The Nile: Notes for Travellers in EgyptT. Cook & Son (Egypt) Limited, 1890 - 311 pages |
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Page viii
... known names as " Luxor , " in Arabic El - Uksûr or El - kuşûr , and " Cairo , " in Arabic Kâhira , have not been altered . Similarly , the ordinary well - known forms of the Egyptian proper names " Rameses , " " Thothmes , " " Amenophis ...
... known names as " Luxor , " in Arabic El - Uksûr or El - kuşûr , and " Cairo , " in Arabic Kâhira , have not been altered . Similarly , the ordinary well - known forms of the Egyptian proper names " Rameses , " " Thothmes , " " Amenophis ...
Page 1
... known to us . It is true that the earliest of the Babylonian kings whose names are known lived very little later than the earliest kings of Egypt , nevertheless our knowledge of the early Egyptian is greater than of the early Babylonian ...
... known to us . It is true that the earliest of the Babylonian kings whose names are known lived very little later than the earliest kings of Egypt , nevertheless our knowledge of the early Egyptian is greater than of the early Babylonian ...
Page 6
... known are Herodotus , Manetho , and Diodorus Siculus . Herodotus devotes the whole of the second and the beginning of the third book of his work to a history of Egypt and the Egyptians , and his is the oldest Greek treatise on the ...
... known are Herodotus , Manetho , and Diodorus Siculus . Herodotus devotes the whole of the second and the beginning of the third book of his work to a history of Egypt and the Egyptians , and his is the oldest Greek treatise on the ...
Page 7
... known to us he divides into three sections : - I - XI , XII - XIX , and XX - XXX . Diodorus Siculus , who visited Egypt B.C. 57 , wrote a history of the country , its people and its religion , based chiefly upon the works of Herodotus ...
... known to us he divides into three sections : - I - XI , XII - XIX , and XX - XXX . Diodorus Siculus , who visited Egypt B.C. 57 , wrote a history of the country , its people and its religion , based chiefly upon the works of Herodotus ...
Page 8
... known . Some have believed that during their rule Egypt was divided into two parts , each ruled by its own king ; and others have thought that the whole of Upper and Lower Egypt was divided into a large series of small , independent ...
... known . Some have believed that during their rule Egypt was divided into two parts , each ruled by its own king ; and others have thought that the whole of Upper and Lower Egypt was divided into a large series of small , independent ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abydos Alexandria Åmen Åmen-Rā Amenemḥāt Amenophis Amenophis III ancient days ancient Egyptian Apis Arabic Aswân beautiful building built Cairo called Cambyses canal cataract century chamber Chephren church coffin and mummy columns Coptic Copts crocodile dedicated Denderah Dêr east bank Egyptian Ethiopians excavations famous feet high Girgeh Gizeh gods granite Greek Harmachis Hathor Heliopolis hemt Herodotus hewn hieroglyphic Horus Hyksos inscribed inscriptions Isis Karnak king of Egypt land large number lived lord Manetho Mariette maṣṭaba Memphis miles from Cairo monuments Mosque Muḥammad mummy Museum neter Nile Nilometer Nubia obelisks Osiris papyrus pillars priests Ptaḥ Ptolemy Ptolemy II pylon pyramid Rameses II reign represented river Roman royal Sakkârah sarcophagus scenes sculptures Serapeum Seti side sphinxes stele stone stood Strabo Suez Sulțân Suten t'etta Thebes thee Thothmes tombs town Unȧs Upper Egypt Usertsen walls west bank worshipped XIIth dynasty XVIIIth
Popular passages
Page 35 - And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough which they brought forth out of Egypt, for it was not leavened ; because they were thrust out of Egypt, and could not tarry, neither had they prepared for themselves any victual.
Page 81 - Hail to thee, maker of all beings, Lord of law, father of the gods ; maker of men, creator of beasts ; Lord of grains, making food for the beast of the field The One alone without a second King alone, single among the gods ; of many names, unknown is their number.
Page 90 - Isis set out once more in search of the scattered members of her husband's body, using a boat made of the papyrus rush in order the more easily to pass through the lower and fenny parts of the country.
Page 100 - If these writings of the Greeks agree with the book of God, they are useless, and need not be preserved • if they disagree, they are pernicious, and ought to be de stroyed.
Page 164 - The rooms above ground I myself went through and saw, and relate from personal inspection. But the underground rooms I only know from report ; for the Egyptians who have charge of the building would, on no account, show me them, saying, that there were the sepulchres of the kings who originally built this labyrinth, and of the sacred crocodiles. I can therefore only relate what I have...
Page 138 - ... ten years were expended, and in forming the subterraneous apartments on the hill, on which the pyramids stand, which he had made as a burial vault for himself, in an island, formed by draining a canal from the Nile.
Page 193 - ... there was no city under the sun so ' adorned with so many and stately monuments of gold, silver, and ' ivory, and multitudes of colossi and obelisks, cut out of one entire 'stone.
Page vii - It is for this reason that no attempt has been made to run logs in the river.
Page 139 - Cheops reached such a degree of infamy, that being in want of money, he prostituted his own daughter in a brothel, and ordered her to extort, they did not say how much ; but she exacted a certain sum of money, privately, as much as her father ordered her ; and contrived to leave a monument of herself, and asked every one that came in to her to give her a stone towards the edifice she designed : of these stones they said the pyramid was built that stands in the middle of the three, before the great...
Page 138 - And they worked to the number of a hundred thousand men at a time, each party during three months. The time during which the people were thus harassed by toil lasted ten years on the road which they constructed...