Chapter V
, p. 105.
[216] See Macalister, _Excavation of Gezer_, I, 286.
[217] _Ibid._, p. 122, f.
[218] Palestine Exploration Fund’s _Annual_, II, 42, ff.
[219] For a Babylonian parallel, see Part II, p. 423, ff.
[220] See Macalister, _Excavation of Gezer_, II, 429, f.
[221] See _Biblical World_, Vol. XXIV, p. 177.
[222] See Macalister, _Excavation of Gezer_, I, 288, f.
[223] _Ibid._, 289, ff.
[224] See Bliss and Macalister, _Excavations in Palestine, 1898-1900_, p. 9, ff.
[225] So called because of a tradition that the members of the Sanhedrin were buried there. The tradition probably arose because the _kôkim_ and shelves make provision for seventy bodies.
[226] See _Journal of Biblical Literature_, XXII, 1903, p. 164, ff.
[227] See Josephus, _Antiquities of the Jews_, XX, ii, 1; iv, 3.
[228] See Peters and Thiersch, _Painted Tombs at Marissa_, London, 1905.
[229] All who can do so should read George Adam Smith’s _Jerusalem from the Earliest Times to A. D. 70_, New York, 1908, and Hughes Vincent’s _Jerusalem_, Paris, 1912. Or, if this is not possible, L. B. Paton’s _Jerusalem in Bible Times_, Chicago, 1905.
[230] See Dr. Masterman in the _Biblical World_, Vol. XXXIX, p. 295, f.
[231] See Part II, Chapter XV , Letter V, and the writer’s note in the _Biblical World_, XXII, p. 11, n. 5.
[232] See _Biblical World_, XXXIX, 306.
[233] See Part II, Chapter XV .
[234] See