A dictionary of the . now called Eitki Stamboul,or Old Constantinople, and it is saidthat Constantine hesitated between Troasand Constantinople as the site of hiscapital. TROGYLLIUM, a town and capeon the western coast of Asia Minor, be-tween Ephesus and the mouth of theMeander, opposite Samos, at the foot ofMount Mycale. Paul there spent a nighton his third missionary journey. Acts20 : 15. An anchorage a little east ofthe point is still called St. PaulsPort. TROOP, BAND, often means asmall body of marauders, as in Gen,49 : 19; 2 Sam. 22 : 30; Jer. 18 : 22;Mic. 5:1. TROPHIMUS (foster-c


A dictionary of the . now called Eitki Stamboul,or Old Constantinople, and it is saidthat Constantine hesitated between Troasand Constantinople as the site of hiscapital. TROGYLLIUM, a town and capeon the western coast of Asia Minor, be-tween Ephesus and the mouth of theMeander, opposite Samos, at the foot ofMount Mycale. Paul there spent a nighton his third missionary journey. Acts20 : 15. An anchorage a little east ofthe point is still called St. PaulsPort. TROOP, BAND, often means asmall body of marauders, as in Gen,49 : 19; 2 Sam. 22 : 30; Jer. 18 : 22;Mic. 5:1. TROPHIMUS (foster-child), anative of Ephesus, Acts 21: 29, and aconvert to the faith of the gospel, prob-ably under Pauls ministry. Acts 20 :4. He became one of the apostles com-panions and helpers in missionary trav-els and labors. 2 Tim. 4 : 20. TROW, in Luke 17:9, means to think, believe. TRUMPET. The trumpet differ-ed little from the horn, and in partic-ulars which are no longer 19 : 16. The silver trumpets were881 TKU TYft. Trumpets. used by the priests alone in publishingthe approach of festivals and giving sig-nals of war. TRUMPETS, FEAST OF. This feast—enjoined Num. 29 : 1-6;Lev. 23 : 24—was the New Years dayof the civil year, corning on the firstof Tisri (October), and was furthercalled by the Rabbins the birthdayof the world, because in Tisri the latefruits were gathered and seed was was characterized by the use of boththe straight trumpet and the cornet inthe temple, by the blowing of trumpetseverywhere, unless the festival fell on aSabbath (in this case no trumpets wereblown outside of the temple), and by theoffering of a young bullock, a ram, andseven first-year lambs, with meat-offer-ings and a kid for a sin-offering inaddition to the daily sacrifices and theeleven victims of the new moon, theordinary feast of the first day of themonth. It was one of the seven daysof holy convocation. The feast differedfrom the other feasts of new moon, whichalso had the


Size: 1938px × 1289px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernp, bookyear1887