Category: History - Religious

The History of the Ten "Lost" Tribes: Anglo-Israelism Examined

scriptural "proofs" of a separate fate and destiny of the Ten Tribes from that of "Judah," and have added notes and explanations on some of the more plausible points brought up by all Anglo-Israelite writers.

Chapters

10. PART III.

The Anglo-Israel theory is based for the most part on the supposition of a separate history during the Dispersion, and a separate destiny of the Ten Tribes from that of Judah. I...

8. PART II.

But now discarding the whole heap of Anglo-Israel fiction, let us glance at the question of the so-called "lost" Ten Tribes in the light of Scripture history and prophecy. Anglo...

9. vii. 35), forming, as we have seen, the greater part of the nation, and

some of them still settled in the ancient regions of Assyria and Babylon; but wherever they were, they are all interchangeably called "Jews," or "Israelites," who regarded Jerus...

5. PART I.

DEAR FRIEND,--I shall endeavour to comply with your request, and to give you in this Letter a few reasons for my rejection of the Anglo-Israelite theory. I can sincerely say tha...

6. xli. 8): 'But thou, Israel, art My servant, Jacob whom I have

chosen; the seed of Abraham My friend--thou whom I have taken from the ends of the earth, and called thee from the chief men thereof, and said unto thee, Thou art My servant; I...

1. Part III., which is altogether new, I have further analysed some of the

scriptural "proofs" of a separate fate and destiny of the Ten Tribes from that of "Judah," and have added notes and explanations on some of the more plausible points brought up...

4. PART III.

3. PART II.

7. liii. 11--is a designation of the whole people; and it must be

remembered that Isaiah prophesied primarily "concerning Judah and Jerusalem." The term as a designation of the people is also used five times by Jeremiah in the same inclusive s...

2. PART I.