The struggle of the nations - Egypt, Syria, and Assyria . there is a confusion in liis notes between theprenomen of this sovereign and that of Seti II., who actually did decorate one of the doorways of thattemple (Champollion, Mmi. de V^gypte, etc., vol. ii. p. 263). Nakliusit must have also worked on thetemple of Phtah at Memphis CWiedemann, ^Egyptische Gesch., p. 490). His cartouche is met withon a statue originally dedicated by a Pharaoh of the XII dynasty, discovered at Tell-Nebesheh(Peteie, Tanis II., Tell-Nebesheh, pp. 11, 29, 31, pi. x. 6 li). » Champolltox, Moil, de VEgypte, etc., vol.


The struggle of the nations - Egypt, Syria, and Assyria . there is a confusion in liis notes between theprenomen of this sovereign and that of Seti II., who actually did decorate one of the doorways of thattemple (Champollion, Mmi. de V^gypte, etc., vol. ii. p. 263). Nakliusit must have also worked on thetemple of Phtah at Memphis CWiedemann, ^Egyptische Gesch., p. 490). His cartouche is met withon a statue originally dedicated by a Pharaoh of the XII dynasty, discovered at Tell-Nebesheh(Peteie, Tanis II., Tell-Nebesheh, pp. 11, 29, 31, pi. x. 6 li). » Champolltox, Moil, de VEgypte, etc., vol. i. pp. 448, 459, 606-608; cf. LEFEBrEE, Les Hypogfesroyaux de Thebes, in the M€moires de la Mission du Caire, vol. ii. pt. 1, pp. 123-145, and pis. further details, cf. the bibliographical information given on p. 439. note 5, of this volume. * Maspero, Leiire a M. Gustave dEichthal sur les circonstances de VHistoire dEgyple, in theComptei rendus de IAcadimie des Inscriptiuns et Belles-Lettres, 1S73, pp. 51-53. NAEETUSIT AND RAMSES HI. 455. merely cbauging tlie dates and the cartouches,^ or when he assumed theprenomen of Usirmari, and distributed among his male children the names anddignities of the sons of Sesostris. We see, moreover, at his court another highpriest of Phtah at Memphis bearing the name of Khamoisit, and Maritiimu,another supreme pontiif of Ea in Heliopolis.^ However, this ambition toresemble his ancestor at once instigated him to noble deeds, and gave him thenecessary determination to accomplish began by restoring order in the admini-stration of affairs; he established truth,crushed error, purified the temple from allcrime, ^ and made his authority felt notonly in the length and breadth of the Nilevalley, but in what was still left of theAsiatic provinces. The disturbances of thepreceding years had weakened the prestigeof Amon-Ra, and the kings supremacywould have been seriously endangered, hadany one arisen in Syria of sufficient energy t


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