The History of Ancient Egypt, as Extant in the Greek Historians, Poets, and Others: Together with the State of the Religion, Laws, Arts, Sciences, and Government : from the First Settlement Under Mizraim, in the Year Before Christ 2188, to the Final SubT. Casell, 1774 - 362 pages |
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Page xii
... almost a state of nature , under Mizraim , accomplishments in the reign of Amofis , and from that period have interfperfed the state of arts , Sciences , religion , laws , 80- vernment , customs and manners , with all poffible exa ...
... almost a state of nature , under Mizraim , accomplishments in the reign of Amofis , and from that period have interfperfed the state of arts , Sciences , religion , laws , 80- vernment , customs and manners , with all poffible exa ...
Page 14
... almost literally the account of Mofes ; he was expofed on the Nile , in a basket of rushes , had two mothers , Joc- babel his natural mother , and Thermutis princefs of Egypt , by whom he was adopted . He afterwards conducted am army of ...
... almost literally the account of Mofes ; he was expofed on the Nile , in a basket of rushes , had two mothers , Joc- babel his natural mother , and Thermutis princefs of Egypt , by whom he was adopted . He afterwards conducted am army of ...
Page 40
... almost innume- rable , but certainly the houses had none of that elegance , which fome writers have thought proper to defcribe , if we may collect an idea of them , from the ftile of their temples and palaces , which were numerous , but ...
... almost innume- rable , but certainly the houses had none of that elegance , which fome writers have thought proper to defcribe , if we may collect an idea of them , from the ftile of their temples and palaces , which were numerous , but ...
Page 53
... almost every veftige AT of the Egyptians fituation under Mizraim , was removed : they came nearest to it in the fimplicity of their food , which was chiefly vegetables , with occasionally flesh broiled or boiled ; they eat twice a day ...
... almost every veftige AT of the Egyptians fituation under Mizraim , was removed : they came nearest to it in the fimplicity of their food , which was chiefly vegetables , with occasionally flesh broiled or boiled ; they eat twice a day ...
Page 57
... almost forgotten . Metals being thus rendered ductile and malleable , gave the artist great opportu- nity of difplaying his skill and ingenuity ; · * ་ ་ and a vast variety of useful 3 and ANCIENT EGYPT . 57 the grofs terrestrial ...
... almost forgotten . Metals being thus rendered ductile and malleable , gave the artist great opportu- nity of difplaying his skill and ingenuity ; · * ་ ་ and a vast variety of useful 3 and ANCIENT EGYPT . 57 the grofs terrestrial ...
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The History of Ancient Egypt, As Extant in the Greek Historians, Poets, and ... George Laughton No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
accompliſhed Affyrian aftronomy againſt almoſt Amafis Amofis amongſt ancient ancient Egypt Anno A. C. Apries army arts Bocchoris body Cambyfes cauſe confifted death defign defire difpofition Diodorus diſcover diſtrict divine dominions eaſtern Egyp Egypt Egyptians eſtabliſhed Ethiopia facred faid fame fays feet fent feven fhew fhould fide fiege filver firft firſt fituation folar fome foon ftate ftatue ftones fubjects fucceeded fuch fuffered fupply fuppofed fupport fyftem genius gold greateſt Heptanomis Herodotus hieroglyphics himſelf honour houſes hundred Ifraelites inftitutions itſelf Jofeph king kingdom lands laws magnificence meaſure Memphis ment Mizraim Mofes moft moſt muſt nature Nebuchadnezar neceffary Necho Nile obferved occafioned Perfia perfon Pfammitichus Pharoah prefent prieſts prince racter raiſed Red Sea reign Sabacon ſcience ſeems ſeen Sefoftris Sofala ſtate ſtone Strabo Syria taſte temple Thebes thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand throne tian tion Typhon uſed weſtern whofe whoſe
Popular passages
Page 320 - Therefore thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I will give the land of Egypt unto Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon; and he shall take her multitude, and take her spoil, and take her prey; and it shall be the wages for his army. I have given him the land of Egypt for his labour wherewith he served against it, because they wrought for me, saith the Lord God.
Page 320 - Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon; and he shall take her multitude, and take her spoil, and take her prey; and it shall be the wages for his army. I have given him the land of Egypt for his labour wherewith he served against it, because they wrought for me, saith the Lord God.
Page 79 - We do not, however, pretend, that all subjects men may have occasion to inquire into, can be expressed by lines. There are many not reducible to any such rule : thus, the knowledge of an infinitely powerful, infinitely just God, on whom all things depend, and who would have all his creatures execute his orders, to become capable of being happy, is the principle of all morality, from which a thousand undeniable consequences may be drawn, and yet neither the principle nor the consequences can be expressed...
Page 324 - ... thus saith the Lord ; Behold, I will give Pharaoh-hophra king of Egypt into the hand of his enemies, and into the hand of them that seek his life...
Page 316 - God, behold, 1 am again/I thee Pharaoh King of Egypt, the great Dragon that lieth in the midft of his Rivers, which hath faid, My River is mine own, and I have made it for my felf.
Page iii - Greek historians, poets, and others ; together with the state of the religion, laws, art, sciences, and government ; from the first settlement of Mizraim in the year before Christ 2188 to the final subversion of the Empire by Cambyses. London (Cadell), 1774.
Page 349 - Son of Cyrus, the calamities of my family are too great to leave me the power of weeping : but the misfortunes of a companion, reduced in his old age to want of bread, is a fit subject for lamentation.
Page 58 - the veflels here called, brazen, after ancient .authors, cannot have been of the materials our prefent brafs is compofed of, the art of making it is a modern difcovery.
Page 125 - Epaphus, (as the Greeks call it) is the calf of a cow incapable of bearing another, impregnated by lightning. Thefe marks diftinguifh him from all others.
Page 6 - ... to vary the phrafe. The Arabic is greatly fuperior to it, the Greek is vaftly more elegant and harmonious, and modern languages are more abundant in beauty, fertility of words, and modes of conveying ideas.