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<h3> CHAPTER 11. Concerning Nebuchadnezzar And His Successors And How Their Government Was Dissolved By The Persians; And What Things Befell Daniel In Media; And What Prophecies He Delivered There. </h3>
<p>1. Now when king Nebuchadnezzar had reigned forty-three years, <SPAN href="#link10note-20" name="link10noteref-20" id="link10noteref-20"><small>20</small></SPAN>
he ended his life. He was an active man, and more fortunate than the kings
that were before him. Now Berosus makes mention of his actions in the
third book of his Chaldaic History, where he says thus: "When his father
Nebuchodonosor [Nabopollassar] heard that the governor whom he had set
over Egypt, and the places about Coelesyria and Phoenicia, had revolted
from him, while he was not himself able any longer to undergo the
hardships [of war], he committed to his son Nebuchadnezzar, who was still
but a youth, some parts of his army, and sent them against him. So when
Nebuchadnezzar had given battle, and fought with the rebel, he beat him,
and reduced the country from under his subjection, and made it a branch of
his own kingdom; but about that time it happened that his father
Nebuchodonosor [Nabopollassar] fell ill, and ended his life in the city
Babylon, when he had reigned twenty-one years; <SPAN href="#link10note-21"
name="link10noteref-21" id="link10noteref-21"><small>21</small></SPAN> and
when he was made sensible, as he was in a little time, that his father
Nebuchodonosor [Nabopollassar] was dead, and having settled the affairs of
Egypt, and the other countries, as also those that concerned the captive
Jews, and Phoenicians, and Syrians, and those of the Egyptian nations; and
having committed the conveyance of them to Babylon to certain of his
friends, together with the gross of his army, and the rest of their
ammunition and provisions, he went himself hastily, accompanied with a few
others, over the desert, and came to Babylon. So he took upon him the
management of public affairs, and of the kingdom which had been kept for
him by one that was the principal of the Chaldeans, and he received the
entire dominions of his father, and appointed, that when the captives
came, they should be placed as colonies, in the most proper places of
Babylonia; but then he adorned the temple of Belus, and the rest of the
temples, in a magnificent manner, with the spoils he had taken in the war.
He also added another city to that which was there of old, and rebuilt it,
that such as would besiege it hereafter might no more turn the course of
the river, and thereby attack the city itself. He therefore built three
walls round about the inner city, and three others about that which was
the outer, and this he did with burnt brick. And after he had, after a
becoming manner, walled the city, and adorned its gates gloriously, he
built another palace before his father's palace, but so that they joined
to it; to describe whose vast height and immense riches it would perhaps
be too much for me to attempt; yet as large and lofty as they were, they
were completed in fifteen days. <SPAN href="#link10note-22"
name="link10noteref-22" id="link10noteref-22"><small>22</small></SPAN> He
also erected elevated places for walking, of stone, and made it resemble
mountains, and built it so that it might be planted with all sorts of
trees. He also erected what was called a pensile paradise, because his
wife was desirous to have things like her own country, she having been
bred up in the palaces of Media." Megasthenes also, in his fourth book of
his Accounts of India, makes mention of these things, and thereby
endeavors to show that this king [Nebuchadnezzar] exceeded Hercules in
fortitude, and in the greatness of his actions; for he saith that he
conquered a great part of Libya and Iberia. Diocles also, in the second
book of his Accounts of Persia, mentions this king; as does Philostrates
in his Accounts both of India and of Phoenicia, say, that this king
besieged Tyre thirteen years, while at the same time Ethbaal reigned at
Tyre. These are all the histories that I have met with concerning this
king.</p>
<p>2. But now, after the death of Nebuchadnezzar, Evil-Merodach his son
succeeded in the kingdom, who immediately set Jeconiah at liberty, and
esteemed him among his most intimate friends. He also gave him many
presents, and made him honorable above the rest of the kings that were in
Babylon; for his father had not kept his faith with Jeconiah, when he
voluntarily delivered up himself to him, with his wives and children, and
his whole kindred, for the sake of his country, that it might not be taken
by siege, and utterly destroyed, as we said before. When Evil-Mcrodach was
dead, after a reign of eighteen years, Niglissar his son took the
government, and retained it forty years, and then ended his life; and
after him the succession in the kingdom came to his son Labosordacus, who
continued in it in all but nine months; and when he was dead, it came to
Baltasar, <SPAN href="#link10note-23" name="link10noteref-23" id="link10noteref-23"><small>23</small></SPAN> who by the Babylonians was
called Naboandelus; against him did Cyrus, the king of Persia, and Darius,
the king of Media, make war; and when he was besieged in Babylon, there
happened a wonderful and prodigious vision. He was sat down at supper in a
large room, and there were a great many vessels of silver, such as were
made for royal entertainments, and he had with him his concubines and his
friends; whereupon he came to a resolution, and commanded that those
vessels of God which Nebuchadnezzar had plundered out of Jerusalem, and
had not made use of, but had put them into his own temple, should be
brought out of that temple. He also grew so haughty as to proceed to use
them in the midst of his cups, drinking out of them, and blaspheming
against God. In the mean time, he saw a hand proceed out of the wall, and
writing upon the wall certain syllables; at which sight, being disturbed,
he called the magicians and Chaldeans together, and all that sort of men
that are among these barbarians, and were able to interpret signs and
dreams, that they might explain the writing to him. But when the magicians
said they could discover nothing, nor did understand it, the king was in
great disorder of mind, and under great trouble at this surprising
accident; so he caused it to be proclaimed through all the country, and
promised, that to him who could explain the writing, and give the
signification couched therein, he would give him a golden chain for his
neck, and leave to wear a purple garment, as did the kings of Chaldea, and
would bestow on him the third part of his own dominions. When this
proclamation was made, the magicians ran together more earnestly, and were
very ambitious to find out the importance of the writing, but still
hesitated about it as much as before. Now when the king's grandmother saw
him cast down at this accident, <SPAN href="#link10note-24"
name="link10noteref-24" id="link10noteref-24"><small>24</small></SPAN> she
began to encourage him, and to say, that there was a certain captive who
came from Judea, a Jew by birth, but brought away thence by Nebuchadnezzar
when he had destroyed Jerusalem, whose name was Daniel, a wise man, and
one of great sagacity in finding out what was impossible for others to
discover, and what was known to God alone, who brought to light and
answered such questions to Nebuchadnezzar as no one else was able to
answer when they were consulted. She therefore desired that he would send
for him, and inquire of him concerning the writing, and to condemn the
unskilfulness of those that could not find their meaning, and this,
although what God signified thereby should be of a melancholy nature.</p>
<p>3. When Baltasar heard this, he called for Daniel; and when he had
discoursed to him what he had learned concerning him and his wisdom, and
how a Divine Spirit was with him, and that he alone was fully capable of
finding out what others would never have thought of, he desired him to
declare to him what this writing meant; that if he did so, he would give
him leave to wear purple, and to put a chain of gold about his neck, and
would bestow on him the third part of his dominion, as an honorary reward
for his wisdom, that thereby he might become illustrious to those who saw
him, and who inquired upon what occasion he obtained such honors. But
Daniel desired that he would keep his gifts to himself; for what is the
effect of wisdom and of Divine revelation admits of no gifts, and bestows
its advantages on petitioners freely; but that still he would explain the
writing to him; which denoted that he should soon die, and this because he
had not learnt to honor God, and not to admit things above human nature,
by what punishments his progenitor had undergone for the injuries he had
offered to God; and because he had quite forgotten how Nebuchadnezzar was
removed to feed among wild beasts for his impieties, and did not recover
his former life among men and his kingdom, but upon God's mercy to him,
after many supplications and prayers; who did thereupon praise God all the
days of his life, as one of almighty power, and who takes care of mankind.
[He also put him in mind] how he had greatly blasphemed against God, and
had made use of his vessels amongst his concubines; that therefore God saw
this, and was angry with him, and declared by this writing beforehand what
a sad conclusion of his life he should come to. And he explained the
writing thus: "MANEH. This, if it be expounded in the Greek language, may
signify a Number, because God hath numbered so long a time for thy life,
and for thy government, and that there remains but a small portion. THEKEL
This signifies a weight, and means that God hath weighed thy kingdom in a
balance, and finds it going down already.—PHARES. This also, in the
Greek tongue, denotes a fragment. God will therefore break thy kingdom in
pieces, and divide it among the Medes and Persians."</p>
<p>4. When Daniel had told the king that the writing upon the wall signified
these events, Baltasar was in great sorrow and affliction, as was to be
expected, when the interpretation was so heavy upon him. However, he did
not refuse what he had promised Daniel, although he were become a
foreteller of misfortunes to him, but bestowed it all upon him; as
reasoning thus, that what he was to reward was peculiar to himself, and to
fate, and did not belong to the prophet, but that it was the part of a
good and a just man to give what he had promised, although the events were
of a melancholy nature. Accordingly, the king determined so to do. Now,
after a little while, both himself and the city were taken by Cyrus, the
king of Persia, who fought against him; for it was Baltasar, under whom
Babylon was taken, when he had reigned seventeen years. And this is the
end of the posterity of king Nebuchadnezzar, as history informs us; but
when Babylon was taken by Darius, and when he, with his kinsman Cyrus, had
put an end to the dominion of the Babylonians, he was sixty-two years old.
He was the son of Astyages, and had another name among the Greeks.
Moreover, he took Daniel the prophet, and carried him with him into Media,
and honored him very greatly, and kept him with him; for he was one of the
three presidents whom he set over his three hundred and sixty provinces,
for into so many did Darius part them.</p>
<p>5. However, while Daniel was in so great dignity, and in so great favor
with Darius, and was alone intrusted with every thing by him, a having
somewhat divine in him, he was envied by the rest; for those that see
others in greater honor than themselves with kings envy them; and when
those that were grieved at the great favor Daniel was in with Darius
sought for an occasion against him, he afforded them no occasion at all,
for he was above all the temptations of money, and despised bribery, and
esteemed it a very base thing to take any thing by way of reward, even
when it might be justly given him; he afforded those that envied him not
the least handle for an accusation. So when they could find nothing for
which they might calumniate him to the king, nothing that was shameful or
reproachful, and thereby deprive him of the honor he was in with him, they
sought for some other method whereby they might destroy him. When
therefore they saw that Daniel prayed to God three times a day, they
thought they had gotten an occasion by which they might ruin him; so they
came to Darius and told him that the princes and governors had thought
proper to allow the multitude a relaxation for thirty days, that no one
might offer a petition or prayer either to himself or to the gods, but
that, "he who shall transgress this decree shall be east into the den of
lions, and there perish."</p>
<p>6. Whereupon the king, not being acquainted with their wicked design, nor
suspecting that it was a contrivance of theirs against Daniel, said he was
pleased with this decree of theirs, and he promised to confirm what they
desired; he also published an edict to promulgate to the people that
decree which the princes had made. Accordingly, all the rest took care not
to transgress those injunctions, and rested in quiet; but Daniel had no
regard to them, but, as he was wont, he stood and prayed to God in the
sight of them all; but the princes having met with the occasion they so
earnestly sought to find against Daniel, came presently to the king, and
accused him, that Daniel was the only person that transgressed the decree,
while not one of the rest durst pray to their gods. This discovery they
made, not because of his impiety, but because they had watched him, and
observed him out of envy; for supposing that Darius did thus out of a
greater kindness to him than they expected, and that he was ready to grant
him pardon for this contempt of his injunctions, and envying this very
pardon to Daniel, they did not become more honorable to him, but desired
he might be cast into the den of lions according to the law. So Darius,
hoping that God would deliver him, and that he would undergo nothing that
was terrible by the wild beasts, bid him bear this accident cheerfully.
And when he was cast into the den, he put his seal to the stone that lay
upon the mouth of the den, and went his way, but he passed all the night
without food and without sleep, being in great distress for Daniel; but
when it was day, he got up, and came to the den, and found the seal
entire, which he had left the stone sealed withal; he also opened the
seal, and cried out, and called to Daniel, and asked him if he were alive.
And as soon as he heard the king's voice, and said that he had suffered no
harm, the king gave order that he should be drawn up out of the den. Now
when his enemies saw that Daniel had suffered nothing which was terrible,
they would not own that he was preserved by God, and by his providence;
but they said that the lions had been filled full with food, and on that
account it was, as they supposed, that the lions would not touch Daniel,
nor come to him; and this they alleged to the king. But the king, out of
an abhorrence of their wickedness, gave order that they should throw in a
great deal of flesh to the lions; and when they had filled themselves, he
gave further order that Daniel's enemies should be cast into the den, that
he might learn whether the lions, now they were full, would touch them or
not. And it appeared plain to Darius, after the princes had been cast to
the wild beasts, that it was God who preserved Daniel <SPAN href="#link10note-25" name="link10noteref-25" id="link10noteref-25"><small>25</small></SPAN>
for the lions spared none of them, but tore them all to pieces, as if they
had been very hungry, and wanted food. I suppose therefore it was not
their hunger, which had been a little before satisfied with abundance of
flesh, but the wickedness of these men, that provoked them [to destroy the
princes]; for if it so please God, that wickedness might, by even those
irrational creatures, be esteemed a plain foundation for their punishment.</p>
<p>7. When therefore those that had intended thus to destroy Daniel by
treachery were themselves destroyed, king Darius sent [letters] over all
the country, and praised that God whom Daniel worshipped, and said that he
was the only true God, and had all power. He had also Daniel in very great
esteem, and made him the principal of his friends. Now when Daniel was
become so illustrious and famous, on account of the opinion men had that
he was beloved of God, he built a tower at Ecbatana, in Media: it was a
most elegant building, and wonderfully made, and it is still remaining,
and preserved to this day; and to such as see it, it appears to have been
lately built, and to have been no older than that very day when any one
looks upon it, it is so fresh <SPAN href="#link10note-26"
name="link10noteref-26" id="link10noteref-26"><small>26</small></SPAN>
flourishing, and beautiful, and no way grown old in so long time; for
buildings suffer the same as men do, they grow old as well as they, and by
numbers of years their strength is dissolved, and their beauty withered.
Now they bury the kings of Media, of Persia, and Parthia in this tower to
this day, and he who was entrusted with the care of it was a Jewish
priest; which thing is also observed to this day. But it is fit to give an
account of what this man did, which is most admirable to hear, for he was
so happy as to have strange revelations made to him, and those as to one
of the greatest of the prophets, insomuch, that while he was alive he had
the esteem and applause both of the kings and of the multitude; and now he
is dead, he retains a remembrance that will never fail, for the several
books that he wrote and left behind him are still read by us till this
time; and from them we believe that Daniel conversed with God; for he did
not only prophesy of future events, as did the other prophets, but he also
determined the time of their accomplishment. And while prophets used to
foretell misfortunes, and on that account were disagreeable both to the
kings and to the multitude, Daniel was to them a prophet of good things,
and this to such a degree, that by the agreeable nature of his
predictions, he procured the goodwill of all men; and by the
accomplishment of them, he procured the belief of their truth, and the
opinion of [a sort of] divinity for himself, among the multitude. He also
wrote and left behind him what made manifest the accuracy and undeniable
veracity of his predictions; for he saith, that when he was in Susa, the
metropolis of Persia, and went out into the field with his companions,
there was, on the sudden, a motion and concussion of the earth, and that
he was left alone by himself, his friends fleeing away from him, and that
he was disturbed, and fell on his face, and on his two hands, and that a
certain person touched him, and, at the same time, bid him rise, and see
what would befall his countrymen after many generations. He also related,
that when he stood up, he was shown a great rain, with many horns growing
out of his head, and that the last was higher than the rest: that after
this he looked to the west, and saw a he-goat carried through the air from
that quarter; that he rushed upon the ram with violence, and smote him
twice with his horns, and overthrew him to the ground, and trampled upon
him: that afterward he saw a very great horn growing out of the head of
the he-goat, and that when it was broken off, four horns grew up that were
exposed to each of the four winds, and he wrote that out of them arose
another lesser horn, which, as he said, waxed great; and that God showed
to him that it should fight against his nation, and take their city by
force, and bring the temple worship to confusion, and forbid the
sacrifices to be offered for one thousand two hundred and ninety-six days.
Daniel wrote that he saw these visions in the Plain of Susa; and he hath
informed us that God interpreted the appearance of this vision after the
following manner: He said that the ram signified the kingdoms of the Medes
and Persians, and the horns those kings that were to reign in them; and
that the last horn signified the last king, and that he should exceed all
the kings in riches and glory: that the he-goat signified that one should
come and reign from the Greeks, who should twice fight with the Persian,
and overcome him in battle, and should receive his entire dominion: that
by the great horn which sprang out of the forehead of the he-goat was
meant the first king; and that the springing up of four horns upon its
falling off, and the conversion of every one of them to the four quarters
of the earth, signified the successors that should arise after the death
of the first king, and the partition of the kingdom among them, and that
they should be neither his children, nor of his kindred, that should reign
over the habitable earth for many years; and that from among them there
should arise a certain king that should overcome our nation and their
laws, and should take away their political government, and should spoil
the temple, and forbid the sacrifices to be offered for three years' time.
And indeed it so came to pass, that our nation suffered these things under
Antiochus Epiphanes, according to Daniel's vision, and what he wrote many
years before they came to pass. In the very same manner Daniel also wrote
concerning the Roman government, and that our country should be made
desolate by them. All these things did this man leave in writing, as God
had showed them to him, insomuch that such as read his prophecies, and see
how they have been fulfilled, would wonder at the honor wherewith God
honored Daniel; and may thence discover how the Epicureans are in an
error, who cast Providence out of human life, and do not believe that God
takes care of the affairs of the world, nor that the universe is governed
and continued in being by that blessed and immortal nature, but say that
the world is carried along of its own accord, without a ruler and a
curator; which, were it destitute of a guide to conduct it, as they
imagine, it would be like ships without pilots, which we see drowned by
the winds, or like chariots without drivers, which are overturned; so
would the world be dashed to pieces by its being carried without a
Providence, and so perish, and come to nought. So that, by the
forementioned predictions of Daniel, those men seem to me very much to err
from the truth, who determine that God exercises no providence over human
affairs; for if that were the case, that the world went on by mechanical
necessity, we should not see that all things would come to pass according
to his prophecy. Now as to myself, I have so described these matters as I
have found them and read them; but if any one is inclined to another
opinion about them, let him enjoy his different sentiments without any
blame from me.</p>
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<h3> FOOTNOTES </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-1" id="link10note-1">
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<p class="foot">
1 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-1">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This title of great king,
both in our Bibles, 2 Kings 18:19; Isaiah 36:4, and here in Josephus, is
the very same that Herodotus gives this Sennacherib, as Spanheim takes
notice on this place.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-2" id="link10note-2">
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<p class="foot">
2 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-2">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ What Josephus says here,
how Isaiah the prophet assured Hezekiah that "at this time he should not
be besieged by the king of Assyria; that for the future he might be secure
of being not at all disturbed by him; and that [afterward] the people
might go on peaceably, and without fear, with their husbandry and other
affairs," is more distinct in our other copies, both of the Kings and of
Isaiah, and deserves very great consideration. The words are these: "This
shall be a sign unto thee, Ye shall eat this year such as groweth of
itself, and the second year that which springeth of the same; and in the
third year sow ye, and reap, and plant vineyards, and eat the fruit
thereof," 2 Kings 19:29; Isaiah 37:30; which seem to me plainly to design
a Sabbatic year, a year of jubilee next after it, and the succeeding usual
labors and fruits of them on the third and following years.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-3" id="link10note-3">
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<p class="foot">
3 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-3">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ That this terrible
calamity of the slaughter of the 185,000 Assyrians is here delivered in
the words of Berosus the Chaldean, and that it was certainly and
frequently foretold by the Jewish prophets, and that it was certainly and
undeniably accomplished, see Authent. Rec. part II. p. 858. We are here to
take notice, that these two sons of Sennacherib, that ran away into
Armenia, became the heads of two famous families there, the Arzerunii and
the Genunii; of which see the particular histories in Moses Chorenensis,
p. 60.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-4" id="link10note-4">
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<p class="foot">
4 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-4">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Josephus, and all our
copies, place the sickness of Hezekiah after the destruction of
Sennacherib's army, because it appears to have been after his first
assault, as he was going into Arabia and Egypt, where he pushed his
conquests as far as they would go, and in order to despatch his story
altogether; yet does no copy but this of Josephus say it was after that
destruction, but only that it happened in those days, or about that time
of Hezekiah's life. Nor will the fifteen years' prolongation of his life
after his sickness, allow that sickness to have been later than the former
part of the fifteenth year of his reign, since chronology does not allow
him in all above twenty-nine years and a few months; whereas the first
assault of Sennacherib was on the fourteenth year of Hezekiah, but the
destruction of Sennacherib's army was not till his eighteenth year.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-5" id="link10note-5">
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<p class="foot">
5 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-5">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ As to this regress of the
shadow, either upon a sun-dial, or the steps of the royal palace built by
Ahaz, whether it were physically done by the real miraculous revolution of
the earth in its diurnal motion backward from east to west for a while,
and its return again to its old natural revolution from west to east; or
whether it were not apparent only, and performed by an aerial phosphorus,
which imitated the sun's motion backward, while a cloud hid the real sun;
cannot now be determined. Philosophers and astronomers will naturally
incline to the latter hypothesis. However, it must be noted, that Josephus
seems to have understood it otherwise than we generally do, that the
shadow was accelerated as much at first forward as it was made to go
backward afterward, and so the day was neither longer nor shorter than
usual; which, it must be confessed agrees best of all to astronomy, whose
eclipses, older than the time were observed at the same times of the day
as if this miracle had never happened. After all, this wonderful signal
was not, it seems, peculiar to Judea, but either seen, or at least heard
of, at Babylon also, as appears by 2 Chronicles 32:31, where we learn that
the Babylonian ambassadors were sent to Hezekiah, among other things, to
inquire of the wonder that was done in the land.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-6" id="link10note-6">
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<p class="foot">
6 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-6">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This expression of
Josephus, that the Medes, upon this destruction of the Assyrian army,
"overthrew" the Assyrian empire, seems to be too strong; for although they
immediately cast off the Assrian yoke, and set up Deioces, a king of their
own, yet it was some time before the Medes and Babylonians overthrew
Nineveh, and some generations ere the Medes and Persians under Cyaxares
and Cyrus overthrew the Assyrian or Babylonian empire, and took Babylon.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-7" id="link10note-7">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
7 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-7">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ It is hard to reconcile
the account in the Second Book of Kings [Footnote ch. 23:11: with this
account in Josephus, and to translate this passage truly in Josephus,
whose copies are supposed to be here imperfect. However, the general sense
of both seems to be this: That there were certain chariots, with their
horses, dedicated to the idol of the sun, or to Moloch; which idol might
be carried about in procession, and worshipped by the people; which
chariots were now "taken away," as Josephus says, or, as the Book of Kings
says, "burnt with fire, by Josiah."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-8" id="link10note-8">
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<p class="foot">
8 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-8">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This is a remarkable
passage of chronology in Josephus, that about the latter end of the reign
of Josiah, the Medes and Babylonians overthrew the empire of the
Assyrians; or, in the words of Tobit's continuator, that "before Tobias
died, he heard of the destruction of Nineveh, which was taken by
Nebuchodonosor the Babylonian, and Assuerus the Mede," Tob. 14:15. See
Dean Prideaux's Connexion, at the year 612.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-9" id="link10note-9">
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<p class="foot">
9 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-9">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This battle is justly
esteemed the very same that Herodotus [B. II. sect. 156: mentions, when he
says, that "Necao joined battle with the Syrians [or Jews] at Magdolum,
[Megiddo,] and beat them," as Dr. Hudson here observes.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-10" id="link10note-10">
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<p class="foot">
10 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-10">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Whether Josephus, from
2 Chronicles 35:25, here means the book of the Lamentations of Jeremiah,
still extant, which chiefly belongs to the destruction of Jerusalem under
Nebuchadnezzar, or to any other like melancholy poem now lost, but extant
in the days of Josephus, belonging peculiarly to Josiah, cannot now be
determined.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-11" id="link10note-11">
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<p class="foot">
11 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-11">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This ancient city
Hamath, which is joined with Arpad, or Aradus, and with Damascus, 2 Kings
18:34; Isaiah 36:19; Jeremiah 49:23, cities of Syria and Phoenicia, near
the borders of Judea, was also itself evidently near the same borders,
though long ago utterly destroyed.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-12" id="link10note-12">
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<p class="foot">
12 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-12">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Josephus says here that
Jeremiah prophesied not only of the return of the Jews from the Babylonian
captivity, and this under the Persians and Medes, as in our other copies;
but of cause they did not both say the same thing as to this circumstance,
he disbelieved what they both appeared to agree in, and condemned them as
not speaking truth therein, although all the things foretold him did come
to pass according to their prophecies, as we shall show upon a fitter
opportunity their rebuilding the temple, and even the city Jerusalem,
which do not appear in our copies under his name. See the note on Antiq.
B. XI. ch. 1. sect. 3.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-13" id="link10note-13">
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<p class="foot">
13 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-13">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This observation of
Josephus about the seeming disagreement of Jeremiah, ch. 32:4, and 34:3,
and Ezekiel 12:13, but real agreement at last, concerning the fate of
Zedekiah, is very true and very remarkable. See ch. 7. sect. 2. Nor is it
at all unlikely that the courtiers and false prophets might make use of
this seeming contradiction to dissuade Zedekiah from believing either of
those prophets, as Josephus here intimates he was dissuaded thereby.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-14" id="link10note-14">
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<p class="foot">
14 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-14">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ I have here inserted in
brackets this high priest Azarias, though he be omitted in all Josephus's
copies, out of the Jewish chronicle, Seder Olam, of how little authority
soever I generally esteem such late Rabbinical historians, because we know
from Josephus himself, that the number of the high priests belonging to
this interval was eighteen, Antiq. B. XX. ch. 10., whereas his copies have
here but seventeen. Of this character of Baruch, the son of Neriah, and
the genuineness of his book, that stands now in our Apocrypha, and that it
is really a canonical book, and an appendix to Jeremiah, see Authent. Rec.
Part I. p. 1—11.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-15" id="link10note-15">
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<p class="foot">
15 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-15">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Herodotus says, this
king of Egypt [Pharaoh Hophra, or Apries] was slain by the Egyptians, as
Jeremiah foretold his slaughter by his enemies, Jeremiah 44:29, 30, and
that as a sign of the destruction of Egypt [by Nebuchadnezzar]. Josephus
says, this king was slain by Nebuchadnezzar himself.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-16" id="link10note-16">
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<p class="foot">
16 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-16">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ We see here that Judea
was left in a manner desolate after the captivity of the two tribes and
was not I with foreign colonies, perhaps as an indication of Providence
that the Jews were to repeople it without opposition themselves. I also
esteem the latter and present desolate condition of the same country,
without being repeopled by foreign colonies, to be a like indication, that
the same Jews are hereafter to repeople it again themselves, at their so
long expected future restoration.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-17" id="link10note-17">
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<p class="foot">
17 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-17">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ That Daniel was made
one of these eunuchs of which Isaiah prophesied, Isaiah 39:7, and the
three children his companions also, seems to me plain, both here in
Josephus, and in our copies of Daniel, Daniel 1:3, 6-11, 18, although it
must be granted that some married persons, that had children, were
sometimes called eunuchs, in a general acceptation for courtiers, on
account that so many of the ancient courtiers were real eunuchs. See
Genesis 39:1.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-18" id="link10note-18">
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<p class="foot">
18 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-18">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Of this most remarkable
passage in Josephus concerning the "stone cut out of the mountain, and
destroying the image," which he would not explain, but intimated to be a
prophecy of futurity, and probably not safe for him to explain, as
belonging to the destruction of the Roman empire by Jesus Christ, the true
Messiah of the Jews, take the words of Hayercamp, ch. 10. sect. 4: "Nor is
this to be wondered at, that he would not now meddle with things future,
for he had no mind to provoke the Romans, by speaking of the destruction
of that city which they called the Eternal City."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-19" id="link10note-19">
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<p class="foot">
19 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-19">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Since Josephus here
explains the seven prophetic times which were to pass over Nebuchadnezzar
[Daniel 4:16: to be seven years, we thence learn how he most probably must
have understood those other parallel phrases, of "a time, times, and a
half," Antiq. B. VII. ch. 25., of so many prophetic years also, though he
withal lets us know, by his hint at the interpretation of the seventy
weeks, as belonging to the fourth monarchy, and the destruction of
Jerusalem by the Romans in the days of Josephus, ch. 2. sect. 7, that he
did not think those years to be bare years, but rather days for years; by
which reckoning, and by which alone, could seventy weeks, or four hundred
and ninety days, reach to the age of Josephus. But as to the truth of
those seven years' banishment of Nebuchadnezzar from men, and his living
so long among the beasts, the very small remains we have any where else of
this Nebuchadnezzar prevent our expectation of any other full account of
it. So far we knew by Ptolemy's canon, a contemporary record, as well as
by Josephus presently, that he reigned in all forty-three years, that is,
eight years after we meet with any account of his actions; one of the last
of which was the thirteen years' siege of Tyre, Antiq. B. XI. ch. 11.,
where yet the Old Latin has but three years and ten months: yet were his
actions before so remarkable, both in sacred and profane authors, that a
vacuity of eight years at the least, at the latter end of his reign, must
be allowed to agree very well with Daniel's accounts; that after a seven
years' brutal life, he might return to his reason, and to the exercise of
his royal authority, for one whole year at least before his death.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-20" id="link10note-20">
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<p class="foot">
20 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-20">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These forty-three years
for the duration of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar are, as I have just now
observed, the very same number in Ptolemy's canon. Moses Chorenensis does
also confirm this captivity of the Jews under Nebuchadnezzar, and adds,
what is very remarkable, that sale of those Jews that were carried by him
into captivity got away into Armenia, and raised the great family of the
Bagratide there.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-21" id="link10note-21">
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<p class="foot">
21 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-21">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These twenty-one years
here ascribed to one named Naboulassar, in the first book against Apion,
or to Nabopollassar, the father of the great Nebuchadnezzar, are also the
very same with those given him in Ptolemy's canon. And note here, that
what Dr. Prideaux says, at the year, that Nebuchadnezzar must have been a
common name of other kings of Babylon, besides the great Nebuchadnezzar
himself is a groundless mistake of some modern chronologers rely, and
destitute of all proper original authority.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-22" id="link10note-22">
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<p class="foot">
22 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-22">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These fifteen days for
finishing such vast buildings at Babylon, in Josephus's copy of Berosus,
would seem too absurd to be supposed to be the true number, were it not
for the same testimony extant also in the first book against Apion, sect.
19, with the same number. It thence indeed appears that Josephus's copy of
Berosus had this small number, but that it is the true number I still
doubt. Josephus assures us, that the walls of so much a smaller city as
Jerusalem were two years and four months in building by Nehemiah, who yet
hastened the work all he could, Antiq. B. XI. ch. 5. sect. 8. I should
think one hundred and fifteen days, or a year and fifteen days, much more
proportionable to so great a work.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-23" id="link10note-23">
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<p class="foot">
23 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-23">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ It is here remarkable
that Josephus, without the knowledge of Ptolemy's canon, should call the
same king whom he himself here [Bar. i. 11, and Daniel 5:1, 2, 9, 12, 22,
29, 39: styles Beltazar, or Belshazzar, from the Babylonian god Bel,
Naboandelus also; and in the first book against Apion, sect. 19, vol.
iii., from the same citation out of Berosus, Nabonnedon, from the
Babylonian god Nabo or Nebo. This last is not remote from the original
pronunciation itself in Ptolemy's canon, Nabonadius; for both the place of
this king in that canon, as the last of the Assyrian or Babylonian kings,
and the number of years of his reign, seventeen, the same in both
demonstrate that it is one and the same king that is meant by them all. It
is also worth noting, that Josephus knew that Darius, the partner of
Cyrus, was the son of Astyages, and was called by another name among the
Greeks, though it does not appear he knew what that name was, as having
never seen the best history of this period, which is Xenophon's. But then
what Josephus's present copies say presently, sect. 4, that it was only
within no long time after the hand-writing on the wall that Baltasar was
slain, does not so well agree with our copies of Daniel, which say it was
the same night, Daniel 5:30.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-24" id="link10note-24">
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<p class="foot">
24 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-24">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This grandmother, or
mother of Baltasar, the queen dowager of Babylon, [for she is
distinguished from his queen, Daniel 5:10, 13,] seems to have been the
famous Nitocris, who fortified Babylon against the Medes and Persians,
and, in all probability governed under Baltasar, who seems to be a weak
and effeminate prince.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-25" id="link10note-25">
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<p class="foot">
25 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-25">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ It is no way improbable
that Daniel's enemies might suggest this reason to the king why the lions
did not meddle with him and that they might suspect the king's kindness to
Daniel had procured these lions to be so filled beforehand, and that
thence it was that he encouraged Daniel to submit to this experiment, in
hopes of coming off safe; and that this was the true reason of making so
terrible an experiment upon those his enemies, and all their families,
Daniel 6:21, though our other copies do not directly take notice of it.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link10note-26" id="link10note-26">
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<p class="foot">
26 (<SPAN href="#link10noteref-26">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ What Josephus here
says, that the stones of the sepulchers of the kings of Persia at this
tower, or those perhaps of the same sort that are now commonly called the
ruins of Persepolis, continued so entire and unaltered in his days, as if
they were lately put there, "I [says Reland] here can show to be true, as
to those stones of the Persian mansoleum, which Com. Brunius brake off and
gave me." He ascribed this to the hardness of the stones, which scarcely
yields to iron tools, and proves frequently too hard for cutting by the
chisel, but oftentimes breaks it to pieces.]</p>
<p><br/></p>
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