Page:History of Art in Sardinia, Judæa, Syria and Asia Minor Vol 2.djvu/311

 Index. 293 Siculi, i. 18. Siloam, pool of, aqueduct, 147, 71. i, 2, 3 ; monolith tomb, i. 275-280. Siloh, shiloh, i. 289. Silver among the Hittites, ii. 268;/. Sinai, Jehovah dwells on Mount Sinai, i. 124, 125. Sinis, i. 45. Sinjerli, ruins of, ii. 43-47, 75. Sinope, mentioned by Herodotus in relation to Pterium, ii. 103. Sipylus, ii. 234. Sion, Zion, what the name implies in thj present day, i. 146-149 ; as against olden times, i. 146-149. Skene, identifies the ruins of Jerabis, ii. 6, 7. Small figures of men or animals intro- duced in cyHnders to fill up a bare corner, ii. 247. Smend, commentary of, upon the text of Ezekiel, i, 193-195, 204, n. 2. Smith (the late George) was the first to perceive the interest which excavations at Jerabis (Carchemish) would result in, ii. 5, 7. Sokolowski (Maryan), drawings of Eflatoun by, ii. 213-221;/. Solomon, character and policy of, i. 130- 132; works on Moriah, i. 154, 179; what portions of the temple are as- signed to him in Kings and Chronicles, i- 177, 195 ; palace of, i. 309-319 ; his relationship with the Hittites, i. 129, 130; ii. 16, 17. Sorlin-Dorigny, ii. 251 ; objects pre- sented to the Louvre by, ii. 8, 9. Spano, collection of, i. 14, n. i, 2. Spear in Sardinia, i. 74; among the Hit- tites, ii. 25, 168, 271 ; Karabel, ii. 228, 229, 233. Specchie, i. 48, 50. Stade, history of Israel by, i. 1 15-140. Staff on Sardinian statuettes, i. 67 ; lunar hiltcd, at Eyuk, i. 161. Stags on Sardinian swords, i. 74 ; their signification, i. 81. Stela, sepulchral, in Sardinia, i. 37 ; Punic stclas, i. 256, 257. Stephanus liyzantinus, ii. 104, 261, ;/. I, 2. Sterrett discovers the monument at Eassilcr during the Wolfe ICx[)cdilion to Babylonia, etc., ii. 214, 245. Stone, weapons of, in Sardinia, i. (.'4 , unhewn, in Judnea, i. 291 ; pitched, i. 291-295. Strabo, i. 5, 82, //. i, 2. Stucco, on sculptures of lasili-Kaia, ii. 126. Subterraneous passages at Boghaz-Keui, ii. 121. Sulcis, i. 96-99, 105. Summits, mountam, as supports, ii. 136. Sutekh, Hittite god, ii. 30. Synagogue (Great), i. 198, ;/. i. Syrians, ii. 258. Swords (votive), in Sardinia, i. 73, 74, 77 ; symbolic of the deity, i. 81. Tabernacle, description of, of rather recent date, i. 299-301 ; ark, i. 291, 333- Table of offering, shewbread, in Judaea i. 248; among the Hittites, ii. 67, 68. Tacitus, what he says in regard to the substructures of the temple, i. 259, Talayots, i. 37, 45 ; in Pantellaria, i. 45. Talmuds, i. 197, 198; regulations of, about burial, i. 283, n. 3. Talus (paved) of wall at Boghaz-Keui, ii. 1 1 6-1 19. Tanit, stela to, i. 254. Targumim, i. 197, 198, 199. Tarkondemos, boss of, ii. 30-33. Tarsus, i. 40, 41. Teima, i. 304-307. Temple, i. 165, 172-176; restoration of Temple, i. 241 j capital of bronze column in, i. 252, 253 ; divine couples, ii. 164, ;/. 2, 147. Temple, at Jerusalem, i. 112, 129, 243; in Palestine, i. 127, 333».39o; »" Arabia Petra^a, i. 303 ; Semitic, i. 290- 304, 368; terraces of temple, i. 158; of palace at Boghaz-Keui, ii. 115. Teraphim, i. 334, 335. Teti, excavations at, i. 71-76; statuettes of, i. 84-89 ; interlaced ornament, i. 88 ; nature of the repository, i. 83. Tcxier ((Charles), Travels of, ii. loi, 102 ; plan of Boghaz-Keui, ii. 103, 112, 113, 1 15-120; his reading of the main bas-relief at lasili-Kaia, li. 131 ; stela of Iconium, ii. 224 ; drawing of the Knrabcl figure, ii. 229. riiales, ii. 133. 'I'harsos, i. 19. 'I'hdnius, studies uf, upon the Tiinplc, i. 241.
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