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tinctly from Mount Nebo, the fact would hardly be relevant, for Deut. xxxiv. points rather to the sea south of Joppa. It is sufficient, however, that from no other summit can you get so extensive a prospect as from Mount Nebo.

Conder's work was abruptly stopped. Even when the party went out in 1881 there was great excitement in the East. A Moslem Messiah was expected to appear in the year 1300 of the Hegira, and the war in Egypt was brewing. The British Government had served Conder with a notice that any expedition he might take out would be at his own risk, and they could not be responsible for the consequences. After fifteen months, during which the work was carried on at great risks, the Sultan heard that English captains were surveying the land, and sent orders for them to cease. In the same year Mr Rassam's researches in Mesopotamia were stopped. Finally, Conder and his party left Syria on a steamer crowded with refugees from the Alexandria massacres.


[Authorities and Sources:—"East of the Jordan." By Selah Merrill. London: Bentley & Son, 1881. "Across the Jordan." By Gottlieb Schumacher. Bentley & Son, 1886. "The Jaulan." By G. Schumacher, Bentley, 1888. "Abila," "Pella," and "Northern Ajlun." By G. Schumacher. London: Palestine Exploration Society, 1888, 1889. "Palestine." By Major Conder. London: George Philip & Son, 1889. "Heth and Moab." By Major Conder. Bentley & Son, 1883. "The Land of Moab." By Rev. Canon Tristram. London: John Murray, 1873. "Unexplored Syria." By Burton and Drake. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1872.]