Online Encyclopedia

HEATHEN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 159 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HEATHEN  , a

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term originally applied to all persons or races who did not hold the Jewish or Christian belief, thus including Mahommedans . It is now more usually given to polytheistic races, thus excluding Mahommedans .
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Pile derivation of the word has been much debated . It is
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common to all Germanic
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languages; cf . German
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Heide, Dutch heiden . It is usually ascribed to a
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Gothic hairi, heath . In Ulfilas' Gothic version of the Bible, the earliest extant
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literary monument of the Germanic languages, the Syrophoenician woman (Mark vii . 26) is called hai)ino, where the Vulgate has gentilis . " Heathen," i.e. the
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people of the heath or open country, would thus be a
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translation of the Latin paganus, pagan, i.e. the people of the pagus or
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village, applied to the dwellers in the country where the worship of the old gods still lingered, when the people of the towns were Christians (but see PAGAN for a more tenable explanation of that term) . On the other hand it has been suggested (PTO f:y,S . Bugge, Indo-German . Forschungen, v .

178, quoted in the New

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English
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Dictionary) that Ulfilas may have adopted the word from the Armenian hetanos, i.e . Greek EBvi7, tribes, races, the word used for the " Gentiles " in the New Testament . Gentilis in Latin, properly meaning " tribesman," came to be. used of foreigners and non-
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Roman peoples, and was adopted in ecclesiastical usage for the non-Christian nations and in the Old Testament for non-Jewish races .

End of Article: HEATHEN
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