The Mummy: Chapters on Egyptian Funereal ArchaeologyUniversity Press, 1894 - 404 pages |
From inside the book
Page 33
... Ethiopia and Sinai sent him valuable gifts , which are duly enumerated in the inscriptions containing the annals of this king . A good idea of the different objects of the tribute sent from the various countries may be obtained from the ...
... Ethiopia and Sinai sent him valuable gifts , which are duly enumerated in the inscriptions containing the annals of this king . A good idea of the different objects of the tribute sent from the various countries may be obtained from the ...
Page 37
... Ethiopians , but it is doubtful if they were of any importance . kings . After the death of Amenophis IV . there is some confusion in Egyptian history ; the immediate successors of the " heretic The king " were Se - aa - ka - Rā , Tut ...
... Ethiopians , but it is doubtful if they were of any importance . kings . After the death of Amenophis IV . there is some confusion in Egyptian history ; the immediate successors of the " heretic The king " were Se - aa - ka - Rā , Tut ...
Page 44
... Ethiopians . At Abu Simbel , the classical Aboccis , he hewed out of the solid rock a large temple to Rā Harmachis to commemorate his victory over the Cheta ; it is the largest and finest Egyptian monument in Nubia , and for simple ...
... Ethiopians . At Abu Simbel , the classical Aboccis , he hewed out of the solid rock a large temple to Rā Harmachis to commemorate his victory over the Cheta ; it is the largest and finest Egyptian monument in Nubia , and for simple ...
Page 51
... Ethiopia , and her kings built magnificent temples there , and ruled the country by a staff of officers under the direction of the " Prince of Cush . " the unsettled times which followed the death of Rameses II . , the Ethiopians saw ...
... Ethiopia , and her kings built magnificent temples there , and ruled the country by a staff of officers under the direction of the " Prince of Cush . " the unsettled times which followed the death of Rameses II . , the Ethiopians saw ...
Page 52
... Ethiopian troops seem not to have been unvaryingly suc- cessful , for it was necessary for Pianchi himself to come to Thebes ; thence he marched to Hermopolis , which surrendered after a three days ' siege . Nimrod , who had defended it ...
... Ethiopian troops seem not to have been unvaryingly suc- cessful , for it was necessary for Pianchi himself to come to Thebes ; thence he marched to Hermopolis , which surrendered after a three days ' siege . Nimrod , who had defended it ...
Other editions - View all
The Mummy: Chapters on Egyptian Funereal Archaeology Sir Ernest Alfred Wallis Budge Limited preview - 1964 |
Common terms and phrases
Akerblad alabaster alphabet Amāsis Amenophis Amenophis III amulet Ani's Anubis bandages beetle Birch bitumen body Book British Museum bronze called Canopic jars cartouche Cham chamber Champollion chapter characters Cheta coffin colour Coptic cover Dead deceased demotic Diodorus disk embalming example faïence feet funereal glazed faïence gods gold Greek hand Hathor head heart hemt Heru hieratic hieroglyphics Horus Hyksos inscribed inscriptions Isis jars king of Egypt l'inscription large number Lepsius letter linen lord Manetho Memphis mummy name and titles Naville Nephthys neter Nubia obelisk ornamented Osiris painted papyrus Paris period Persians placed pollion Ptaḥ Ptolemy pyramid Rameses Rameses II reign represented Rosetta Stone royal Sacy sarcophagus says scarabs scenes scribe sepulchral Seti side sometimes steatite stelæ stele suten t'etta temple Thebes Thothmes tion tombs translation underworld uræus ushabtiu figures vases wearing XIIth XVIIIth dynasty XXVIth dynasty Young δὲ καὶ τὴν τῶν