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TO THE

AMERICAN BIBLICAL REPOSITORY,

FROM THE

FIRST TO THE TWENTY-FOURTH VOLUME,
INCLUSIVE.

JANUARY, 1831--OCTOBER, 1844.

BY THE PRESENT EDITOR,

JOHN HOLMES AGNEW.

NEW-YORK:

PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE OF THE AMERICAN BIBLICAL

REPOSITORY, 194 BROADWAY.

SERIES OF THE VOLUMES, AND DATE OF PUBLICATION.

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Per, Room

205

B47

Index

Aaron, Tomb of, f. s. vol. ii. 779—f. s. vol. iii. 284, 422, 432,
433, 640.

Abbot, Jacob, his Hoary Head, noticed, s. s. vol. i. 258.
Abd-allatif, Biographical Sketch of, f. s. vol. ii. 657—his ac-
count of a famine and pestilence in Egypt-commencement
of the famine, 659-of the pestilence-the inhabitants devour
human flesh, 660-various instances of this-illustration of 2
Kings 6: 24-30, 661-extract from Elmacin to the same ef-
fect, 665-murders and assassinations-immense mortality-
depopulation of the towns and villages, 667-route to Syria
strewed with corpses-sale of free persons, 669-indifference
of the people, 670-state of the Nile in the first year, 671-
events of the second year-scarcity of fowls and animals, 673
-houses deserted, the doors, etc. used as fuel, 674-estimate
of the dead, 675-earthquake, 676-mounds of corpses, 677,
678-state of the Nile, 679.

Abeel, Rev. David, missionary convention at Jerusalem, s. s.
vol. i. 503.

Abel-Remusat, Memoire sur Lao-Tseu-opinion in reference to

the name Jehovah, f. s. vol. iv. 97.

Aben-Ezra, his Rabbinic Commentary, f. s. vol. iii. 14.

Aborigines, the, of America, s. s. vol. vii. 1-no authentic history

of their origin, 1-Scripture account of a dispersion, 2-Pla-

to's Atlantis, 3-Catcott's remarks on Plato's account, 4-W.

Jones's remarks, 5-the probability of Plato's story, 6—the In-

dians the descendants of Ham, and under the curse, 7—their

fate corresponds with this, 8-probable exceptions, 9-Cen-

tral American ruins, 10-how could they have passed from

the eastern to the western continent? 11-light from Scripture, 12-how came the animals here? 14-resemblance of Indians to ancient races, 16-the old world early possessed a

numerous population, 18-general remarks, 22.

Aborigines of the Canadas, f. s. vol. v. 462-number of Indians, 462-improvements, 463-conversion of some of the tribes,

464.

Abulwalid, his Hebrew Lexicon, f. s. vol. iii. 13.

Abusaid, his Samaritan Arabic Version of the Pentateuch, f. s. vol. ii. 721.

Academical Study, the Principle of Emulation as a Stimulus to, by Dr. Lord, s. s. vol. v. 393.

Accents, Greek, nature and application of, f. s. vol. ix. 457-antiquity, nature, application, and present use of the Greek accents, the subject of much discussion, 458-in the ardor of controversy the real questions lost sight of, 459-the most important historical facts in relation to the accounts from Plato and Aristotle, 460-from Plutarch and Demosthenes, 461Aristophanes of Byzantium not the inventor of the accentual signs, 463-the accents existed in the spoken language at a very early period; were probably denoted by distinct written marks as early as the age of Titus; and were more generally used in writing from the 200th year of the Christian era, 464 -the question, How shall we apply the accent in the reciting of the Greek prose and verse? discussed, 465-rules given for reciting Greek poetry, 466—the earliest accentual Greek poem in A. D. 1160, 467-the Greek accentual signs probably denoted the places in a continuous discourse at which the voice rose and fell, whether on the same or different syllables, without regard to the sudden explosion of voice which forms a principal ingredient in our modern system of pronunciation, 469-some practical examples adduced from ancient and modern poetry, 470.

Accents, Hebrew, power of, f. s. vol. iii. 511.
Achillas, f. s. vol. iv. 54.

Active Obedience of Christ, views of the early reformers on, f. s. vol. xii. 420.

Acts 27: 17, on an expression in, s. s. vol. viii. 405—remarks suggested by a passage in Plato, 405-another passage in

Plato, 406-these passages illustrate the meaning of the word izó∞μα, 407—the common sense of the word, 409.

Adams, Hon. John Quincy, his Jubilee of the Constitution, noticed, s. s. vol. ii. 254.

Adams, Rev. Nehemiah, Review of the Memoir of Mrs. Sarah L. Smith, s. s. vol. iii. 194—Letter to Gannett, noticed, s. s. vol. iv. 263-Review of Dr. Beecher's Plea, f. s. vol. vi. 437. Adams, Prof. Samuel, Psycho-physiology, s. s. vol. i. 362— Psycho-physiology in its connection with the Religious Emotions, s. s. vol. vi. 323-Historical Sketch of Medical Philosophy, s. s. vol. xi. 392-The Natural History of Man in hist Spiritual Relations, s. s. vol. xii. 111,353.

Adams, Rev. Thomas, his Exposition of the Second Epistle of Peter, noticed, s. s. vol. iii. 235.

Adams, Rev. William, on the Influence of Piety on Pulpit Eloquence, s. s. vol. vii. 69.

Adams's Peter, Exposition of, noticed, s. s. vol. xii. 484.
Addison, Joseph, Works of, noticed, f. s. vol. xi. 257.

Additional Notices, s. s. vol. v. 507– -S. s. vol. vi. 501--s. s vol. ix. 250-s. s. vol. x. 245—s. s. vol. xi. 237, 472-s. s. vol. xii. 488.

Addresses, Old Humphrey's, noticed, s. s. vol. ix. 249.
Adjeroud, described, f. s. vol. ii. 751.

Adolphe Monod's Lucilla, noticed, f. s. vol. ix. 247.

Advancement of Biblical Knowledge, f. s. vol. xi. 60.

Adventures of Daniel Boone, the Kentucky Rifleman, noticed, s. s. vol. xi. 466.

Aeneze, see Bedouins, f. s. vol. iv. 711.

Africa, intelligence from, f. s. vol. x. 249.

Africa, Missionary labors in Southern, by Robert Moffat, noticed, s. s. vol. ix. 486.

Age of the World, by R. C. Shimeall, noticed, s. s. vol. vii. 263. Age, the Present, some Characteristics of, s. s. vol. iii. 426. Agency, Free, Inquiries respecting, s. s. vol. iii. 455. Agricultural Chemistry, noticed, s. s. vol. vii. 483.

Agnew, Prof. J. H., Translation of C. W. Müller's Explanation of Matt. xxiii. 35, s. s. vol. viii. 136-Considerations on Pantheism, 154-Translation of Brauns's Exposition of Luke xvi. 1-14, s. s. vol. x. 454.

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