Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians: Including Their Private Life, Government, Laws, Art, Manufactures, Religions, and Early History; Derived from a Comparison of the Paintings, Sculptures, and Monuments Still Existng, with the Accounts of Ancient Authors. Illustrated by Drawings of Those Subjects, Volume 3J. Murray, 1837 |
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Page viii
... Herodotus , and the Shash of the Hebrews . Cotton Cloth manufactured in Egypt , and used by the Priests , and sacred Robes of the Gods - Much Cotton used for Household Purposes . The Egyptian Looms , apparently rude . The simple Means ...
... Herodotus , and the Shash of the Hebrews . Cotton Cloth manufactured in Egypt , and used by the Priests , and sacred Robes of the Gods - Much Cotton used for Household Purposes . The Egyptian Looms , apparently rude . The simple Means ...
Page xi
... Herodotus · These Boats of Burden far better built than Herodotus would lead us to suppose - 186 187 - 189 Ships of War fitted out by Sesostris ; probably used before to protect the Trade of the Red Sea . Pliny supposes Ships first ...
... Herodotus · These Boats of Burden far better built than Herodotus would lead us to suppose - 186 187 - 189 Ships of War fitted out by Sesostris ; probably used before to protect the Trade of the Red Sea . Pliny supposes Ships first ...
Page 26
... productions of their country , which were deemed rare and curious to the Egyptians . Herodotus is therefore in error * Wood - cut , No. 328. fig . 10 . respecting the bear * as well as the ottert ; 26 CHAP . VIII . THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS .
... productions of their country , which were deemed rare and curious to the Egyptians . Herodotus is therefore in error * Wood - cut , No. 328. fig . 10 . respecting the bear * as well as the ottert ; 26 CHAP . VIII . THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS .
Page 27
... Herodotus , when he says that the sacred animal of Lycopolis " was not the wolf , for there are none in Egypt , but the jackal , which seems clearly shown by Herodotus , when he says the wolves in that country are scarcely larger than ...
... Herodotus , when he says that the sacred animal of Lycopolis " was not the wolf , for there are none in Egypt , but the jackal , which seems clearly shown by Herodotus , when he says the wolves in that country are scarcely larger than ...
Page 28
... Herodotus ; and since we find them on both sides of the Nile , those now met with there are shown to be indigenous in the country , and not derived from any which may have accidentally strayed from the borders of Syria . The Egyptian ...
... Herodotus ; and since we find them on both sides of the Nile , those now met with there are shown to be indigenous in the country , and not derived from any which may have accidentally strayed from the borders of Syria . The Egyptian ...
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Common terms and phrases
18th dynasty acacia adopted already observed ancient Egyptians appear applied Arabs artists Beni Hassan birds blue boats bottles bronze byblus carrying chariot chase chasseur colour cotton crocodile custom Cyperus papyrus desert Diod Diodorus dogs early Egypt and Thebes employed Ethiopia evident figures fish found at Thebes fowl frequently gazelle glass gold Greeks ground Hassan Herod Herodotus hieroglyphics hippopotamus hyæna inch invention iron Julius Pollux kind king known lake leather linen Lower Egypt manner manufacture mentioned metal mode modern monuments mummy cloths Museum nets Nile numerous ornaments oryx Osirtasen paintings papyrus period piece Plin Pliny Plut Pollux present day preserved probably purpose Pyramids Remeses represented Romans rope sail sculptures Sebennytic nome silver skill skin sometimes spear species specimens stone Strabo supposed temples Thebaïd Thebes thongs threads tombs Upper Upper Egypt various vases Vide wood-cut warp wild wood wooden woof
Popular passages
Page 221 - And it came to pass, as soon as he came nigh unto the camp, that he saw the calf, and the dancing : and Moses' anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his hands, and brake them beneath the mount.
Page 359 - To all of them he gave each man changes of raiment ; but to Benjamin he gave three hundred pieces of silver, and five changes of raiment.
Page 125 - And all the women that were wise-hearted, did spin with their hands, and brought that which they had spun, the blue, and the purple, the scarlet, and the fine linen.
Page 267 - In the paintings of the tombs greater licence was allowed in the representation of subjects relating to private life, the trades, or the manners and occupations of the people ; and some indication of perspective in the position of the figures may occasionally be observed : but the attempt was imperfect, and, probably, to an Egyptian eye, unpleasing ; for such is the force of habit, that even where nature is copied, a conventional style is sometimes preferred to a more accurate representation. In...
Page 385 - susceptible of a lustre, which has even been partially revived at the present day, in some of those discovered at Thebes, though buried in the earth for many centuries. The mirror itself was nearly round, inserted into a handle of wood, stone, or metal, whose form varied according to the taste of the owner. Some presented the figure of a female, a flower, a column, or a rod ornamented with the head of Athor, a bird, or a fancy device ; and sometimes the face of a Typhonian monster was introduced...
Page 322 - BC, consequently many years after the Egyptians had been acquainted with the art of vaulting ; and the reason of their preferring such a mode of construction probably arose from their calculating the great difficulty of repairing an injured arch in this position, and the consequences attending the decay of a single block ; nor can any one suppose, from the great superincumbent weight applied to 452.
Page 338 - They consisted of a leather bag, secured and fitted into a frame, from which a long pipe extended, for carrying the wind to the fire. They were worked by the feet, the operator standing upon them, with one under each foot, and pressing them alternately, while he pulled up each exhausted skin with a string he held in his hand.
Page 392 - Homer, in the Odyssey, describes the many valuable medicines given by Polydamna, the wife of Thonis, to Helen while in Egypt, " a country whose fertile soil produces an infinity of drugs, some salutary and some pernicious ; where each physician possesses knowledge above all other men.
Page 128 - ¿And he made the ephod of gold, blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen. 3 And they did beat the gold into thin plates, and cut it into wires...