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THE SYRIAN CHURCHES.
TRADITIONS OF EARLY ORIENTAL MISSIONARIES.
1. There is a prevailing and by no means ill-founded belief that the Magi, of whom we read in the second chapter of St. Matthew, communicated the first, though indistinct, evangelic tidings to the Gentiles of the East. It is impossible to dispel the obscurity which rests upon the questions of the country, station, and subsequent career of those devout and highly-favoured men, or to settle the titles of contending peoples who have laid claim to them as their countrymen. According to an Armenian tradition, the Magi came to the Holy Land from a part of Tartary called Tanguth, where, after their return, they prepared the way for the gospel. The Chaldeans, on the other hand, claim them as natives of, and