. The dawn of civilization: Egypt and Chaldaea . riod (Maspebo, Les Contes populaires, 2nd edit., ). 3 Amenôthes III. had killed as many as a hundred and two lions during the first ten years of hisreign (Scarabée 580 du Louvre, in Pierrets Recueil dinscriptions inédites du Louvre, vol. i. pp. 87, 88). 4 Traces of the journey of Mirnirî to Assûan are mentioned by Petrie in A Season in Egypt,pi. xiii., No. 338; and by Sayce, Gleanings from the Land of Egypt (in the Receuil de Travaux,vol. xv. p. 147), and of the journey of Papi I. to El-Kab by Stern, Die Cultusstàtte der Lucina, in the


. The dawn of civilization: Egypt and Chaldaea . riod (Maspebo, Les Contes populaires, 2nd edit., ). 3 Amenôthes III. had killed as many as a hundred and two lions during the first ten years of hisreign (Scarabée 580 du Louvre, in Pierrets Recueil dinscriptions inédites du Louvre, vol. i. pp. 87, 88). 4 Traces of the journey of Mirnirî to Assûan are mentioned by Petrie in A Season in Egypt,pi. xiii., No. 338; and by Sayce, Gleanings from the Land of Egypt (in the Receuil de Travaux,vol. xv. p. 147), and of the journey of Papi I. to El-Kab by Stern, Die Cultusstàtte der Lucina, in theZeilschrift, 1875, pp. 67, 68. 5 These are the identical expressions used in the Great Inscription of Beni-Hassan, 11. 36-46. 6 These details are not found on the historical monuments, but are furnished to us by thedescription given in The Book of Knowledge of what there is in the other world of the courseof the sun across the domain of the hours of night; the god is there described as a Pharaoh passing PHARAOHS OCCUPATIONS AND CARES. 269.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidd, booksubjectcivilization