The camel chosen as the victim is bound upon a rude altar of stones piled together, and when the leader of the band has thrice led the worshippers round the altar in a solemn procession accompanied with chants, he inflicts the first wound... An Introduction to the History of Religion - Side 144af Frank Byron Jevons - 1896 - 443 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| Edward Scribner Ames - 1910 - 444 sider
...particle of which must be taken by the group itself. "In the oldest known form of Arabian sacrifice, as described by Nilus, the camel chosen as the victim...and when the leader of the band has thrice led the worshipers round the altar in a solemn procession accompanied with chants he inflicts the first wound,... | |
| Edward Scribner Ames - 1910 - 456 sider
...particle of which must be taken by the group itself. "In the oldest known form of Arabian sacrifice, as described by Nilus, the camel chosen as the victim...and when the leader of the band has thrice led the worshipers round the altar in a solemn procession accompanied with chants he inflicts the first wound,... | |
| Edward Scribner Ames - 1910 - 470 sider
...particle of which must be taken by the group itself. "In the oldest known form of Arabian sacrifice, as described by Nilus, the camel chosen as the victim...and when the leader of the band has thrice led the worshipers round the altar in a solemn procession accompanied with chants he inflicts the first wound,... | |
| Francis Augustus Henry - 1916 - 462 sider
...Nilus toward the close of the fourth century. Robertson Smith gives an account of it in these words : The camel chosen as the victim is bound upon a rude...has thrice led the worshippers round the altar in solemn procession accompanied with chants, he inflicts the first wound while the last words of the... | |
| René Girard - 1979 - 356 sider
...found it highly significant: The victim of the sacrifice, a camel, [Freud quoting Robertson Smith] "is bound upon a rude altar of stones piled together,...accompanied with chants, he inflicts the first wound . . . and in all haste drinks the blood that gushes forth. Forthwith the whole company fall on the... | |
| René Girard - 1988 - 364 sider
...found it highly significant: The victim of the sacrifice, a camel, [Freud quoting Robertson Smith] "is bound upon a rude altar of stones piled together,...accompanied with chants, he inflicts the first wound . . . and in all haste drinks the blood that gushes forth. Forthwith the whole company fall on the... | |
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