. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . Egyptian prince* In their chariot.—(Wilkinson.) horses. Most commonly two persons, and some-times three rode in the chariot, of whom the thirdwas employed to carry the state umbrella (2 K. , 24; IK. xxii. 34; Acts viii. 38). A secondchariot usually accompanied the king to battleto be used in case of necessity (2 Chr. xxv. 34).Chariots of other nations are mentioned, as of As-syria (2 K. xix. 23 ; Ez. xxiii. 24), Syria (2 Sam. 2 K. vi. 14, 15), Persia (Is. xxii. 6), Ethiopia (2Chr. xiv. 9), the Philistines, &c. (se3 above). An-tiochus Eu
. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . Egyptian prince* In their chariot.—(Wilkinson.) horses. Most commonly two persons, and some-times three rode in the chariot, of whom the thirdwas employed to carry the state umbrella (2 K. , 24; IK. xxii. 34; Acts viii. 38). A secondchariot usually accompanied the king to battleto be used in case of necessity (2 Chr. xxv. 34).Chariots of other nations are mentioned, as of As-syria (2 K. xix. 23 ; Ez. xxiii. 24), Syria (2 Sam. 2 K. vi. 14, 15), Persia (Is. xxii. 6), Ethiopia (2Chr. xiv. 9), the Philistines, &c. (se3 above). An-tiochus Eupator is said to have had 300 chariotsarmed with scythes (2 Mc. xiii. 2). (Arms; Army;Highway; Horse.) The prophets allude frequentlyto chariots as typical of power (Ps. xx. 7, civ. 3;Jer. li. 21; Zech. vi. 1). In the N. T., the onlymention of a chariot, except in Rev. ix. 9 and , is in the case of the Ethiopian eunuch (Actsviii. 28, 29, 38).. Assyrian chariot. * Chari-ty (fr. L.) in A. V. of N. T. is a frequenttranslation of the Gr. agape (1 Cor. viii. 1, xiii., &c.), usually and properly translated love (Lk. xi. 42;Horn. v. 5, 8, &c). Feasts ok Charity. * Charmer. Divination ; |karmis] (Or.), son of Melchicl; one of the three ancients or rulers of Bethulia (Jd. vi. 15, viii. 10, x. 6). Charran [karran] (Gr. fr. Heb.) = Haran (Acts vii. 2, 4). Chase \ch as in much]. Hunting. Chase-ba [kas-] (Gr.), probably a corruption ofGazeea, the name succeeding Chaseba (1 Esd. ). * Cliavali [ka-] (Gen. iii. 20, margin) = [ke-] (Heb. length, Ges.), a river in the land of the Chaldeans (Ez. i. 3), on the banksof which some of the Jews were located at the timeof the Captivity, and where Ezekiel saw his earliervisions (Ez. i. 1, iii. 15, 23, &c). It is commonlyregarded as = the Habor, or river of Gozan, towhich some portion of the Israelites were removedby the Assyrians (2 K. xvii. 6). Bu
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