.MTA2Mw.NzIwODg

From Newberry Transcribe
Revision as of 22:59, 31 March 2020 by imported>MManson (Created page with "from the latter. If it be correct, as learned men have alleged, that tradition is adulterated after the lapse of two hundred years, & assumes the character of fable, then it...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

from the latter. If it be correct, as learned men have alleged, that tradition is adulterated after the lapse of two hundred years, & assumes the character of fable, then it is deducible from the beliefs & particularity of their traditions, when first made known to us, between 1606 & 1690, that they were within two hundred years from the period when the original was lost, from whence the traditions were taken." 371

"The Huns, when they fled from the Volga, in the year of our Lord 405, being then identified with the Igors, or at least having the latter politically incorporated with them, were obliged to proceed to the Icy ocean, the countries to the west being all then settled." 373.

"Now is it left to reasoning, founded upon the existing circumstances of the world, to show us, that the Igours, when they removed from the Volga, in the year of our Lord 405, went to the Icy ocean, & the north of Siberia: for we have unknown information of the fact from authentic history: (b Gibbon 137.) About the year 454, "the Igours o the north, unknown from the cold Siberian regions of the north, which produce the most valuable furs, spread themselves over the desert as far as the unknown & Caspian gates, & finally extinguished the empire of the Huns." - 374.

"And there they did not remain long enough to lose their huge stature by the intense