The history of Egypt from the earliest times till the conquest bythe Arabs A.D. 640, Volume 11876 |
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Pagina
... century . But since that time the wonderful fertility of English literature has produced many writers equal , and in some cases far superior , to the majority of their predecessors ; and the widely augmented roll of acknowledged English ...
... century . But since that time the wonderful fertility of English literature has produced many writers equal , and in some cases far superior , to the majority of their predecessors ; and the widely augmented roll of acknowledged English ...
Pagina iii
... centuries through which it has passed , is in its present fulness still coloured with the Egyptian opinions , as the Nile reaches the Delta red with Ethiopian soil . Architecture and sculpture , the art of writing and the use of paper ...
... centuries through which it has passed , is in its present fulness still coloured with the Egyptian opinions , as the Nile reaches the Delta red with Ethiopian soil . Architecture and sculpture , the art of writing and the use of paper ...
Pagina vii
... centuries and a half by Rome , and for three centuries and a half by Constantinople , but always through the means of the Greek colonists in Alexandria . During most of these unhappy years , notwithstanding the introduction of ...
... centuries and a half by Rome , and for three centuries and a half by Constantinople , but always through the means of the Greek colonists in Alexandria . During most of these unhappy years , notwithstanding the introduction of ...
Pagina x
... century , the unhappy Jews were the assailants ; -compare page 106 with Gibbon , chap . xvi . Again , he too hastily follows Procopius rather than Theophanes and Nonnosus at the end of his chapter xlii .; he thus confounds the embassy ...
... century , the unhappy Jews were the assailants ; -compare page 106 with Gibbon , chap . xvi . Again , he too hastily follows Procopius rather than Theophanes and Nonnosus at the end of his chapter xlii .; he thus confounds the embassy ...
Pagina xi
... century to century ; and it is as necessary to note the passing of time when giving an account of a people's religion as when speaking of its government . Ecclesiastical history is very unfaithfully written when disjoined from the ...
... century to century ; and it is as necessary to note the passing of time when giving an account of a people's religion as when speaking of its government . Ecclesiastical history is very unfaithfully written when disjoined from the ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The History of Egypt: From the Earliest Times Till the Conquest by ..., Volume 1 Samuel Sharpe Volledige weergave - 1876 |
The History of Egypt from the Earliest Times Till the Conquest by the Arabs ... Samuel Sharpe Volledige weergave - 1846 |
The History of Egypt: From the Earliest Times Till the Conquest by ..., Volume 1 Samuel Sharpe Volledige weergave - 1885 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
afterwards Alexander Alexandria Amasis Amun-Ra Amunmai Amunothph Antigonus Antiochus Arabs army Arsinoë Artaxerxes Asia Minor Assyrian Berenice Bubastis buildings built called Cambyses cataract chief coast Cole-Syria conquered crown Cyprus Cyrene Darius Delta Demetrius desert Diod Egyptian Ethiopia Euergetes gained goddess gods gold Greece Greek head Hebrew Heliopolis Herodotus hieroglyphics honour hundred Inarus inscriptions island Israelites Jerusalem Jews Judæa Karnak king king's kingdom land Libyan Lower Egypt Macedonian Manetho marched Memphis mercenaries Meroë Museum Napata nation neighbours Nile obelisks Osiris Pelusium perhaps Persians Phenicians Philadelphus Philometor Philopator priests province Pthah Ptolemy Soter put to death pyramids queen Rameses Rameses II Red Sea reign river Roman sacred sculpture sent ships Shishank side soldiers statues stone Syene Syria temple Thebaid Theban Thebes Thothmosis thought thousand throne tombs trade troops Upper Egypt valley vols walls worshipped
Populaire passages
Pagina 392 - In that day shall there be an altar to the Lord in the midst of the land of Egypt, and a pillar at the border thereof to the Lord.
Pagina 123 - 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.