Puranas is ftill more uncertain ; their pretenfions to high antiquity feem completely overthrown by Mr. Bentley in his Diifertation, in the II O R M B I B L I C M. 127 tlie 6th volume of .the Afiatic Refearches, on the Surya Siddhanta : and his arguments indirectly affect the fuppofed high antiquity of the Vedas. All, who take an interefl in the advancement of ufeful or elegant learning, mud anxioufly wifh that Afiatic literature fliould meet with every fpecies of encouragement. Generally fpeaking, in literature as in commerce, the public is the beft patron : and the adventurer feldom fucceeds fo well, as when he is left to his own exertions : but fome- rimes it happens that particular encouragement is neceffary, and premiums advances and bounties have their ufe. The infant ft ate of Afiatic litera- ture, the fmall number of thole who can devote their time to the ftudy of it, and the difficulty and expenfe attending the acquifition of it, feem to make this one of the cafes in which the public fliould ftimulate the exertion of the individual, by leflen- ing the expenfe and fmoothing the difficulty of his purfuits, and by multiplying the means of his fuccefs. A fum of money, the appropriation of which to fuch a purpofe, would neither be felt in England or Alia, and which would fcarcely be difcernible in an Indian budget, would, if juti- cioufly expended in defraying the charges of fcientific and obferving travellers, in engraving curious and iaflruftive objedls of art, and particu- larly in procuring faithful tranflations of original works of acknowledged value, open to us, in a few years, the choiceft treafures of the caft. Such ia8 HORJE BIBLICT^. Such a meafure would be worthy of the merchant kings, to whom, as the beft managers of it for the public welfare, the Britifh nation exclufively trufts her Afiatic trade. Under their aufpices, the Britifli arms have triumphed in almofl every territory between the Indus and the Ganges, and every fhore of the great Peninfula, has been tri- butary to Britifli commerce. That to deferve well of their country is their earneft wim, we all know ; now wealth and power are feldom fo well employed, as in the encouragement of thofe, whofe labours increafe the knowledge, refine the rafte, or elevate the genius of their countrymen : and if they are defirous of fair fame, they mufk be fenfible that the mofl certain method of obtain- ing it, is to connect their names with great literary inftitutions, and to fecure the gratitude of the artift and the fcholar. X. 3. LEAVING Hinduftan, we muft take a nortli- ca^ernly courfe, to arrive at CHINA, andconfider the feveral books accounted facred in that coun- try. Something (hould be premifed, ift, on the origin and antiquity of its empire ; 2dly, on the geographical notions which the antients entertained of it ; and 3dly, on the rife and progrefs of the intercourfe between it and Europe. I. The origin and antiquity of the empire of China are among the queftions, which have exercifed, in. H O R JE B I B L I C IE. 139 in a particular manner, the ingenuity of the learned. After much difcuffion, five things ap- pear to be fettled, with fome appearance of pre* cifion :- ift, that the moft probable opinion, re- fpe&ing the origin of the Chinefe, is, that China was firffc peopled from* Hinduftan : this is the univerfal belief of the learned of Benares, and is confirmed by a paflage, cited for the purpofe, by Sir William Jones, from the Inftitutes of Menu, a work, which, in a queftion of this nature, is of the very higheft authority ; ad, that the original feat of the Chinefe muft be fought for in Chinfi, the moft north-weftern province of the prefent empire of China ; ^d f that, adopting the fomflritnq chronology, the sera of the Chinefe empire may be fixed, with fome latitude of calculation, at 2,500 years before Chrift ; 4th, that, with the fame latitude, its hiftorical sera may be fixed at 800 years before Chrift ; 5th, that the actual form and extent of the Chinefe government, may be dated from the dynafty of Hane, 206 years before Chrift ; 6th, and that, to repel the invafion of the Huns, the celebrated Wall of China was built about a cen- tury before the acceflion of that dynafty. 2. In refpecT: to its Geography, it already has been obferved, that the geographical knowledge of the Greeks did not extend, in the noith- eaftern parts of Alia, much beyond the Imaus or Caf. The geographical knowledge of the Romans K extended I 3 o HORJE B I B LI C JE. extended much farther ; their Serica regio was a part of the Scythia extra Imaum, and ftretched from the Atyai mountains, over the country of Chami, to Kantcheou in a north-weftern part of the province of Chinfi. Till d'Anville aflerted and eftabliihed a contrary opinion, modern geo- graphers fuppofsd the Sinarum regio, correfponded with China : he has fhown its correfpondence with Cochin China. 3. The antient Roman hiftorians are wholly ftlent on thefubjel of any political relations be- .tween Rome and China ; the indefatigable induftry of M. de Guignes, (Mem. de 1* Academic, Tom. 32, p. 355)) has proved that there was an occa- . iional intercourse between them from the Chinefe writers; and Ptolemy, Ammianus Marcellinus, and other authors, fhow, that a confiderable trade, in the article of filk, was carried on between China and the weftern parts of Afia, and Europe. It was managed by caravans, fome of which took a northern, and others a. fouthern route : the former pafled over the Great Defer t to Kaftigar, where Ptolemy fixes the ftation of the merchants, qui ad Seres profijlfcuntur ; thence, the caravans proceeded to Samarcand, and thence through Perfia to Syria : the whole journey took up 243 days, but a great proportion of the commodity was purchafed, in its paflage, by the merchants of Nifib'is and Armenia. The fouthern route took the caravans through the mountains of Thibet, to the HOR^ BIBLIC^E. 131 the GufczafSt) where they were met by the mer- chants of the weft. The commerce was alfo car- " fied on by fea: the (hips of the Chinefe failed from its caftern ports to Malacca, or to Achem, the Promontory of Sumatra ; and, when that was not the term of the -voyage, they failed on t6 Ceylon, the Taprobane of the Antients, where they were met by the merchants of the Perfian Gulph and the countries adjacent. Such was the nature of the commercial intercourfc between China and Eu- rope, till the reign of the emperor Juftinian, when filkworms were introduced into Europe. From that time the intercourfe between the countries, gradually wore away ; and, at the end of a few- centuries, Europe alrfloft wholly forgot the ex- iftence, and even the name of China. The hif- tory of the introduction of the filk worm into Europe, is one of the moft pleating parts of Mr. Gibbon's work. 4. The firft writer to whom, after that time, we are indebted for an account of China, is Cofmas In- dicopleujies, or the Indian Navigator : he performed his voyage, about the year 522: a valuable extradt of it, was given in French and Greek by Thevenot, (Relations Curieufes,) and the whole of it was publifhed by Montfaucon in his Nova Collefiio Patrum. But the work of Cofmas Indicopleuftes was foon forgotten, and Europe generally remained in ignorance of China, till about the end of the K 2 I tth I 3 * HOR^E ZIEL1CJE. 1 2th century, when 'John Car fin a Polonefe friar, and Rubruquis a French friar, penetrated into it, and, on their return, publifhed accounts of ir. Tn the following century, the travels of Marco Poh> in Tartary and China, made their appear- ance: what he faid of China, was, at firft, thought fabulous; by degrees it was more favour- ably received, and infenfibly obtained general credit. Soon after the Portuguefe doubled the Cape of Good Hope, their mips reached China ; and they obtained leave to fettle at Macao. Several priefts of the order of St. Ignatius, ad- vanced into different parts of the country : their knowledge of the arts and fciences recommended them to the court ; of this circumftance they availed themfelves to propagate the Gofpel; an account of their labours, and their viciflitudes of favour and perfecution, and many curious cir- cumftances refpe<5ting the natural, civil, and re- ligious hiftory of the country, have been pub- lifhed by them in feveral works, particularly their Lettres Edifiantes et Curreufcsy of which Fon- tenelle faid, that he had never read a work which anfwered better to its title. Of the general ac- curacy of thofe letters, and the works of Father Du Halde and Father Gaubil, the author has often heard the late Sir George Staunton fpeak in the higheft terms: his teftimony is certainly of great weight ; and the author avails himfelf with much fatisfa&ion, of this opportunity of men- tioning HOR^E BIBLIC^E, 133 tiohing a gentleman, whofe talents and uncon- querable vigour of mind, rendered his country eflential fervices on many important occafions, and whofe many amiable and eftima'ble qualities, will long remain in the memory of his numerous friends, and are feen by them, with great pleafure, to furvive in his fon. The labours of de Guignes, the Fourmonts and Freret, are well known: an interefting account of the rife and progrefs of Chi- nefe literature in Europe, is prefixed by Bayer, to his Mufcum Sinicum. 5. All the works of literature which the Chi- nefe have compofed are divided by them into four clavTes; ift, that of Kings, or the Sacred Books;- ad, that of Su or Che, or Books of Hiftory; 3d, that of Tfu or Tfe, or Books of Philofophy ; 4th, that of Fele, or Mifcellanies. The Kings, or Sacred Books, anfwer to what we call Theology: they are divided into two clafles ; the firft are five in number ; the Y-King, the Chou-King, the Chi- King, the /-/', and Tchun- tficou. The Y-King oonfifts of horizontal lines, entire or cut, multiplied and combined into flxty- four different forms or pofitions : (hey appear in- volved in impenetrable myftery, but fome writers have affec"led to difcover in them the origin of all beings, the principles of natural hiftory, and the harmony of the univerfe. The Chou-king contained the public annals of the nation : all that remains of it are fragments collected by Confucius; his K 3 objed 134 HOR^ffi BIBLIC^. object ill compiling them, was to form a collection of the precepts and inftrudtions given by princes to their miniflers and fubjedts : a tranflation of it was publifhed by Father Gaubil. The Chi- King is a collection of poems on different fubjedts ; a tranflation of it was made by Father Gaubil, and publifhed by M. de Guignes in 1770. The Li-ki cootaincd the civil and religious ceremonial of the Ghinefe ; all that remains of it, is an extract of it publiihed in the reign of Ham, about 200 years be- fore the Chriftian aera . The Tchun-tfieou is a work of Confucius which contains the annals of 12 kings, who reigned in Lou, his native country. A work, ranked among the facred books, called the Yo- king on the fubjedt of mufic, formerly exifted, but it is wholly loft. Thirty other works are called Kings ; they are held in great refpedr., but are not deemed facred. The fecond clafs of the Sacred Books of the Chinefe confifts of the Su-Chu, or the four Books: they are moral writings compofed by Confucius or his difciples. Many commentaries have been written, and many dictionaries have been compofed, to facili- tate the intelligence of the facred books. " They " contain," fays Father Premare, (Lettres Edif. et Curi. Tom. 21. p. 218. Ed. 1781), " thewhole ' of the Chinefe Religion. In the fundamental " doctrines of them may be found the principles of l< natural law, which the antient Chinefe received *' from HOR^E BIBLIC^. 135 ** from the fons of Noah : they teach the reader " to know and reverence the Supreme Being. " Like the Patriarchs, under the unwritten law, " the emperor is both king and pontiff: to him u it belongs to offer, at certain times of the year, " facrifice for his people ; to him it belongs to " prefcribe ceremonies, to decide on doctrines. " This alone can be called the eftablifhed religion " of China ; all other fe<5ts are considered by " them to be extraneous, falfe, and pernicious, " and are only tolerated. The Chriftian reli- *' gion was declared lawful by a public edicl: ; ia " a fubfequent reign, it was profcribed." The whole of Father Premare's letter deferves to be read : it is entitled to all the praife beftowed by Montefquieu, (Efprit dex Loix, /. 8. ^.31), on the letters of Father Parennin and Father Mairan. X. 4. CONSIDERING the great attention which the learned of Europe have beftowed on the An- tiquities of the North, it may be a matter of fur- prife that Icelandic literature, and particularly the EDDA, has been fo little the fubjecl of their inquiries. Something will be faid in this place, ift, of the Antient Hiftory of Ice- land; 2dly, of the Edda in general; 3dly, of the Edda of Sasmund; 4thly, of the Edda of K 4 Snorro ; 136 HOR^BIBLIC^E. Snorro ; and 5thly, a fhort view will then be given of the Mythology of the Edda. I. It is probable that Iceland was originally peopled from England or Ireland. Of its hif- tory, till it was difcovered by the Norwegians about the middle of the ^th century we know very little. It is faid that the Norwegians found in it fome veftiges of Chriftianity : in 981, a Saxon Bifhop, of the name of Friederick. attempted its converfion ; he was not favourably received, but, after much oppofition, the whole nation was con- verted to the Chriftian faith, about the eleventh century. The Lutheran Religion was introduced into it by Chriftian III. in 1550. In refpect to its literature, the learned of their country divide it into four ftages: according to them, its infancy extended to 1056, the year affigned to the final eftablimment of Chriftianity; from that time till the year mo, when their fchools and feminaries for learning were firft inftituted, its literature is faid by them to have been in its youth ; then its manhood began, and lafted till the I4th century, when it fell to decay. In the fecond and third of thefe periods, while the greateft part of Europe was almoft buried in ignorance, every fpecies of litera- ture was cultivated in Iceland with great fuc- cefs. 2- To the Icelandic Literati we are principally indebted for what we know of the Edda. The learned HOR^B BIB LI CM. 137 learned are not agreed in their opinion, -cirhe-r of the meaning or etymology of that word. In a general fenfe it may be ufed to denote the antient fongs or memorials, either in the Icelandic language, or in any of the antient languages of Scandinavia, which exprefs the mythology of the ' North, concerning Odin and his companions. In a more limited fenfe it is ufed to denote two publications, the Edda of Saermmd and the Edda of Snorro. So far as the writer can perceive, the fcenes of all the antient fongs or memorials, which compofe the Eddas contained in thefe publications, or Scattered in other works, are Danifh, Swcdifh, or Norwegian, and never Icelandic : from this it may be inferred, that the w-hole fyftem of mytho- logy expreffed in them was carried from Scan- dinavia to Iceland : now, as Scandinavia was converted to Chriftianity about the eleventh cen- tury, it feems to follow, that the Eddie mytho- logy muft have been imported into Iceland before that time. It muft be added, that, this is conform- able to the notion given of it by Adam of Bremen, Saxo Grammaticus, and other writers of authority ; we may therefore fafely conclude that the two publications demonftratively fhow that the Edda, in the large fenfe affigncd to that word, contains the antient creed of Scandinavia, before its con- verfion to Chriftianity. 3. Having thus fpoken of the Edda in the moft general fenfe which can be afcribed to that word, we 138 HORJ BIBL1CJE. we have to notice each of the two particular Eddals, which have been mentioned. The firft is the Edda of Samund: he was born in 1056, travelled to Rome in fearch of knowledge, returned to his native country about 1076, and died about 1133. To him the antient Edda, as it is called, in op- pofition to the Edda afterwards publiflied by Snorro, is afcribed. Two of the mod important poems in the Edda of Saemund, the Volufpa and Haavamaal, and a third called Odins Magic, were publifhed by Refenius in feparate pamphlets. The Volufpa is the Oracle or Prophecy of Vola, a Scandinavian Sibyl, and contains the whole My- thology of the Edda ; the Haavamaal> or the f ub- lime difcourfe of Odin, contains, in about 120 ftrophes, certain leffons of morality fuppofed to be pronounced by Odin himfelf. Refenius pub- lifiied an edition of it from another manufcript in 1673: the difference between the editions is con- fiderable. Thefe poems were all we poflefled of the antient Edda, till the, /year 1787, when the whole of the Mythologic part of it, not publimod by Refenius, was printed .at Copenhagen, in one large quarto volume. t . The preface contains an account of the Eddie mythology, and of theManu- fcripts from which the poems are printed ; a curi- ous life of Saemund follows, and then the poems : they are thirteen in number. The ninth of them is the journey of Odin to hell, fo finely tranilated HOR/E BTBLTC^. 139 translated by Mr. Gray: he has omitted to tranf- latc the five firft ftanzis; without them it is im- poflible to comprehend the action of the poem ; and even with them feveral parts of it are very .obfcure. Dreams of a terrible kind had intimated to the god Balder, one of Odin's fons, that he fhould foon die : he communicated them to the other gods ; they were alarmed, and agreed to conjure away the danger with which he was threatened: with that view they fent Odin, and Friga his wife, to exact an oath from every object; in nature, not to hurt Balder. Odin and Friga executed the commifnon. Still Odin was uneafy; he called a new council, and not hearing any thing fatisfactory, he " up rofe with fpeed." Here Mr. Gray's translation of the poem begins : when the prophetefs appears, he afiumes a feigned name and character, and alks her, in the figura- tive Style of the Edda, for whom the ornamented bed, (fuch as according to the Eddie Mythology- awaited martial heroes in the next life, immedi- ately on their deceafe), was then prepared; fhe replies for Balder, and fays his ihield already- hung over the bowl of mead prepared for him ; this was another reward of heroes: then follow the queftions and replies respecting the author and avenger of Balder's death. Odin then inquires who the virgins are, who fo greatly bewail Bal- der's fate; by this queflion, the prophetefs in- ftantly perceives the deception put on her, and that 140 HORJE BISL that (he is talking to the " King of Men :'* but it has been a{ked, how is this intimated by the queftion ? Now in the Edda of Snorro, it is re- lated, that on the death of Balder, Friga his mother, fent Hermod to Hela the goddefs of Death, to perfuade her to give him up ; Hela re- quired that all things animate or inanimate fhould bewail his death : to this general lamentation Odin refers; the prophetefs feels that this is a circum- flance which none but Odin could forefee, and {he therefore breaks out into the exclamation, " King of Men, I know thee now !" This feems to explain the poem fatisfadtorily. The poem as it (lands in Saemund's Edda, and the account of Baider's death in the Edda of Snorro, may be read as curious fpecimens of each. In Ssemund's Edda, the poems are followed by a Dictionary. It is difficult to afcertain the age of thefe poems with precifion: we have ob- ferved that they are of an earlier date than the in- troduction of Chriftianity into Iceland by the Norwegian fettlers ; the arguments of Saemund's editor to prove they are of the Qth century are very ftrong. Such is the antient Edda. It is evident that Saemund was at moft the compiler of it, and his being the compiler of it, is uncertain ; it is by no means clear that we are in poffeffion of all the fables or mythologies originally inferted in the compilation which goes under his name ; and that compilation, H-ORJB BIBLIC^. i 4l compilation, probably, did not contain all the Eddie fables or mythological tales then extant. 4. The modern Edda is unqueftionably the work of Snorro Sturlefon: he was born in 1179, was fupreme judge of Iceland from 1215 to 1222, and died in 1241. His work is an abridgment of Eddie mythology in the form of a dialogue. It was publimed by Refenius in 1665; a new edition, (which the writer has not been able to procure), of part of the modern Edda was pub- lilhed by Goranfon, at Upfal, in 1746. In 1763, Mr. Mallet published his Hiftoire de Dannemarc, in fix volumes odlavo ; the two firft of them ferve as an Introduction : and the fecond of them contains a tranilation of part of the Edda. Under the title of Northern Antiquities, an excellent Engliih tranflation of the two firft volumes of Mr. Mallet's work, with a learned preface and valuable notes, and with Goranfon's Latin verfion of the Edda, was publirtied in 1770. We are princi- pally indebted for it to the learned and polite pen of the Bifhop of Dromore. It has been obferved that Refenius's edition contains, befides the modern Edda, the Volufpa, the Haavamaal, and the Magic of Odin of the antient or Saamund's Edda. In Refenius's edition, the Edda of Snorro it preceded by a dedication in 58 pages to Frederick III. This is followed by a preface of 52 pages, containing an account of the antient and modern Edda, 142 HOR7E BIBLICJE. Edda, and of Sasmund and Snorro ; the modern Edda then follows. Every chapter firft appears in the Icelandic language, in Danifti chara&ers, then in a Danifh, and afterwards in a Latin tranfla- tion. The Danifh is by Stephanius, the Latin by Magnus Uiai ; various readings are noticed from manuicnpis, and the Latin tranflation : neither page nor folio is marked in the book. In Refenius's edition, the Edda contifts of 78 mythologies or fables, in Goranfon's of 26, in Mallet of 33 ; but the divifion of the chapters is arbitrary, the matter, as far as they all proceed together, being the fame. . Refenius's edition, contains three introdu&ory chapters ; the two nrft are very fliort, the third is long, and is omitted both by Goranfon and Mallet; both Goranfon and Mallet ftop with the end of the 50th fable in Refenius's edition. Thus far the works confift of a dialogue between a king of Sweden, called Gylfe, and the gods, at their court at Afgard. Gylfe propofes quef- tions, which fome of the gods anfwer ; they turn on the nature of the gods, and their adventures. The ad part contains an account of a fimilar dialogue between the gods and ^Egaera Danish lord. They receive his vifit with great ceremony ; the god Eragge fits down by him, and narrates their exploits and adventures to him. This pan of the Edda ends with the 62d fable or mythology ; the remainder of the work, except the 68th and 69th BIBLIC^. 143 69th and ^oth divifions, which are of the mytho- logical kind, is hiflorical, with a confiderable in- termixture of fable. The work concludes with an epilogue of no confequence, and probably an inter- polation. It is followed by the Scalda, a kind of poetical dictionary for the ufe of ftudents, with ob- fervations on the language, and its orthography, and on the ftrudlure of the verfes of the poetical works written in it. Such are the Antient and New Eddas of Ssemund and Snorro ; the reputation and importance, in many refpe&s, of the Edda, loudly call for a new and complete edition of them. This is Mr. Pinkerton's obfervation in an ufeful and inftru&ive manufcript on the Edda, which he kindly per- mitted the writer to perufe. 5. Od'm is the hero of the Edda : but the whole of his hiftory is involved in fable and obfcurity. It is a probable conjecture that the tribes, which he led into Scandinavia, came originally from the countries reaching to the Caucafus from the north of Perfia ; and that, by different irruptions, they fucceffively extended their conquefts over the Volga,; the Tanais, and each fide of the Baltic : it alfo is probable, that, at the time of their irrup- tion into the Scandinavian countries, which is referred to by the Edda, the principal feat of their refidence was Afoph, and that Odin was their leader. We are told that, by a variety of heroic a&s of valour and confummate military fkill, he perfuaded J44- II O R rS B I B L I C IE. perfuaded his troops that he poflefTed more than mortal powers ; that he himfelf chcriflied this opinion among them ; and that to confirm them in It, when he found the approach of age and in- firmity, he called an aflembly of the principal of his fabjects, and wounded himfelf in nine mortal places, haftening away, (as he declared with his dying voice), to prepare the feaft of the heroes in the palace of the god of war. The enthufiaftic admiration of his follower^ at firft compared him, then identified him with that deity. This confufion in the ideas of the Scandinavians affets the Edda ; there Odin is fometimes an hero highly gifted and favoured ; fometimes he is the god of war himfelf. As the mythology of the Scandinavians became more refined, the number of their deities increafed. They affigned Odin the wife we have mentioned, Fripa-or Fria, the Scandinavian Venus. Twelve O gods and twelve goddeffes, all of whom were children of Odin, completed the celeftial family: Thor, the god o thunder, was the moft powerful of them ; Balder, the god of grace and eloquence, was the Scandinavian Apollo ; Loke, the god ef cunning, was at once their Momus, their Mercury, and their Akriman : he had fcveral children, and ieveral monflers were born of him, the wolf Fenris, the ferpent Medgard, ajid Hela or Death. The gods have chained up the wolf, thrown the ferpent Into the fea, caft Hela into the lower world. HOR^fe $ IE LI CM. j 4 World, where {he reigns over the dead; and fhut tip Loke in a cavern under the earth, where, by His rage, he Ihakes the world with earthquakes. Each of the twelve goddefles has her feparate and characleriftic powers : feveral virgins are afligned tt> wait on the heroes after their death : every day rhe heroes engage in moft violent battles, mounted' on fiery Heeds, and clothed in refplendent armour ; they give and receive wounds ; but> when the battle' is over, they bathe in a fountain of living 1 water; they are inftantly healed, and* then (it down to a ftimpruous repair, at which Odin prefides,. and' pafs the remaining hours in circling goblets of' mead, and martial fongi- But all this is temporary; the twilight' of tht gods, as it is termed in- the Edda, will arrive, when Loke will break from his confinement, when the Human race, the ftars, the moon- and the: fun will' difappear, the earth fink in the feas, fire confume the fkies, and Odin hirnfelf and his kindred gods will periih. A myfleriaus and all powerful be- ing, who- feems to have nothing in common with Odin, and who, before this grand cataflrophe, is fcarcely difcernible in the Eddie mythology, will then come on the ftage, and renovate the, univerfe. This is the moft curious paflage in the Edcla; it is thus exprefled, in the tranflation wa have mentioned. " There will come a time," fays the. Edda, " a barbarous age, an, age of the fword, when L " iniquity * 4 6 H O R JE E I B L I C JS. "iniquity fhall infeft the earth, when bro- " thers {hah ftain themfelves with brothers " blood, when fons fhali be the murderers of * their fathers, and fathers of their fons, when " inceft and adultery {hall be common, when no *' man fhall fpare his friend. Immediately fhall 44 fucceed a defolaung winter; the fnow (hall fall " from the four corners of. the world, the winds " fliall blow with fury, the whole earth fhall be " rhard bound in ice. Three fuch winters fhall pafs " away, without being foftened by one fummer. " Then fhall fucceed afionifliing prodigies: then " fhall the monfters break their chains and 11 efcape: the great dragon fhall roll himfeli in " the ocean, and with his motions the earth fliall 4t be overflowed: the earth (hall be fhaken; " the trees fhall be torn up by the roots, die " rocks fhall be dafhed againft each other. The " \\ oIf*Fenris, broke loofe from his chains, fhall " open his enormous mouth which reaches from " heaven to earth; the fire fliall fiaih out from " his eyes and noftrils; he fliall devour tlie iun : ** and the great dragon who follows him, fliall " vomit forth upon the waters, and into the air, " great torrents of venom^ In this confufion the " ft-rs fhall fly from their places, the heaven ^ fhall cleave aiimder, and the army of evil " Genii and giants, conducted by Sortur (the '* black) and followed by Luke, fliall break in, ' to attack the gods. But Heimdal, the doqr- '* keeper of the gods, .tifes up ; he founds the ** " clanging H O R M : _B IB L I C Mi 147 " clanging trumpet; the gocb awake and afTem- *' ble ; the great afh tree fhakes its branches;' '* heaven and earth are full of horror and affright. *' The gods fly to arms; die heroes place them* " felves in battle-array. Odin appears armed in " his golden cafque and his refplendent cuirafs; " his vaft fcimetar is in his hands. He attacks " the wolf Fenris ; he is devoured by him, and ** Fenris perifhes at the fame inftant. Thor is " fuffocated in the floods of venom which the " dragon breathes forth as he expires. Loke and " Heimdal mutually kill each other. The fire " confumes every thing, and the flame reaches " up to heaven. But prefently after, a new earth. " fprings forth from the bofom of the waves, <( adorned with green meadows; the fields there " bring forth without culture, calamities are there " unknown, a palace is there raifed more fhining " than the fun, all covered with gold. This is " the place that the juft will inhabit, and enjoy " delights for' evermore. Then the powerful, " the valiant, he 'who governs all things, comes "" forth" from his 'lofty abodes, to reader divine " juftice. He pronounces decrees: he errablifheS " the facred deftinies which fhall endure for ever. " Tliere is an abode remote from the fun, the " gates of which face the north; poifon rains " there through a thoufand openings : this place " is all compofed of the cavcafes of ferpents: '< there run certain torrents, in which are plunged " the ,48 HOR.aJBIBLIC.ffi. " the perjurers, aflaflins, and thofe who fediicc* *' married women. A black, winged dragon flies " inceffantly around, and devours the bodies of " the wretched who are there imprifoned." FINIS. CORRIGENDA. P. 4, line 9, for Defert cf Arabia, read Euphrates. 3, line 8, for Pijbdadian, read Caianian, 14, line ii, for ffeflerti, read Roman. 25 and z6, line i, in the margin, for Before Cbrijl, Jfter Luke Hansard, Printer, Great Turnftile } Linoln's-Inn Fields. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles Thl, book I. DUE on the la.t date stamped below. 3 1158 00721 5055 pit, ^000070359