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New Moon

myrrh, times, east, frankincense, formed and earliest

MOON, NEW (moon nil). See FESTIVALS.

MOR(m6r),(Hcb. ?nor, distilling), sometimes written Mur, is the well-known substance MYRRH.

(1) it is the exudation of a little known tree found in Arabia, but much more extensively. in Abyssinia. It formed an article of the earliest commerce, was highly esteemed by the Egyptians z.nd Jews, as well as by the Greeks and Romans, as it still is both in the East and in Europe. The earliest notice of it occurs in Exod. xxx :23, 'Take thou also unto thee principal spices, of pure myrrh (morderor) soo shekels.' It is afterwards men tioned in Esther ii:12, as employed in the purifi cation of women; in Ps. xlv :8, as a perfume, 'All thy garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cas sia ;' also in several passages of the Song of Solo mon, 'I will get me to the mountain of myrrh, and to the hill of frankincense' iv:6) ; 'My hands droppcd with myrrh, and my fingers with sweet s»telling myrrh' v :5). We find it mentioned in Matt. ii :it, among the gifts presented by the wise men of the East to the infant Jesus—'gold, and frankincense, and myrrh.' It may be remarked as worthy of notice, that myrrh and frankincense are frequently mentioned together. In Mark xv :23, we learn that the Roman soldiers 'gave him (Jesus) to drink wine mingled with myrrh; but he received it not.' The Apostle John (xix:39) says, `Then came also Nicodemus, and brought a n.ixture of myrrh and aloes (see AHALIM), about an hundred pound vveight,' for the purpose of embalming the body of our Savior.

(2) Though myrrh seems to have been known from the earliest times, and must consequently have been one of the most ancient articles of com merce, the country producing it long remained un known. It is collected in small kid-skins, and taken to Ecrur, whence the Hurrah merchants, on their way from Shoa, convey it to the great an nual market at Berberah from whence great quan tities are shipped for India and Arabia.' When the Portuguese first entered these seas, gold dust, ivory, myrrh, and slaves formed the staple com merce of Adal. Though there is no doubt that the largest quantity of myrrh has always been ob tained from Africa, yet it is equally certain that some is also procured in Arabia. Mr. Johnson, in

his recently published Travels in Abyssinia (i. 249), mentions that `Myrrh and mimosa trees abounded in this place' (Koranhedudah in Adal). The former he describes as being a low, thorny, ragged-looking tree, with bright-green trifoliate leaves; the gum exudes from cracks in the bark of the trunk near the root, and flows freely upon the stones immediately underneath. Artificially it is obtained by bruises made with stones. The natives collect it principally in the hot months of July and August, but it is to be found, though in very small quantities, at other times of the year.

(3) Several kinds of myrrh were known to the ancients, and in modern commerce we have Turk ish and East Indian myrrh, and different names used to be, and are still applied to it, as red and fatty myrrh, myrrh in tears, in sorts, and myrrh in grains. In the Bible also several kinds of myrrh are enumerated. respecting which various opinions have been entertained.

(4) Myrrh, it is well known, was celebrated in the most ancient times as a perfume, and a fumi gant, as well as for its uses in medicine. Myrrh was burned in their temples, and employed in em balming the bodies of the dead. It was offered in presents, as natural products commonly were in those days, because such as were procured from distant countries were very rare. The ancients prepared a wine of myrrh, and also an oil of myrrh, and it formed an ingredient in many of the most celebrated compound medicines, as the Theriaca, the Mithridata, Manus Dei, etc. Even in Europe it continued to recent times to enjoy the highest medicinal reputation, as it does in the East in the present day. From the sensible properties of this drug, and from the virtues which were ascribed to it, we may satisfactorily account for the mention of it in the several passages of Scrip ture which have been quoted. (See MYRRH.) J. F. R.