| 1. | Duke of. Philip (def. 4). |
| 2. | a city in and the capital of Scotland, in the SE part: administrative center of the Lothian region. 470,085. |
| 1. | one of the 12 apostles. Mark 3:18; John 1:43–48; 6:5–7. |
| 2. | one of the leaders of the Christian Hellenists in the early church in Jerusalem who afterwards became an evangelist and missionary. Acts 6; 8:26–40. |
| 3. | King (Metacomet ), died 1676, North American Indian chief: sachem of the Wampanoag tribe 1662–76; leader of the Indians in King Philip's War. |
| 4. | Prince, Duke of Edinburgh, born 1921, consort of Elizabeth II. |
| 5. | a male given name: from a Greek word meaning “lover of horses.” |
Capital of Scotland, located in the Lothian region in the southeastern part; Scotland's banking and administrative center.
Note: The University of Edinburgh, which was founded in the sixteenth century, is noted for its faculties of divinity, law, medicine, music, and the arts.
Note: As a cultural center, Edinburgh was especially prominent in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when the philosophers David Hume and Adam Smith, the authors Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott, and the scientist James Hutton were active.