Septuagint, Vol. i. 42, 46, 64. Wakefield, Vol. i. 55. Walker, Rev. Thomas, Dundo- Rev. Robert, Edin. burgh, i. 44.-ï. 60. i. 8, 31.-ii. 9, 54, 60. Watts, Dr Isaac, i. 47.-. 50, 86. Wells, Dr Edward, Rector of West, Esq. Gilbert, ïi. 23, 33. -ï. 60. Westminster Assembly, i. 44. Wetstein, i. 63. Mathematics, Cambridge, i. Whitby, Dr Daniel, i. 4, 8, 14, 15, 31, 32, 43, 46, 52, 61, 25, 26, 27, 29, 31, 37, 40, Wilberforce, William, M. P. i. 20, 53. Wilkins, Dr John, Bishop of 58,71.-ii. 4, 44, 58, 77,90. Willison, Rev. John, Dundee, President of the College of 52.-ü. 8, 35. 42, 44, 51, 59, 67, 73,-i. 3, 7, 24, 47, 49, 55, 58, 60, 61, 66, 73, 74, 75, 76, 79, Wolfius, i. 22. THE EXD. ERRATA. Vol. I. גבעית read נבעות foot , Page xii, middle, for Pages 291-392. read Pages 291-322. 8, line 12, for Possevin read Possevino. John xii. 43. , ; , , 7, and 8, for Greisbache read Griesbach. מנחת read מגחת foot , - 381, Vol. II. 48, 10, after love add 2 Cor. v. 20. 27, for Sazomen read Sozomenus. 22, for Janna read Janua. 605, Seneca, an eminent Stoic philosopher, born at Corduba near the commencement of the Christian era: He was distinguished at once as an orator, philosopher, poet, and historian. He put himself to death in the year 65, by opening his veins at the command of Nero. Diss. viii. 93. xiii. 21. xvi. 27. Silvester I. a Bishop of Rome, who was elected 314, and held the pontificate nearly twenty-two years. xvi. 10. Simeon, the son of Jochai, a celebrated man among the Jews in the 2d Century, who wrote Sohar, being a cabbalistic explanation of the Pentateuch, and a book De Muis varia sacra. X. 10. Sixtus of SIENNA, a city in Tuscany, a converted Jew, and a Dominican, who died 1569. He wrote a book entitled Bibliotheca Sancta. i. 5. SMAlcius, a leader among the Socinians. vi. 21. Socinus, Faustus, or, in the vernacular language, Soccini Fausto, the proper founder of the sect of the Socinians, who was born 1539, and died 1604. He was early embued with the sentiments of his uncle Lelio, and discovered great zeal in the defence and propagation of his tenets. He is the author of the Racovian Catechism ; and his works form collectively two volumes folio. iv. 14, 21. viii. 44. ix. 15. xii. 19. xiv. 12, 13. xv. 8. xxi. 7. xxvi. 34. Socrates, the most eminent of the Grecian moralists, born at a village near Athens B. C. 469, and compelled to drink poison in his 70th year. xxvi. 80. Socrates, surnamed the Scholastic, a native of Constantinople, an exact and judicious Historian in the 5th Century. His Ecclesiastical History commences from the year 309, where that of Eusebius terminates, and comes down to 440. xii. 15. xvi. 9. xviii. 7. xx. 14. Sophocles, the most eminent of the tragic Poets of Greece, born B. C. 497. viii. 46. Sozomenus, Hermias, an Ecclesiastical Historian of the 5th Century. He frequented the bar as a pleader at Constantinople. His History of the Church consists of nine books, and extends from the year 324 to 439. xvi. 9, 33. xx. 14. Spondanus, HENRY DE SPONDE, a French Prelate, author of an abridgment and continuation of the annals of Baronius, in which he brings down the history to 1640. He was born 1568. and died 1643. xvi. 16. STRADA, FAMIANO, a learned Jesuit in the 17th Century, Professor of eloquence in the Roman college. He was born at Rome |