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[304]
I shall now add to these accounts about Manetho and Cheremon somewhat
about Lysimachus, who hath taken the same topic of falsehood with those
forementioned, but hath gone far beyond them in the incredible nature of
his forgeries; which plainly demonstrates that he contrived them out of
his virulent hatred of our nation. His words are these: "The people
of the Jews being leprous and scabby, and subject to certain other kinds
of distempers, in the days of Bocchoris, king of Egypt, they fled to the
temples, and got their food there by begging: and as the numbers were very
great that were fallen under these diseases, there arose a scarcity in
Egypt. Hereupon Bocehoris, the king of Egypt, sent some to consult the
oracle of [Jupiter] Hammon about his scarcity. The god's answer was this,
that he must purge his temples of impure and impious men, by expelling
them out of those temples into desert places; but as to the scabby and
leprous people, he must drown them, and purge his temples, the sun having
an indignation at these men being suffered to live; and by this means the
land will bring forth its fruits. Upon Bocchoris's having received these
oracles, he called for their priests, and the attendants upon their altars,
and ordered them to make a collection of the impure people, and to deliver
them to the soldiers, to carry them away into the desert; but to take the
leprous people, and wrap them in sheets of lead, and let them down into
the sea. Hereupon the scabby and leprous people were drowned, and the rest
were gotten together, and sent into desert places, in order to be exposed
to destruction. In this case they assembled themselves together, and took
counsel what they should do, and determined that, as the night was coming
on, they should kindle fires and lamps, and keep watch; that they also
should fast the next night, and propitiate the gods, in order to obtain
deliverance from them. That on the next day there was one Moses, who advised
them that they should venture upon a journey, and go along one road till
they should come to places fit for habitation: that he charged them to
have no kind regards for any man, nor give good counsel to any, but always
to advise them for the worst; and to overturn all those temples and altars
of the gods they should meet with: that the rest commended what he had
said with one consent, and did what they had resolved on, and so traveled
over the desert. But that the difficulties of the journey being over, they
came to a country inhabited, and that there they abused the men, and plundered
and burnt their temples; and then came into that land which is called Judea,
and there they built a city, and dwelt therein, and that their city was
named Hierosyla, from this their robbing of the temples; but that
still, upon the success they had afterwards, they in time changed its denomination,
that it might not be a reproach to them, and called the city Hierosolyma,
and themselves Hierosolymites."
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