Zeus : a study in ancient religion . league the Rev. Prof. R. H. Kennett has suggested that Moloch, to whom first-bornchildren were burnt by their parents in the valley of Hinnom,...may have been originallythe human king regarded as an incarnate deity: for this important hypothesis see FrazerGolden Bough^. Adonis Attis Osiris^ ii. 219 ff. (Moloch the King). ^ Cp. P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 513 n. 4: M. Renan avait fait re-marquer que la forme la plus vraiseniblable est Milik, que la lefon A/a MiXtxiOJ se rencontre Zeus Meilichios 1109 dans plusieurs des manuscrits dEusebe ou


Zeus : a study in ancient religion . league the Rev. Prof. R. H. Kennett has suggested that Moloch, to whom first-bornchildren were burnt by their parents in the valley of Hinnom,...may have been originallythe human king regarded as an incarnate deity: for this important hypothesis see FrazerGolden Bough^. Adonis Attis Osiris^ ii. 219 ff. (Moloch the King). ^ Cp. P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 513 n. 4: M. Renan avait fait re-marquer que la forme la plus vraiseniblable est Milik, que la lefon A/a MiXtxiOJ se rencontre Zeus Meilichios 1109 dans plusieurs des manuscrits dEusebe ou est traduit un passage de Sanchoniaton sur ledieu phenicien [Euseb. praep. ev. i. 10. 12 A/a MeiXixioi. G. H. A. Ewald in W. W. Bau-dissin Studien zur semitischen Religionsgeschichte Leipzig 1876 i. 15 took MetXixtos here tobe a Grecised form of the Semitic word for sailor, and Baudissin himself ib. p. 36 n. 2says : Insofern der oben S. 15 erwahnte MetX^xtos der Schiffer die Bezeichnung ZeiJs f A i< A E1: -a H E Til \ © £ il 8. Fig- 945- erhalt, haben wir eine Gottheit in diesem Namen zu suchen, die kaum eine andere als Mel-kart sein kann ( Jahve el Moloch S. 28 f.). M-eKiK^pT-qs, dessen Name sicher dasphonicische Melkart ist, gilt bei den Griechen als Cp. Gruppe Cult. Myth,orient. Rel. i. 398, Gr. Myth. Rel. p. 908 n. 3. A propos of the Semitic word for sailormy friend Mr N. McLean writes to me (April 10, 1917): The word occurs in the formmalldh in Hebrew, Aramaic, & Arabic. Arabic borrowed it from Aramaic; & it is said to I no Appendix M itself to sundry scholars including M. Clerc^, H. Lewy^, M. Mayer^, O. Hofer*,W. Prellwitz^ and in a modified form to S. Reinach^. But Miss Harrison in-


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