A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge.

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Title
A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge.
Author
Daneau, Lambert, ca. 1530-1595?
Publication
[Cambridge] :: Printed by Iohn Legate, printer to the Vniversitie of Cambridge [and at London, by J. Orwin] 1594. And are to be sold [by R. Bankworth] at the signe of the Sunne in Paules Church-yard in London,
[1594]
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Subject terms
Bible. -- O.T -- Commentaries -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19799.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19799.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Page 1079

Vers. 11.
In that day shall there bee a great mourning in Ie∣rusalem, as the mourning of Hadradrimmon in the valley of Megiddon.

* 1.1THe first amplification of the mourning described before And it is taken from things compared together, or from a com∣parison, to wit, this mourning shall be in the very middest of Ie∣rusalem, a most strong citie, the head of the land, and an holy ci∣tie, and not onely in the countrie, and villages: yea, and it shall be such a mourning, as was some time for King Iosias in Hadra∣drinmon the valley of Magiddon, concerning whose death and most sorrowfull mourning for the same, thus it is written 2. Chro. 35. ver. 24.25. So his seruants tooke him out of that chariot (name∣ly wherein he was shot at by the shooters of Necho King of Ae∣gypt in the valley of Megiddo, verse 22.23.) and put him in the second chariot, which he had, and when they had brought him to Ierusalem, he died, and was buried in the sepulchres of his fathers: and all Iudah, and Ierusalem mourned for Iosiah. And Ieremiah la∣mented Iosiah, and all singing men, and singing women mourned for Josiah in their lamentations to this day, and made the same, for an or∣dinance vnto Jsrael: and behold they bee written in the Lamentati∣ons. Some thinke also that there is an allusion and resemblance vnto this place, Reuelat. 16. ver. 16. in these wordes: And they gathered them together into a place called in Hebrew Arma∣gedon.

Notes

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