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TRANSLATED

FROM THE GREEK,

WITH NOTES.

BY THE REV. WILLIAM BELOE.

IN FOUR VOLUMES.

VOL. II.

THE FOURTH EDITIO N.

LONDON:

PRINTED FOR F. C. AND J. RIVINGTON; J. CUTHELL; J. NUNN;
LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN; J. RICHARD-
SON; BALDWIN, CRADOCK, AND JOY; LACKINGTON AND CO.;
J. MAWMAN; G. AND W. B. WHITTAKER; W. COLLINGWOOD;
W. WOOD; OGLE, DUNCAN, AND CO.; E. EDWARDS; ROD-
WELL AND MARTIN; SIMPKIN AND MARSHALL; R. SAUNDERS;
W. SHELDON; W. MASON; AND J. PARKER, AND J. VINCENT,
OXFORD.

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HERODOTUS.

BOOK II.

EUTER PE

CONTINUED.

CHAP. II.

THE name of Sesostris 179, who lived after these monarchs, claims our attention. According to the priests, he was the first who, passing the Arabian gulf in a fleet of long vessels, reduced under his authority the inhabitants bordering on the

179 Sesostris.]-See Bouhier's Chronological Account of the Kings of Ægypt from Moris to Cambyses, according to which Moris died in the year of the world 3360, and was succeeded by Sesostris in 3361.

Diodorus Siculus makes this prince posterior to Moris by seven generations; but, as Larcher justly observes, this writer cannot be entitled to an equal degree of credit with Herodotus. Sesostris has been differently named: Tacitus calls him Rhampses: Scaliger, both Rhamesses and Ægyptus. He is named Sesostris in Diodorus Siculus; Sesosis in Pliny, &c.-T. VOL. II.

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