Types of mankind, or, Ethnological researches, based upon the ancient monuments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geographical, philological and Biblical history / illustrated by selections from the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton and by additional contributions from L. Agassiz, W. Usher, and H.S. Patterson ; by J.C. Nott and Geo. R. Gliddon.
- Nott, Josiah C. (Josiah Clark), 1804-1873.
- Date:
- 1860
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Types of mankind, or, Ethnological researches, based upon the ancient monuments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geographical, philological and Biblical history / illustrated by selections from the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton and by additional contributions from L. Agassiz, W. Usher, and H.S. Patterson ; by J.C. Nott and Geo. R. Gliddon. Source: Wellcome Collection.
767/800 (page 711)
![FROM ABRAHAM TO DAVID. IV. V. VI. VII. Tin. IX. David’s Parent- Generations Generations IIeman’s Parentage Assaph’s Parent- Ethan’s Parent- age to Judah. ElkanarAMAS.ii. Merari- to Jezehar. to Amasai. age to Jahath. age to Musi. Ruth iv. 18; 1 Chron. vii. 25- Mahei.i. 1 Chron. vii. 1 Chron. vii. 1 Chron. vii. 1 Chron. vii. 1 Chron. ii. 4-13; 28. 1 Chron.y ii. 36-38. 33-36. 39-43. 44-47. Slutlh. i. 3-6; (=V1I.) 29, 30. (=ni.) Hiv.) (-11) Luke iii. 32, 33. 1. [Levi] 1. Levi 1. Levi 1. [Levi] ; 1. Levi 1. Levi 1. Judah 2. Elkana 2. Merari 2. Kahath 2. Elkana 2. Gersom 2. Merari 3. Amasai (and) 3. Maheu 3. Jezehar 3. Amasai 3. (Jahath) 3. Musi 2. Perez 1. Ahimoth 30 1. Libni 1. Korah 30 1. Mahath 30 1. Simei 30 1. Maheli 30 1. Ilezrom 30 2. Elkana 30 2. Simei 2. [Assir] 30 2. Elkana 30 2. Sima 30 2. Samer 30 2. Ram 30 3. Elk.Zophai30 3. Usa 3. [Elkana] 30 3. Zuph 30 3. Ethan 30 3. Bani 30 3. Aminadab 39 4. Thoah | 30 4. Adaja 30 f 4. Nahath 30 4. Simea 4. Ebjassaph 30 (Thohu) 5. Serah 30 4. Amzi 30 4. Nahesson 30 5. Eliab 30 5. Ilagija 5. Assir 39 5. Eliel ; [30 6. Ethni 30 5. Ililkin 30 5. Salma 30 6. Joram 30 6. Asaja 6. Thahath 30 (Elihu) J 7. Malcliija 30 6. Amazia 30 6. Boas 30 30 7. Zephanja 30 6. Jeroham 30 8. Baesaja 30 7. Ilasabja 30 7. Elkana 7. Elkana 30 9. Michael 39 8. Maluch 30 7. Obed 30 8. Samuel 30 8. Asarja 30 8. Samuel 30 10. Simea 30 9. Abdi 30 9. Vasni 30 9. Joel 30 9. Joel 30 11. Berechja 30 10. Kisi 30 8. Isai 30 10 30 10. [IIeman] 30 12 Arsapfi 30 11. Ethav 30 9. Davtd 30 300 300 300 360 330 270 j 3d.— That, as said before, there are no recorded dates in the Jewish Scriptures that are trustworthy; that, it is we moderns who must make Hebrew chronology for the antique Jews— who, until Rabbi Hillel, had not thought of doing it themselves; — and that, in these restorations, we cease to tread upon historical ground so soon as we retrograde to Solomon’s era, said to correspond to b. c. 1000. Beyond that cipher, Jewish chron- ology is all conjecture, within a few approximate limitations. Moses, or the Hebrews, being unmentioned upon Egyptian monuments of the 12th-17th centuries b. c., and never alluded to by any extant writer who lived prior to the Septuagint translation at Alexandria (commencing in the 3d century b. c.), there are no extraneous aids, from sources alien to the Jewish books, through which any information, worthy of historical acceptance, can be gathered elsewhere about him or them. With these emphatic reservations, we are quite willing to consider Lepsius’s computa- tive synchronisms as not merely the most scientific but the only probable. Ilis estimates place the Jewish Exodus in the reign of Pharaoh Menephthes, of the XIXth dynasty, about the year 1318 b. c. ; (557) or rather between the years 1314 and 1322 B. c.: if we have understood our authority correctly: (558) to which we add the following comparative view (557) Chronologic; p. 379, compared with pp. 335-337. (558) Vide Glidw »: Hand-book • 1849; p. 44,](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24885307_0769.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)