, or Abydinus. This word, which signifies a native, or inhabitant of Abydos, is given by Eusebius,
, or Abydinus. This word, which signifies a native, or inhabitant of Abydos, is given by Eusebius, Cyril, and Syncellus, as the proper name of a Greek
historian to whom some authors ascribe two works, “Assyriaca,
” and “Chaldaica,
” or the history of the Assyrians and Chaldeans; but it is probable that these are the
titles of parts of the same work. The fragments quoted
by Eusebius, in his “Praeparatio Evangelica,
” St. Cyril,
in his writings against Julian, and Syncellus, in his Chronography, have been collected and commented on by
Scaliger, in his Thesaurus, and in his “Emendatio Temporum.
” But Scipio Tettius, a Neapolitan writer of the
sixteenth century, in his Catalogue of scarce Manuscripts,
quoted by Labbe, in his “Biblioth. Nov. libror. Manuscr.
”
p.