Capitolo

 1     1(18) |       Kinnaid, F.R.S. reduced from the original work by J.
 2     1     | custom (if it be not borrowed from the Jews) is probably of
 3     1     |      delle verità divine: "...from the audible groans and sight,
 4     1     |       which involuntary burst from the hearth of many a one
 5     1     |     never allow him to accept from envied stranger. This unexpected
 6     1     |      one. This would be going from bad to worse did he not
 7     1     |  illuminating beams emanating from the sacred Scriptures. Unhappily,
 8     1(91) |    Mission to Ras Alì in 1848 from the Mss. of the late Walter
 9     1     |     Judaism still fairly free from Talmudic minutiae”.136~ ~
10     1     |        scrivendo: “Travellers from the earliest times to the
11     1     |       which were transplanted from South Arabia into the Horn
12     1     |  jewis or judaized immigrants from any period till about the
13     1     |  Syriac or Hebrew influences, from different quarters, of course,
14     1     |   accounted for in the period from the 4th to perhaps the 7th
15     1(173)|  Falasha Antology. Translated from Ethiopic Sources with an
16     1     |    avvenuti in varie epoche: "From various indications one
17     2(27) |  Finka, in particolare, cfr.From Wollwka to Florence: the
18     2(38) |        Daniel P. SummerfieldFrom Falashas to Ethiopian jews.
19     2(53) |  citato, pp. 67-69 "Returning from the third Mission”; pp.
20     2(55) |      76-77.~ ~D. SummerfieldFrom Falashas to Ethiopian jews”,
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