The History of Egypt: From the Earliest Times Till the Conquest by the Arabs, A.D. 640, Volum 1George Bell and sons, 1885 - 842 sider |
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Side 20
... equally corrupted by additions . Like all other early languages , it is full of monosyllables ; but , unlike our own , these monosyllables are very much formed with only one consonant , and thus increase the ease 20 [ CHAP . I ...
... equally corrupted by additions . Like all other early languages , it is full of monosyllables ; but , unlike our own , these monosyllables are very much formed with only one consonant , and thus increase the ease 20 [ CHAP . I ...
Side 22
... equally great in each half of the country . While one race was hollowing its tombs out of the rock near Thebes , the other was building its huge pyramids on the edge of the desert near Memphis . The historian Manetho , who has the best ...
... equally great in each half of the country . While one race was hollowing its tombs out of the rock near Thebes , the other was building its huge pyramids on the edge of the desert near Memphis . The historian Manetho , who has the best ...
Side 38
... equally great famine . Joseph further advised that officers should be set over the whole land to gather into the royal granaries , during each of the years of plenty , one fifth of the crop , in store against the seven years of famine ...
... equally great famine . Joseph further advised that officers should be set over the whole land to gather into the royal granaries , during each of the years of plenty , one fifth of the crop , in store against the seven years of famine ...
Side 82
... turn with equal pleasure to the build- ings and to the histories of ancient Rome ; while Carthage is equally without ruins and without writings . Hence , if In 0000 ww ጠቦ Fig . 82 , Tablet of Thebes 82 [ CHAP . II . OIMENEPTHAH I.
... turn with equal pleasure to the build- ings and to the histories of ancient Rome ; while Carthage is equally without ruins and without writings . Hence , if In 0000 ww ጠቦ Fig . 82 , Tablet of Thebes 82 [ CHAP . II . OIMENEPTHAH I.
Side 124
... equally claimed to be Manetho . B.C. 945 . www sovereign cities ; and the first king of Lower Egypt who sat upon the throne of Rameses was SHISHANK of Bubastis ( see Fig . 129 ) , who raised his own city into independence and then ...
... equally claimed to be Manetho . B.C. 945 . www sovereign cities ; and the first king of Lower Egypt who sat upon the throne of Rameses was SHISHANK of Bubastis ( see Fig . 129 ) , who raised his own city into independence and then ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abou Simbel afterwards Alexander Alexandria Amasis Amun-Ra Amunothph Antigonus Arabs army Arridæus Artaxerxes Asia Minor Assyrian Athenians Babylon body Bubastis buildings built called Cambyses cataract chief coast conquered conqueror Cyprus Cyrene Darius death Delta Demetrius desert Diod Egyptian Ethiopia goddess gods gold Greece Greek Greek mercenaries head Hebrew held Heliopolis Herodotus hieroglyphics honour Hophra hundred Inarus inscriptions island Israelites Jews Judæa Karnak king's kingdom kings of Sais land Libyan Lower Egypt Macedonian Manetho marched Memphis Meroë mummy Napata nation Nectanebo neighbours Nile Nubia obelisks ornamented Osiris Osirtesen Pelusium perhaps Persians Phenicians Philadelphus priests province Pthah Ptolemy pyramids queen Rameses Rameses II Red Sea reign religion river sacred satrap sculpture sent ships Shishank side soldiers statues stone Syene Syria temple Thebaid Theban kings Thebes Thothmosis thousand throne tombs trade troops Upper Egypt valley walls worshipped
Populære avsnitt
Side 117 - Hearken, O daughter, and consider, and incline thine ear; forget also thine own people, and thy father's house; So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty: for he is thy Lord; and worship thou him.
Side 435 - Chronicles. FLORENCE OF WORCESTER'S Chronicle, with the Two Continuations : comprising Annals of English History from the Departure of the Romans to the Reign of Edward I. Trans., with Notes, by Thomas Forester, MA GEOFFREY OF MONMOUTH.
Side 434 - BOETHIUS'S Consolation of Philosophy. King Alfred's Anglo-Saxon Version of. With an English Translation on opposite pages, Notes, Introduction, and Glossary, by Rev. S. Fox, MA To which is added the Anglo-Saxon Version of the METRES OF BOETHIUS, with a free Translation by Martin F. Tupper, DCL BRAND'S Popular Antiquities of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Illustrattng the Origin of our Vulgar and Provincial Customs, Ceremonies, and Superstitions.
Side 431 - The only complete English translation. ROSCOE'S (W.) Life of Leo X., with Notes, Historical Documents, and Dissertation on Lucretia Borgia. 3 Portraits. 2 vols. Lorenzo de' Medici, called 'The Magnificent,' with Copyright Notes, Poems, Letters, &c. With Memoir of Roscoe and Portrait of Lorenzo. RUSSIA, History of, from the earliest Period to the Crimean War. By WK Kelly. 3 Portraits. 2 vols.
Side 435 - HENRY OF HUNTINGDON'S History of the English, from the Roman Invasion to the Accession of Henry II. ; with the Acts of King Stephen, and the Letter to Walter. By T. Forester, MA Frontispiece from au old MS, INGULPH'S Chronicles of the Abbey of Croyland, with the CONTINUATION by Peter of Blois and others.
Side 428 - History of the House of Austria. From the Foundation of the Monarchy by Rhodolph of Hapsburgh to the Death of Leopold II., 1218-1792.