Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY. PART FIRST. ON DOMESTIC ANTIQUITIES. CHAPTER I. 4. Biblical Geography. As it seems necessary that something should be known respecting the theatre of the memorable events in the Bible, before proceeding further we shall give a concise view of biblical or sacred geography. Lest we should delay too long in the threshold, we shall not now discuss the situation of the countries, mentioned Gen. 10: 5?10, etc., shall say nothing respecting the origin of the Tigris and Euphrates, and shall omit the geography of Asia Minor and Greece. We proceed, therefore, to state in a few words the situation of those countries, which occur more frequently in the Bible. 5. A i: M i:, . The region, which in the Bible is denominated Aram, "x. b a vast tract, extending from Mount Taurus south as far as Damascus and Babylonia, and from the Mediterranean Sea in an chapter{Section 46 5. AIU.UEA. eastern direction beyond the Tigris into Assyria. Different ports of it are called by different names. I. Aram beth Rechob, airn ppa Dx, otherwise called Assyria; in the most limited meaning of the term, it was a small province or peninsula surrounded by the Tigris, and the less and greater Zab. Its extent was increased in the progress of time by the addition of seven other provinces, and in the age of Isaiah and Ahaz, it became, by the accession of other territories still, which extended into Syria and Palestine, the very large empire of Assyria. Its metropolis, Nineveh, was situated on the eastern shore of the Tigris, nearly opposite the site of Mosul at the present day. It was laid waste in the year 877 before Christ by Arbaces and Belesis, but was rebuilt; it was laid waste again by Cyaxares I. and Nabopolassar in the year 625 before Christ, and ever after...