the father and stock whence the faithful sprung, was the son of Terah. He was descended from Noah by Shem, from whom he was nine degrees removed. Some fix his birth in the 130th year of Terah's age, but others place it in his father's 70th year. It is highly probable he was born in the city of Ur, in Chaldea, which he and his father left when they went to Canaan, where they remained till the death of Terah; after which, Abraham resumed his first design of going to Palestine. The Scriptures mention the several places he stopped at in Canaan; his journey into Egypt, where his wife was carried off from him; his going into Gerar, where Sarah was again taken from him, but restored, as before; the victory he obtained over the four kings who had plundered Sodom; his compliance with his wife, who insisted that he should make use of their maid Hagar in order to raise up children; the covenant God made with him, sealed with the ceremony of circumcision; his obedience to the command of God, who ordered him to offer up his only son as a sacrifice, and how this bloody act was prevented; his marriage with Keturah; his death at the age of 175 years; and his interment in the cave of Machpelah, near the body of Sarah his first wife. It would be of little use to dwell long upon these particulars, since they are so well known. But tradition has supplied numberless other, the mention of one or two of which may not be unacceptable.
Many extraordinary particulars have been told relating to his conversion from idolatry. It is a pretty general opinion, that he sucked in the poison with his milk; that his father made statues, and taught that they were to be worshipped as gods*. Some Jewish authors relate+, that Abraham followed the same trade with Terah for a considerable time. Maimonides f says, that he was bred up in the religion of the Sabaeans, who acknowledged no deity but the stars; that his reflections on the nature of the planets, his admiration of their motions, beauty and order, made him conclude there must be a being superior to the machine of the universe, a being who created and governed it; however, according to an old tradition, he did not renounce Paganism till the 50th year of his age. It is related ||, that his father, being gone a journey, left him to sell the statues in his absence; and that a man, who pretended to be a purchaser, asked him how old he was; Abraham answered, Fifty."—"Wretch that thou art (said the other), for adoring at such an age a being which is but a day old!" These words greatly confounded Abraham. Some time afterwards, a woman brought him some flour, that he might give it as an offering to the idols; but Abraham, instead of doing so, took up a hatchet and broke them all to pieces, excepting the largest, into the hand of which he put the weapon. Terah, at his return, asked whence came all this havoc? Abraham made answer, that the statues had had a great contest which should eat first of the oblation; "Upon which (said he), the god you see there, being the stoutest, hewed the others to pieces with that hatchet." Terah told him this was bantering; for those idols had not the force to act in this manner. Abraham retorted these words upon his father against the worshipping of such gods. Terah, flung with this raillery, delivered up his son to the cognizance of Nimrod, the sovereign of the country; who exhorted Abraham to worship the fire; and, upon his refusal, commanded him to be thrown into the midst of the flames: "Now let your God (said he) come and deliver you." But (adds the tradition) Abraham escaped from the flames unhurt.—This tradition is not of modern date, since it is told by St Jerome §; who seems to credit it in general, but disbelieves that part of it which makes Abraham so cruel as to be the informer against his own son. Perhaps the ambiguity of the word Ur * might have given rise to the fiction altogether. Such as lay stress on the following words which God says to Abraham city, and it (Gen. xv. 7.), I am the Lord that brought thee out of the land of Chaldee, imagine that he saved him from the fire. The Lat. version has it thus: Qui eligisti cum deigne sum de igne.
Abraham is said to have been well skilled in many sciences, and to have wrote several books. Josephus † tells us that he taught the Egyptians arithmetic and geometry; and according to Eupolemus and Artapan, lib. i. cap. 7., he instructed the Phoenicians, as well as the Egyptians, in astronomy. A work which treats of the creation has been long ascribed to him: it is mentioned in the Talmud ‡, and the rabbis Chanina and Hofchla used to read it on the eve before the Sabbath. In the Hist. Patriarchage of Christianity, according to St Epiphanius ||, arch. tom. a heretical sect, called Sethians, dispersed a piece †, which had the title of Abraham's Revelation. Origen Har. p. mentions also a treatise supposed to be wrote by this patriarch. All the several works which Abraham composed in the plains of Mamre, are said to be contained in the library of the monastery of the Holy Cross on Mount Amaria in Ethiopia §. The book on the creation was printed at Paris 1552, and translated into Latin by Pofstel: Rittangel, a converted Jew, and professor at Konigberg, gave also a Latin translation of it, with remarks, in 1642.
ABRAHAM Ben Chaila, a Spanish rabbi, in the 13th century, who professed astrology, and assumed the character of a prophet. He pretended to predict the coming of the Messiah, which was to happen in the year 1358; but fortunately he died in 1303, fifty-five years before the time when the prediction was to be fulfilled. Abraham fulfilled. He wrote a book, *De Nativitatibus*, which was printed at Rome in 1545.
**ABRAHAMUSQUE**, a Portuguese Jew, who, in conjunction with Tobias Athias, translated the Hebrew Bible into Spanish. It was printed at Ferrara, in 1553, and reprinted in Holland in 1630. This Bible, especially the first edition, which is most valuable, is marked with stars at certain words, which are designed to show that these words are difficult to be understood in the Hebrew, and that they may be used in a different sense.
Nicholas, a learned Jesuit, born in the diocese of Toul, in Lorraine, in 1489. He obtained the rank of divinity professor in the university of Pont-a-Mousson, which he enjoyed 17 years, and died September 7, 1655. He wrote Notes on Virgil and on Nonnus; A Commentary on some of Cicero's Orations, in two vols. folio; an excellent collection of theological pieces in folio, entitled *Pharus Veteris Testamenti*; and A Hebrew Grammar in verse.