✪ "Ussher published in 1650 A.D. and his dates were added to the margin of the KJB in 1700 when the Church of England had bishop Lloyd edit for spelling and typesetting errors. Lloyd used most of Ussher's dates, but changed some to fit his thinking. Hence the dates which are commonly referred to as “Ussher's” are often Lloyd's." Ref-0186, p. 67. ". . . the insertion of Archbishop Ussher's chronology, which first appeared in its margins in 1701, were more serious changes from the original King James; the chronology in particular has certainly outlived its usefulness and, as at best a late accretion upon the version, out not to continue." -- 20180126114025.pdf, p. 1.
✪ "In 1179, the Third Lateran Council had forbidden all Roman Catholics to lend money at interest, threatening to refuse Christian burial to any who did so." Ref-0152, p. 70. "Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225-1273) proclaimed that ‘to take usury for money lent is unjust in itself, because this is to sell what does not exist, and this evidently leads to inequality which is contrary to justice’. . . so spoke Rashi on the brink of the First Crusade: ‘He who loans money at interest to a foreigner will be destroyed.’" Ref-0153, pp. 160-161. "The rise of capitalism brought the growing urban society into conflict with the church's prohibition against the loaning of money for interest, a practice it had traditionally regarded as usury." Ref-0169, p. 21.