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DER

Der-el-Medineh, temple called Hakak
at, i. 433

Despatches, official, records of, ii.
126, 127

Did (Didi), king of Lybians, ii. 118,
146

Didoon, god, i. 394

Diodorus, i. 70; ii. 361, 365
Dionysus, same as Bes, i. 115
Diospolis, i. 247, 269; of. Thebes
Dynasties of gods, demi-gods, and
manes, i. 26, 27, 28

- of Pharaohs, causes of change of
dynasty, i. 61

1st and 2nd, i. 54; 3rd, 55

4th and 5th, i. 68; Table of the
kings of the, 67

6th to 11th, i. 96

12th, i. 119; Table of kings, 120
- 13th, imperfect accounts, i. 182;
revolts, internal troubles, 184; list
of kings in the Turin papyrus,
187-189; in the papyrus of Karnak,
194

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ETE

Egypt, its native name, i. 10; Asiatic
names, 12; two great divisions, 12;
influence on political state of, 152;
the central point of a world-inter-
course in the reign of Thutmes III.,
317'

- prehistoric, i. 25; no age of stone,
bronze, or iron, 25; mythical in-
ventions, 26

list of its nomes, ii. 317-319
Egyptian Empire, under the 12th
dynasty, i. 174; commerce, 175;
schools, 175; pyramids, temples,
175; tombs, 176; sculpture and
painting, 176; gold and minerals,
176; art, 176-179; architecture, 177;
bas-reliefs, engraving, 178; honour
paid to artists, 180, 181

- Kingdom, the decline and fall of,
ii. 278; death-blow by the Persians,
279; silence of the monuments,
281

- Lowlands, boundary of the, i. 199
Egyptians, the, mental peculiarities
of, i. 10; character, 18

the ancient, desire of learning, i.
293; trade and arts, 294; intro-
duction of the horse, 295

Eileithyia, i. 244, 396. See El-Kab
Elephantine, island and city, i. 12,
159, 195, 393, ii. 25; temple to local
god, i. 395, 436; obelisks from, ii.
57; dialect of, i. 13, ii. 109
Eleutherus, Fl., i. 290
Elim, ii. 367

El-Kab (Eileithyiapolis), i. 196, 197;
inscriptions at, 206; tombs at, 245,
261; Seti I.'s temple, ii. 28
El-Kassarieh, remains of temple, i. 44
Ellahoon pyramid, i. 168, 170
El-Khargeh. See Hibis

Ellesieh, inscription to Nahi, i. 345;
rock-tombs, 394

Epiphi, the month, i. 409; ii. 30, &c.
Eratosthenes, i. 68

Erpa, little, i. 50; ii. 202
Esneh (Latopolis), temple, i. 29, 396
Etearchus. See Taharaqa

ETH

Etham (Khetam), i. 203-4, 208, 215;
ii. 11, 54, 94, 95, 126, 132, 356, f.
Ethiopia, riches of, i. 285-6; inde-
pendence and kingdom, i. 285-6;
independence and kingdom of at
Napata, ii. 226; capital of, 226;
Egyptian manners, language and
customs preserved, 227; position of
the women of the royal house, 227;
extension of the kingdom, 227, ƒ. ;
contest with Assyria, 256, f.; end of
empire, 272

Ethiopian proper names, etymology
of, ii. 274-276
Etruscans, ii. 124

Euphrates, i. 263, 291, 292, 357

Exodus, the, i. 203, 207; date of, 259;
the Pharaoh of, ii. 128

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ALILEE, i. 361; ii. 51
U Galla, the, i. 7. See Kar
Ganabut, tribute from, i. 332
Gardafui, Cape, i. 374

Gauzanitis (Gozan), ii. 3, 44, 73

Gaza, Gazatu, i. 274, 290, 315, 319,
321; ii. 109, 126

Gebel Tooneh, rock-tablet at, i. 454
Germanicus, Cæsar, his visit to Thebes,
i. 318

Ge-ro-a-ro-pi, sister to Miamun Nut,
ii. 249
Gerrhon. See Anbu
Gilead, balm of, i. 361

Girgaooi, valley of, inscription of
Amenemhat III.'s victory, i. 123

HAS

Gizeh, pyramids of, i. 70; memorial
stone at, 414; inscription, 415–417
Gods, land of the (Arabia), ii. 31 (cf.
Holy Land)

Gold-mines of Egypt and Nubia, ii.
29, 30; in Wady Alaki, 78
Gold-washing, ii. 30, 79

HA

ABENNU, Hibonu (Phoenix-city)
or Hasuten, (Hipponon), i. 463;
ii. 232, 236, 308, 318
Hadramaut, i. 117

Haggi Qandil, rock-tablets at, i. 454
Hai, tomb of, i. 473, &c.

Hak (Haq), title (= prince or king),
i. 107, 115, 152, 156, 199, 232,
239, f.; ii. 136, 139, f.

Hakak, temple, at Der-el-Medineh,
memorial stone, i. 433-435
Hak-Shaus, i. 232. See Hyksos
Haleb (Khilibu), ii. 3
Hamath, i. 350; ii. 107
Hammamat, valley, inscription to
Sankh-ha-ra, i. 114; expedition
to, in Ramses IV.'s time, ii. 168-
170; &c.

Hands, the, of slain foes, cutting of,
i. 421

Hannu, sent by Sankh-ka-ra to the
land of Punt, i. 115, 116
Ha-nub, i. 42, 105
Hapi. See Apis

Hapi, the Nile-god, ii. 83
Hapi (Nilopolis), ii. 231, 318
Hapu, architect, i. 48

Hapzefa, tomb of, at Lycopolis, i. 195
Harabat-el Madfouneh, i. 33, 38
Harem conspiracy, the, in Ramses
III.'s time, ii. 158-165; chief cul-
prits, 159-161

Harincola (Rhinocolura), i. 290, 348
Harris papyrus, i. xvi, 200
Hashop, Queen, i. 296, 298; assumes
a king's dress, 302; erases the
name of Thutmes II. from the
monuments, 302; her buildings,
303; expedition to the balsam land

HAS

of Punt, 304; homage paid to her
ambassador, 305; gifts and trea-
sures, 307, 308: her royal attire,
310; dedication of the treasures of
the temple, 310-313; her peaceful
reign, 313; shares the throne with
her brother, Thutmes III., 314;
her obelisk of rose granite, 314;
their joint tablet at Wady Magha-
rah, 314

Ha-suten. See Ha-bennu
Hathor, goddess, protectress of Maf-
kat, i. 65; temple of, at Tentyra,
inscription, 402; &c.

the famous cow of, ii. 282

the month, i. 134

Hauar, the Avaris of Josephus, i. 204,
205, 206

Hazina, or Hazion (Kasion, or Mount

Casius), i. 208; ii. 12, 363
Heba, or Heb, country of, i. 145
Hebrews, i. 11, 12, 258, f.; ii. 98, f.;
129, 334, f.

Hebron, i. 201; ii. 352
Heh, i. 160, 161, 174
Heka, architect, i. 48
Heliopolis (Annu, On), obelisk at,

i. 127; buildings, inscription, 130;
temple at, ii. 28, &c.
Heliopolites Nomos, i. 219, 220
Helmet, royal, or double crown, i.
466, 467
Hephæstos, i. 43

Heracleopolis Magna, ii. 215, 232, 234
Parva (Pithom), ii. 343

Heracleum, i. 200

Hermes. See Thut
Hermonthis, i. 128, 396

Hermopolis Magna, i. 82, 85, 272, 399;
ii. 230, 232, 235, 236, 318 (cf.
Khmun)

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Parva, ii. 230, 232, 234, 245, 282
Herodotus, i. 33, 75, 82, 168

Hi, governor of the South, i. 423,
457

- sculptor, records of, ii. 29

-

88

administrator to the temples, ii.

HOR

Hibis (El-Khargeh), temple at, ii. 297
Hibonu. See Habennu
Hibset, festival of, i. 102, 103
Hierapolis (Mabog), ii. 5
Hir pyramid, i. 83

Hirhor, the priest-king, his usurpa-
tion, ii. 191; previous high position
at court, 191, 192; overthrow of
his race, ii. 225; they retire to
Ethiopia, 225; seat of their future
royalty, 226

Hirpit, title, i. 220, &c. ; ii. 349
Hir-seshta, the secret learning, i. 52
Hirusha, the, i. 99; Pepi's wars with,
100, 124, 141

Hittites, the, of Scripture, ii. 2. See
Khita

Holy Land, the, Arabia, i. 369, &c.
Holy Scripture, agreement of the
monuments with, i. 269; ii. 330,

332

Hontsen, king's daughter, pyramid
to, i. 80

Hor (Horus, Apollo), god, and proto-
type of the king, i. 13, 28, 30, 63;
et passim

Horemhib (Horus) king, i. 462; his
relationship to the royal family,
463;
retirement at Ha-suten, 463;
memorial at Turin of his early his-
tory, 464; crown prince and son-in-
law to Ai, 466; coronation and
titles, 466, 467; voyage to Thebes,
468; coronation there, 469; en-
larges and beautifies the temple of
Amon, 469; campaign and victories
in the South, 470; pictures illus-
trating his conquests, 470-472
Hor-em-saf, architect, ii. 211, 299
Hormakhu, sun-god of Heliopolis,
the Sphinx an emblem of, i. 81;
festival instituted in honour of,
348; et passim

Horse and chariot, introduced from
Asia; first mentioned, i. 295
Hor-shesu, the successors of Horus,
i. 32

Horsiise, priest and satrap, ii. 221, 261

HOR

Hortotef, prince, i. 85

Hu, name of the Sphinx, i. 81
Huni, king, i. 55, 56, 67
Hunt, Lake Moeris, i. 169
Hyksos, the dynasty of, i. 227; Jo-
sephus's account of, 228, 229; Arab
origin, 229; no mention in monu-
ments, 231; agreement with the
double word, Hak-Shaus, 232; ha-
tred of, confined to the South, 254;
they increased the splendour of
Zoan-Tanis, 257; their monuments
destroyed by the kings of the eigh-
teenth dynasty, 257 (cf. Menti)

IBR

[BRIM (Primis), fortress of, i. 394;
ii. 175

Ibsambul (Abusimbel), rock-tablet at,
ii. 67, 85; memorial-stone of the
people of Africa conquered by
Ramses II., 78; of the relation be-
tween Egypt and Khita, 85–87;
rock-temple of, 90-93; inscription
of Seti II., 134, 135

Incense, the true, from the land of

Punt, i. 308; devoted to the
Temple at Thebes, 311
Inu'amu (Jamnia), i. 290, 326, 348;
battle of, ii. 14

Ise (Isis), Ramses III.'s wife, ii. 165
Isis, goddess, i. 31, 61, 80, 81, 82, 313,
402, 416; ii. 28, &c.

Israel, the children of, pursuit of, ii.
359, 360; kingdom of, ii. 207
Israelites in Egypt, chronological re-
lation to the Hyksos kings, i. 258;
no mention of them in the inscrip-
tions, explained, ii. 99

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KAN

Joppa, i. 290, 351, 361; ii. 107
Jordan (Iurduna), i. 291; the ford of,
ii. 106

Joseph, i. 137, 243; his sale into

Egypt placed by tradition under
the Hyksos king Apophis, i. 260;
contemporary record of a famine
for many years, 261-3 (cf. 137-8);
his offices of Adon and Ab-en-pirao,
265, 269; ii. 140, 643; meaning of
his name of Zaphnatpaneakh, i.
265;
ii. 348; names of his wife and
her father, and of his master,
Putiphar, i. 265; striking parallel
in the tale of the Two Brothers, i.
266, f.; ii. 133

Josephus, i. 204; his account of the
origin of the Hyksos, 228, 229
Jubilee of Amenhotep III., i. 437

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Kaiechos, king, i. 54; worship of
Apis and Mnevis established in his
reign, 60

Kakami, pyramid of the black bull, i.

59; (cf. Kochome)
Kakau, king, i. 54, 56, 60

Kal, Kar, (the Gallas), i. 7
Kambathet, ii. 294. See Cambyses
Kames, king, i. 252, 253

Kan'ana, or Kan'aan, fort, i. 216;
ii. 11, 13; Ramesseum at, 157
Kanah, i. 324

Kanbuza. See Cambyses

KAR

Ka-ra-ma, Usarkon II.'s wife, ii. 215
Karamat, Shashanq I.'s wife, ii. 204;
inscription concerning her property
in Egypt, 204, 205

Karba, Karbana, Karbanit (Hera-
cleum), i. 200 (cf. Canopus)
Karbelmati. See Saïs

Kari, or Kali (the land furthest S.),

i. 393, 413, 423; ii. 81
Karnak, monuments at, i. 121; vil-
lage, 133; list of kings in the
chamber of, 193; temple of, com-
mencement, 277; inscriptions at,
318; the Hall of Pillars, 348, 386;
list of towns, 350: gardens and
arable land given to temple, 378;
doors and gates of Thutmes III.,
380; thanksgiving, of the priests,
380, 381; table of kings, 387; Hall
of Ancestors, 390; representation
of Amenhotep II. on southern gate,
411; of Ramses I.'s coronation, ii.
9; Great Hall of Columns, 10, 19,
89; Mineptah II.'s inscription, 116-
123; record of Shashanq I.'s inva-
sion of Judah, 207; list of con-
quered countries, 208, 209; Hall of
the Bubastids, 210

Karoo, Kaloo. See Kari

Kas, i. 139

Kati (Galilee), ii. 53, 75; beer from,
98, 147

Kefa, Keft, Kefeth, Kefthu, i. 222.
See Kal

Kemi, or Kami (black land) ancient
name of Egypt, i. 10; ii. 256;

&c.

Ken, i. 245. See Taa

Kepkep, Kipkip (Nubia and its capi-
tal), ii. 255, 256
Kerkasorus, i. 205

Kerkesh, or Keshkesh (the Girge-
sites), ii. 44

Kerman, near Tombos, list of vic-
tories at, i. 284

Khaanchra, king, i. 189, 193
Khabbash, anti-king to Xerxes, ii.
292; his sarcophagus for the Apis-

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priests' at Pi-ramses, the 'ma-
gicians' who withstood Moses, ii.
354

Khesef-Thamhue, a Ramses-fortress,
ii. 147

Kheta, the, i. 8 See Khita
Khetam (Etham) ii. 11, 18, 356;
drawing of, at Karnak, 357
Kheti, wife of Khnumhotep, i. 157
Khilibu (Haleb), ii. 3, 44

king of, at the battle of Kadesh,
ii. 48

Khim (Pan), i. 348, ii. 169, f., 303
Khinensu (Ahnas). See Heracleopolis
Khita, the (Hittites), i. 291; tribute

from, 334, 342, 362; rise of, ii. 2;
locality and supremacy, 3; deities,
towns, 3; military array, 4; non-
Semitic names, 5; list of their
peoples and cities, 5-7; supremacy
in Western Asia before the Assy-
rians, 7; war with Egypt, 44;
treaty of alliance, 68, f.; relations
of Mineptah II. with, 125
Khitasar, or Khitasir, king of Khita,
ii. 3, 4; treaty with Ramses II.
written on a silver tablet, 67-74
Khmun (Hermopolis) worship of the
moon at, i. 273

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