GLOSSARY AND INDEX

THE PRONUNCIATION OF EGYPTIAN

The correct pronunciation of Old, Middle, and Late Egyptian can only be gleaned by analogy from that of Coptic, which represents the popular language of Egypt from the third to the ninth century A.D. But this tongue was strongly reinforced by Greek loan-words, and as it was rendered in writing by the Greek alphabet it is difficult to say how much of the native linguistic element it really represents. But its orthography gives a clear idea of its pronunciation, and it is the mainstay of Egyptian philologists in restoring the word-forms of the ancient language, or at least Late Egyptian, between which and the Middle and Old dialects there is a wide linguistic gap. Indeed, the pronunciation of these archaic forms is probably for ever lost to modern scholarship. Speaking generally, Egyptian words and names are usually pronounced by scholars as they are spelt.

GLOSSARY AND INDEX

A
AAH'MES, QUEEN. Wife of King of Egypt, [246];
visited by Amen-Ra, [247];
raised above the earth by Neith and Selk [247];
the mother of Queen Hatshepsut, [248];
likeness, of, [318]
AAH-TE-HU'TI, or TE-HU'TI. Equivalent, Thoth, [106], [107]
AA-RU. Underworld known as, [64]
AAT-AB. Shrine of Heru-Behudeti at, [86]
AB'TU. A pilot fish to Ra's barque, [131]
ABU. Alternative, Elephantine, [152]
ABU RO'ASH. Second pyramid built at, [25]
AB-Y'DOS. Five priests comprised the staff at, [54];
centre of worship of Osiris, [63];
oracle of Bes at, [281], [310];
likeness of Seti I at, [318]
AB-YSS-IN'IA, [259]
AB-YSS-IN'IANS, [34]
ADAM, ROBERT, [322]
AD-O'NIS. Similarity of myth to that of Osiris, [70];
reference to, [160]
Æ-GE'AN. Merchants of the, evolved their alphabet from Egyptian hieratic, [185]
Æ'LI-AN, [284], [291]
ÆSOP'S FABLES, [195]
AF'A. Beings in heaven; characteristics of, unknown, [126]
AF'RA. Variant of Ra-Osiris, [78];
boat of, meets boats of Osiris in underworld, [117];
as Afra, Osiris continues his journey through the Duat, [118];
passes through body of monstrous serpent, and emerges as Khepera, [118]
AFRICA-N. Origin of older religion of Egypt certainly, [3];
Osiris, god of North-east, [64];
origin, Osiris of, [64];
origin, Anqet of, [156]
AFRICA-N INFLUENCE. Semitic and, on Egyptian religious ideas, [280]-[282];
deities, Bes the most important of, [281]
AH. The moon-god; Ashtoreth and, [278]
AH-U'RA. Wife of Neper-ka-Ptah, [268];
her prophecy regarding Setne, [268];
requests Setne not to remove her husband's book, [266]
AÏ. The palace of, [42];
hymn to Aten found in tomb of, [161]
AI'NU OF JAPAN. God of the, [146]
AK'ER. The lion-god; guarded the gate of the dawn, [291]
AK'ER-BLAD. One who helped decipher Rosetta Stone, [187]
AK'ER-TET. Celebration of mysteries of, [57]
AK'HEN-AT-EN. See Amen-hetep IV.
1. King; Amen-hetep changes his name to, [158];
religion of, [158];
introduced cult of Aten into Egypt, [159];
his reign, [160];
reference to, [161].
2. Palace of, [42];
new capital built by Amen-hetep, [158];
social life in, [159]
AL-AS'IA. Ounamounou drives into the country of, [236];
Hatibi, the Princess of, [236]
AL'CHE-MY, [269]
ALEXANDER THE GREAT, [142]
ALEXANDRIA. Wine made in Mareotis, [46];
writings of Greeks of, [108];
statue of Sarapis at, [307];
Sarapis, principal deity in, [310]
ALEXANDRINE-CONQUEST. The religion of Egypt and, [304]
AL KHE-MEI'A, [269]
AM-A'IT. The attendant of the Lord of Amenti, [209], [210]
AM-AS'IS. An Egyptian monarch who died 526 B.C., [196], [197];
Saïte King, [302];
raised sarcophagi to the sacred bull, [302];
Naukratis founded in time of, [303]
AM'ELINEAU, [124]
AMEMT. Monster, who attends the Judgment Scene, [294]
AM'EN. Great wealth and power of the god, [52];
alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
associated with Ra; temple at Thebes, [131];
Ra and Osiris, worship widespread Nile valley, [137];
centre of worship and power, Thebes; all attributes of Ra attributed
to him, [138], [139];
national deity; fusion of Ra and Amen, [139], [140];
'king of the gods,' [140];
his cult an attempt at monotheism, [141];
in Egyptian pantheon was worshipped as Amen-Ra, [157];
reference to, [144], [158], [159], [176];
the god, Pharaoh Manakhphrê-Siamon, and, [213], [214];
appellation, the Bull of Meroe, [214];
invoked in connexion with spells, [264];
Sebek represented with the plumes of, [291];
shared in worship of Egypt during Libyan period, [300];
priestesses in service of, [305];
Zeus identified with, [305], [306]
A'MEN-EM-HAT I. Wrote work on good government, [187];
first king of Twelfth Dynasty, [190]
AM'EN-EM-HAT III. Pyramid of, at Dahshur, [26]
AM'EN-HET'EP III. Temple of Mut built by, [143];
temples of Ra-Harmachis and Aten built by, [157];
worship of Ashtoreth in the time of, [278];
boasted to have shot one hundred and two lions, [292];
son of Hāpu, [303];
a hero-god who was thought to have seen and conversed with the gods, [303]
AM'EN-HET'EP IV. Cult of Aten in reign of; regarded as abode of
sun-god, [157], [58];
built new capital dedicated to faith of Aten, [158];
reference to, [161]
AM'EN-RA. Political power of priests of, [140];
all the attributes of the Egyptian pantheon lavished upon him,
with the exception of those of Osiris, [141];
one of his forms that of a goose, [141];
dominion of, [142];
Nut, female counterpart, [143];
worshipped in Eighteenth Dynasty, [157];
struggle for supremacy between votaries of, and those of Aten; name of,
obliterated from inscriptions
by order of king, [158];
supremacy triumphantly restored on death of Akh-en-Aten, [160];
beauty of, [176], [177];
festival of, [177];
Ounamounou, chief priest of, [232];
gold of, [232];
statue of, [233];
sacred barque of, [233];
Pharaoh Petoubastis swears by, [244];
king of gods and maker of men, [246];
Queen Hatshepsut daughter of, by Queen Aahames, [246]-[248];
Prince Thoutii extols, [251];
goose sacred to, [297]
AM-EN'TET. A region of Field, or Place of Reeds, where dwelt souls living upon
earth-offerings, [116];
ruled over by Menuqet, [116];
reference to, [124], [164]
AM-EN'TI. Reference to, [208];
a vision of, [209]-[211];
the gods of, seen by Setne, [209]-[211];
Amait, the attendant of the Lord of, [210]
AMERICA. Tribes, and animal totems, [11];
aborigines of, and soul, [31];
myth of Nut common among aborigines of, [173]
AMERICA-N, NORTH. Superstition among tribes of, re new name [259];
parallel to practice of Egyptian gods found in the mythology of
certain tribes of, [261];
Indians; the orenda of the, [261];
Indian; dreams and, [273]
AMERICAN INDIAN. Reference to belief of the, [5];
belief in resurrection by, [79]
AM'HET. A portion of the underworld, [117]
AM'SET. Equivalent, Mesti, [28];
one of the four helpers of Horus, [96]
AM'SU. Variant of Ptah-Seker, Asar, [146];
Qetesh associated with, [279]
AMULET-S. Use in Egypt, [263];
some of more important ones—the Heart (the Scarab), the Pillow, the Collar of Gold,
the Eye of Horus, etc., [263];
efficaciousness of, [269]
AN'AP-OU. Brother of Bitou, [224]-[228];
kills his wife and mourns for Bitou, [225];
rewarded by Pharaoh, [226];
succeeds Bitou on throne of Egypt, [228]
ANCIENT EMPIRE. Reference to, [137]
AN'I. Papyrus of, [6];
reference to, [57];
instructions to his heir, [187];
reference to the papyrus of, [324]
ANIMAL-S. Spells in Thoth's Library of Magical Books capable of
enchanting, [266];
transformation, [270]-[273];
Dr. Bridge and the idea of transformation of, [271];
provision of spells in the Book of the Dead to enable the deceased to transform
himself from a bird, serpent, etc., [270], [271];
worship; Egyptians incurred merriment of the cultured Greek and the ridicule of early
Christian writers, by, [271];
worship; the attitude of primitive man and Egyptians, [271];
transformation; origin of, [271];
form; of Egyptian gods, question re totemic origin, [272];
sacred, in Egypt, [282]-[297];
worshipped in Egypt—the bull, [284]-[288];
the crocodile, [289]-[291];
the lion, [291]-[292];
the cat, [293];
the dog, [294];
the hippopotamus, [294];
the ibis, [295]-[297];
other animals in Egyptian mythology—the ass, the pig, the hare,
the shrew-mouse, the ichneumon, the bat, the tortoise, the serpent,
the uræus, the scorpion (sacred to Isis), and the frog (symbol
of generation, birth, and fecundity), [295];
worship of, during the Late period, [302]-[304];
worship of, during Hellenic period, [306];
Strabo, and statues of sacred, [306];
crude images of living, made of mud in Egypt during the Thinite period, [312]
AN'IM-ISM. Ancient Egyptians passed through phase of, [4];
the mother of Spiritism, [254], [255]
ANKH-NET'ERU. A great serpent through whose body Af Ra is drawn
in his boat by twelve gods, [118]
AN-OUK-HOR'ON. The Prince of Tiome; breaks under the stress of the bonds of Sebennytos, [244];
is overthrown by Petekhousou, [244]
AN-PU. Equivalent, Anubis, [103]
AN'QET. Isis, as goddess of fertile waters was called, [83];
one of a triad of gods held in reverence at Elephantine, [152];
female counterpart of Khnemu; local Nubian goddess, [153];
sister-goddess of Satet; origin; worship centred at Sahal; shrine at Philæ,
where she was identified with Nephthys, [156];
personification, [156]
ANT. A pilot fish to Ra's barque, [131]
ANTH. See Anthat
AN'THAT. Egyptian war-goddess, [276];
her cult in Syria, [277];
shrine at Thebes to, [277];
Rameses II and, [277];
name given by Rameses II to his daughter, [277];
appellation, 'lady of heaven and mistress of the gods,' [277];
Set and, [278]
ANTIQUITY-IES. Service of, [38];
of Egyptian magic, [254];
reference to Comte de Caylus, [321]
AN'TUF. Temple of, [151]
AN'U, or AN'NU. College at, [54];
the On or Heliopolis of the Greeks, [54], [113];
alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
worship of Ra centred in, [132]
AN'U-BIS. Representation of, [11];
mask of, [30];
body of Osiris and, [79];
son of Nephthys, [97], [98];
son of Set, [99];
alternative, An-pu; guide of the dead, [103];
worshipped at Lycopolis, Abt, and elsewhere; part in the Book of the Dead;
embalmed body of Osiris, [104];
assisted by Up-uaut; personification of the summer solstice, [105];
had votaries in Rome, [106];
reference to, [109], [119];
weighs hearts of the dead before Osiris, [119];
Setne sees beside Osiris, [209];
his judgment on the dead, [209];
in the court of Amen-Ra, [246];
mummy magic and, [274];
the jackal sacred to, [294]
APE-GODS. Songs to Osiris by the, [116]
AP'EP, AP'EPI. Fiend of darkness, [13];
Set takes his form, [100];
obstructs Af Ra, [118];
enemy of Ra, daily devours the sun; counterpart, the Assyrian monster, Tiamat, [131], [132];
reference to, [161];
slain at Heliopolis, ra[174];
the monster serpent; terrors of the Unknown personified in, ra[295];
slain by the solar cat, ra[298];
Set identified with, ra[300]
AP'EPI. Prince; leader of the Hyksos, ra[194]
APES. Kept in temples, ra[294]
AP'ET. Hippopotamus-goddess of Thebes; supposed mother of Osiris, ra[174], ra[175]
APH'RO-D-I-TE. Hathor identified with, ra[168]
APH-ROD'IT-O-POL-IS. Hathor of, ra[169]
AP'IS. Slain by Ochus, ra[103];
sacred bull; Bitou assumes form of, ra[226];
worship of in Egypt, ra[284];
Herodotus describes, ra[284];
account of, by Diodorus, ra[284], ra[285];
Manetho on cult of, ra[284];
Diodorus's account of the finding of the, ra[284];
funeral ceremonies of, ra[285];
installation of, ra[284], ra[285];
transported to Memphis, ra[285];
cows presented to the, ra[285];
oracle in the temple of Ptah, ra[286];
Wiedemann on the oracles of the, ra[286];
Pliny on the prophecies in connexion with the, ra[286];
prophecies during the procession of the, ra[286];
sacrifices to the, ra[287];
burial of, ra[287];
votive statues and stelæ dedicated to the dead, ra[287];
at death, the dual god Osiris-Apis formed, ra[287];
attributes of Hades ascribed to, ra[287];
worship during the Late period, ra[302];
the Saïte King, Amasis, raised sarcophagi to the, ra[302];
Kambyses and the, ra[304];
worshipped by conquered and conquerors, ra[306]
A-POL'LIN-OP'OLIS MAG'NA. 'Lady of the chariot dweller in'—Egyptian
appellation for Ashtoreth, ra[278]
AP-U'-AT. Equivalent, Up-uaut, ra[105]
AP'U-LEI-US. Speaks of Anubis as having a dog's head, ra[106]
ARABIA. Immigrations from, to Egypt, ra[34]
ARABIAN NIGHTS. Reference to, ra[249]
ARABS. Pyramid called a mastaba by, ra[24];
reference to, [182];
Sennacherib, King of the Assyrians and, ra[219], ra[220]
ARCHÆOLOGICAL SOCIETY, ra[248]
ARCHITECTURE. Rude forms of early, in Egypt, ra[312]
AR'IS-TE-AS. Soul of, ra[6]
AR-SIN'OË. TWO royal Ptolemies and an; figures of on stele, ra[288]
AR'THUR, KING. Reference to, ra[87]
ART-S. Influence of Bes, ra[281];
output of the great Egyptian masters, ra[311];
Egyptian, ra[311]-[326];
indigenous to ancient Egypt, ra[311];
Japan and China; the great Italian masters, ra[311];
the old Spanish artists, ra[311];
painting imported from the Low Countries, ra[311];
painting and other domestic, in the land of Isis, ra[312];
the Thinite, the first period of Egyptian, ra[312];
crude images made of mud, ra[312];
rude forms of architecture in Egypt, ra[312];
the materials of painting, ra[315]-[317];
New Empire, ra[317]-[210];
the Saïte, the last period of Egyptian, ra[319], ra[320];
Egyptian artists of the Saïte period prone to imitate, ra[319];
decline of Egyptian jewellery, ra[319];
dawn of Saïte period saw completion of many noble edifices, ra[319], ra[320];
structures and foreign ideas, ra[320];
paintings of period equal to earlier product, ra[320];
statuary of Saïte period, ra[320];
influences of Egyptian, ra[320]-[323];
Egyptian influences in Spain, ra[321];
Egyptian influence on French, ra[321];
reference to Comte de Caylus, ra[321];
reference to Napoleon's Egyptian expedition, ra[321];
reference to Ivan Mestrovic, ra[322];
reference to David Edström, ra[322];
Post-Impressionists and Impressionists, in Egyptian, ra[322], ra[323];
artistic remains, ra[323];
the value of Egyptian, ra[323];
reference to the Salon School and the Rue de Rivoli—also to Clouet,
Boucher, Lancret, Clodion, Dalou, and Rodin, ra[323];
the mass of Egyptian remains, far inferior to those of Greek origin, ra[323];
the Egyptian a divine colourist, ra[324];
Egyptian colour-harmonies, ra[324];
reference to Whistler, ra[325];
simplicity; in Egyptian, ra[325];
great simplicity of Egyptian, ra[325], ra[326];
reference to Lady Margaret Sackville, ra[326];
genius of Egyptian artists, ra[326]
AS'AR-HA'PI. An aspect of Sarapis, ra[306], ra[308]
A'S-ER. Tree of, ra[7]
ASH'EMU. Gods of heaven, attributes unknown, ra[126]
ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM. ra[37]
ASH'TAR-OTH. See Ashtoreth
ASH'TOR-ETH. An Egyptian god borrowed from Semitic Asia, ra[276];
called by Egyptians 'mistress of horses, lady of the chariot,
dweller in Apollinopolis Magna,' ra[278];
the terrible goddess of war, ra[278];
her worship brought into Egypt, ra[278];
mention of, in letter from Tushratta to Amen-hetep III, ra[278];
her worship in the Delta, ra[278];
a temple to, on the shores of the Serbonian lake, ra[278];
identified with the forms of Hathor, or Isis-Hathor, ra[278];
the national goddess of the Syrians, ra[278];
Rameses II named one of his sons after her (Mer-Astrot), ra[279];
depicted as lioness-headed, ra[278];
Qetesh considered, an aspect of, ra[279]
A'SO. Queen of Ethiopia; in league with Set for murder of Osiris, ra[66]
AS'SA. Pyramid of, called the Beautiful, ra[26]
ASS'UAN (pron. As-wān). Tombs and quarries of, ra[43]
ASSYRIAN-S. Reference to, monster Tiamat, counterpart of Apep, ra[132];
Sennacherib, King of the, ra[219], ra[220];
Egyptian artists learn from the, ra[319]
AS-TAR'TE. Equivalent, Athenais, ra[68];
aids Isis, ra[69];
is shown battlefield by Horus, ra[88]
ASTROLOGICAL. Knowledge; of the Egyptians, ra[272], ra[273];
calendars, ra[273]
AT'EF. Crown, the, worn by Thoth, ra[106]
AT'EN. Disk of the sun, ra[156];
cult of during reign of Amenhetep IV, ra[157];
regarded as abode of sun-god, ra[157], ra[158];
king builds capital to faith of, ra[158];
king of the gods, the god, ra[158];
his cult a naturalistic one, ra[159];
signified both the sun-god and the solar-disk;
in Book of the Dead, [160];
words referring to, [161];
his control of the Nile; titles given to, [161];
cult of, was worship of sun-god, [162]
AT'MU. Equivalent, Tem, [119];
or Atum, [133];
god, in the court of Amen-Ra, [246]
AT'TIS. Similarity of myth to that of Osiris, [70];
rites of, [72]
AT'UM. Original local god of Heliopolis; united with Ra-Tem, [133];
equivalents, Atmu, [119];
Atum, or Tem, [136]
AUDIENCE, HALL OF, [211]-[219];
Se-Osiris and, [218]
AUGUSTUS, EMPEROR. The Apis Oracle and, [286];
Strabo's visits Egypt during reign of, [290];
Strabo writes in time of, [306]
AUSTRALIA-N. Societies; almost identical with those of Eleusis, [58];

initiatory ceremonies, [122];
aborigine; reluctance of, to reveal real name, [258], [259];
superstition in, regarding new name, [259]
AYLLU. Each localized tribe or, had its place of origin, [10]
AZ'TEC-S. Belief of, [6];
pantheon; Tezcatlipoca, head of, [82];
reference to, [129]
B
BAAL. Egyptian god of war, [276];
the Ramessides esteemed, [277];
temple at Tanis to, [277];
identified with Set, [277];
name in texts of Edfû, [277]
BABYLONIANS. A people cognate with the, [34]
BACCHUS. Reference to, [102]
BA'DÎL. The prince of Dora; Ounamounou and, [232], [233]
BAK'HAU. The mountain of sunrise, [125]
BANTH-AN'TH ('Daughter of Anth'). Name given by Rameses II to daughter, [277]
BAS-RELIEF-S. Egyptian, [315];
specimens of the New Empire period, [318]
BAST. Worshipped first in shape of cat, [10];
Mut identified with, [143];
temple of, at Memphis, [147];
typified mild heat of the sun; amalgamated with Sekhmet and Ra; mentioned
in Pyramid Texts and Book of the Dead, [148];
festival of, [148], [149];
reference to, [150], [175];
story in which monster cat represents goddess, [189];
the cat that was cured and, [264];
considered of Libyan origin, [276];
the cat an incarnation of, [293];
the goddess of Bubastis, [300], [302];
identified with Artemis, [306]
BAT'TAS. Of Sumatra; the soul and, [32]
'BEAUTY OF RA.' Meaning of name given to wife of Rameses, [177]
BE'BY. A frightful monster, [119]
BE-EL'ZE'BUB. An example of the broken-down deity, [257]
BE-HU'DET. Horus of, [94]
BEKH'TEN. Prince of, vassal of King Rameses, [176];
daughter of, [177]-[180]
BE'LIN, SIR. Reference to, [87]
BEN'I HASS'AN. Graves of, [27];
a remarkable picture at, [317]
BENT-RESHY. Little sister of Rameses' wife, [177]-[179]
BE'O-WULF. Reference to, [87], [132]
BER'E-NICE. Arabian immigrants' base at, [34]
BERLIN, [37], [188], [197]
BERLIN SCHOOL. Reference to, [35];
dating of Egyptian history according to, [36]
BES. Popularity of, [175], [308];
the most important of African deities, [281];
associated with birth, [281];
a representation of, [281];
appears in all 'Birth Houses' in Egyptian temples, [281];
the god of the dance, etc., [282];
identified with his ward Horus, [282];
transformation of, [282];
appellation, 'the Warrior,' [282];
the oracle of, at Abydos, [310]
BES'A. Appellation, Bes, derived from word, [281]
BIBLE, THE. Reference to, [248]
BIL-QUI'LA. Conception of the, [6];
their belief, [32]
BIRDS. Spell in Thoth's Library of Magical Books capable of enchanting, [266];
worshipped by the Egyptians—the ibis, [295], [296];
the bennu, the falcon, the swallow, the heron, the goose, the vulture, [297]
BIRTH HOUSES.' Representations of Bes in, [281]
BI'TOU. Greek god Bitys, and, [224];
the hero in the tale of "Two Brothers," [224];
Anapou brother of, [224]-[228];
goes to Vale of the Acacia, [225];
wife of, [225];
the Seven Hathors, and, [226];
the treachery of his wife, [226]-[228];
Pharaoh entices wife of, [226];
dies and is restored to life, [226];
assumes the form of a sacred bull (Apis), [226];
slain by Pharaoh, [227];
assumes form of two trees, [227];
born as Pharaoh's son, [228];
succeeds Pharaoh, [228];
slays his wife and makes Anapou his successor, [228]
BITTER LAKES. Reference to, [191]
BIT'YS. Greek god, perhaps identifiable with Bitou, [224]
BLACKFELLOWS OF AUSTRALIA. Societies and celebrations of, [58];
initiatory ceremonies of, [122]
BLACK POWDER. Identified with Osiris, [270];
the genesis of practical alchemy and, [270]
BLESSED, THE. Heavenly beings; chanted praises of Ra; nourished upon sunlight, [127]
BOHEMIA. Belief in, [6];
soul conceived as a white bird in, [32]
BOOK OF BREATHINGS. Believed to be work of Thoth, [108]
BOOK OF GATES. Description of the Duat in, [116];
Book of Him that is in the Duat and, [118]
BOOK OF HIM THAT IS IN THE DUAT. See Book of Gates, [116], [118]
BOOK OF SLAYING THE HIPPOPOTAMUS. Horus repeats formulæ in, [89]
BOOK OF THE DEAD. Supplies Theban Recension, [2];
revision of, [18];
walls of tomb covered with texts from, [29];
if memorized ensures blissful future, [51];
reference to, [56], [63], [114], [143]-[145], [148], [152], [181], [187];
quotation from, [57];
society outlined in the, [58];
Osiris-Ra in, [73];
myth of Osiris in, [77];
the authority upon Osiris, [79];
helpers of Horus given positions in the, [95];
Anubis in, [104], [106];
a speech by Anubis in, [105];
Thoth alluded to in the, [107];
believed to be the work of Thoth, [108];
Egyptian title, Pert em hru; compiled for use of the dead, [109];
texts in, of great antiquity, [110], [111];
revision of, [112];
discoveries made by Maspero; three versions of, [113];
all good men made study of the, [115];
gods in the, [119];
description of Osiris in, [119];
book, an allegory, [120];
analogy to the, in the Popol Vuh, [121];
may preserve prehistoric ritual, [122];
Egyptian faith in the, [124];
states number of spirits in heaven, [127];
pictures of ladders in, [128];
Satet appears in, [156];
Aten appears in, [160];
deceased described in, as relying on Nut, [174];
magic formulas and guardians pictured in, [262];
provisions of spells in, [270], [271];
Set symbolized in, [289];
cat named in, [293]
BOOK OF THE OPENING OF THE MOUTH, [30]
BOOKS, LIBRARY OF MAGICAL. Equivalent, The Double House of Life;
written by Thoth, [265]-[268];
Setne's study in, [265]
'BOOKS OF THOTH.' Number of, [108]
BOOKS OF OVERTHROWING AP'EP. Gives spells and instructions, [131]
BORNEANS. The soul and, [32]
BOR'OS or BOR-O'ROS. Belief of, re the soul, [6], [32]
BRAZIL. Boros of, [6], [32]
BREASTED, PROFESSOR, [36]
BRITAIN. Worship of Isis and, [84]
BRITISH. Rosetta Stone in possession of, [37];
suzerainty, [38]
BRITISH COLUMBIA, [6], [32]
BRITISH MUSEUM. Papyri in the, [12], [206], [224], [228];
antiquities brought from Egypt to, [37];
reference to, [121];
Egyptian love-songs in, [206]
BROTHERS. The story of the Two, [224]-[232]
BRUGSCH. Osiris and, [64];
statement by, [73];
Set and, [100];
Ptah and, [144];
Khnemu and, [153]
BU-BAS'TIS. Bast worshipped at, [148], [293], [300];
Herodotus and, [149];
cats buried at, [293], [302];
Sheshonk's capital at, [300]
BUDGE, DR. E. A. WALLIS. On divinities of ancient Egypt, [8];
totemic theory and, [9];
reference to, [10], [269];
quotation from, [64];
Osiris and, [64];
compares Isis and Nephthys, [98];
view of, regarding Anubis and Up-uaut, [105];
Maāt and, [108], [109];
on Book of the Dead, [110];
Ptah, [146];
on origin of I-em-hetep, [151], [152];
on magic, [252], [258], [270];
animal transformation and, [271]
BULL OF MEROE, THE. One of Amen's appellations, [214]
BULL, THE. Worship of, [284]-[288];
Amasis and, [302]
BU-SI'RIS. Inhabitants of, never use trumpets, [101];
the port of, [260], [261]
BU'TO. 1. Goddess; the shrew-mouse sacred to, [295].
2. City—Herodotus at, [296]
BYB'LOS. Coffin of Osiris at, [6], [68], [69];
death of child of King of, [81];
Ounamounou and, prince of, [233]
C
CAB-I'RI. Mysteries of the, [122]
CAI'RO, [38]
CAI'RO MUSEUM. Museum at, [38];
reference to, [132], [313], [314], [318]
CALENDAR-S. Astrological, [273]
CANO'PIC. Deities known as, [125];
otherwise called Children of Horus, [125]
CAR'MEL. Worshipped, [9];
high place of deities, [10]
CARTHAGE. Worship of Reshpu and, [280]
CAS'TOR. Describes impress of the Sphragistæ, [103]
CAT, THE. Worship of, [293];
an incarnation of Bast, [293];
Egyptian mythology and, [293];
Book of the Dead, and, [293];
Diodorus and, [293];
penalty for killing, [293];
Herodotus and, [293];
ceremonies at death of, [293];
buried in city of Bubastis, [293]
CAU'AC A Deity of the ancient Maya; equivalent, Hozanek, [29]
CENTRAL AMERICA-N. Teocalli of, [24];
the Maya of, [29], [109];
the Popol Vuh of, [58], [121];
Mayas' belief in resurrection, [79], [121];
the Kiches of, [133]
CERES. Reference to, [102], [121]
CHAMPOLLION. Rosetta Stone and, [38];
expedition to Egypt, [38];
allusion to his work, [187]
CHARMS. Spells and, [262]
CHE'OPS. First pyramid attributed to, [25];
alternative, Khufu, [25];
reference to, [112]
CHEYENNE INDIANS, [10]
CHI'LE. Superstition among tribes of, [259]
CHINA. Japanese painting and, [311];
care for the dead in, [313]
CHINESE. Mythology, [132]
CHRIST, [319]
CHRISTIANITY. Egyptian religion and, [300], [309]
CHRISTIAN-S. Egyptian realms of bliss compared with, [128];
era, fable of lion and mouse dates within, [195];
Egyptian, or Copts, [269]
CLAUDIAN, EMPEROR, [206]
'COMPANIES' OF THE GODS. In the Pyramid Texts, [16];
alternative, Enneads, [16]
COMTE DE CAY'LUS. Reference to, [321]
CONSPIRACY. A magical, by Hui against Rameses III, [262], [263]
CONVENT, THE NORTHERN. Temple erected to Queen Hatshepsut, [248]
COP'TIC. The, idea of punishment in the Duat, [124];
manuscripts [182];
resemblances between Semitic and, [183];
language, [184]
COP'TITES. Reference to, [101]
COP'TOS. One of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142];
Nefer-ka-Ptah, his wife and child, at, [266], [267]
COP'TS. Equivalent for Christian Egyptians, [269]
COURT OF THE THIRTY. Supreme tribunal of Egypt, [195]
CREATION MYTHS. Reference to, [12]
CRETAN. Myths; reference to, [77]
COW-S, THE. Worship of, [284];
the Apis presented with, [285];
the most sacred of animals, [303]
CROCODILE, THE. Worship of, [289]-[291];
the incarnation of the god Sebek, [289];
fear of [289];
Ra, Osiris and, [289];
hunting of, [290];
a protector of Egypt, [290];
Herodotus and, [290];
held sacred, [290], [306];
buried in the subterranean Labyrinth, [290];
centre of worship, [290];
cult of, [291];
Strabo and, [290]
CROWN, WHITE. Shown on Egyptian monuments, [278]
CY'PRUS. Worship of Reshpu and, [280]
D
DAC-O'TAS. Belief of, re the moon, [74]
DAD-EF-RA. Second pyramid credited to, [25]
DAH'SHUR. Pyramid of Senusert at, [26]
DANAË. Greek myth of, [205]
DARWIN. Allusion to, [189]
DAVIES. Monuments and temples recovered by, [160]
DEAD, THE. The judgment of Anubis on, [209];
Egyptian respect for, [238];
a game of draughts with the, [267], [268];
interred in shallow groves in pre-dynastic Egypt, [312];
welfare of the, in Egypt, [313]
DEATH. Destination of the soul after, [255], [256]
DECREE OF CANOPU. Stelæ inscribed in hieroglyphic, Demotic,
and Greek found, [186]
DED'I. Hero of magical tale, [200]-[202]
DEIR-EL-BA'HAR'I. Equivalent, 'the Northern Covent';
the name of the temple erected to Queen Hatshepsut, [248]
DE IS'IDE ET OSI'RI-DE. Religious tales of Plutarch, [4];
legend of Osiris as related in, [64];
passage from, [101]
DEITY. Beelzebub, example of the broken-down, [257]
DEITIES. Native; control over, [253];
of Egypt; evolved from animistic conceptions, [257];
North American, [261];
Egyptians free from bigotry for their native, [275];
war and Egyptian, [276];
Asiatic, [280];
Bes, African, [281];
the lion identified with solar, [291];
lion-headed, in the underworld, [292]
DE'LOS. Reference to, [56]
DEL'TA, THE. Description of, [33];
Isis in swamps of the, [95], [264];
Libyan aggression in the, [140];
Bast, goddess of, [148];
reference to, [150], [191];
war between Upper Egypt and, [240]-[245];
worship of Ashtoreth in, [278];
Reshpu's chief centre of worship in the, [280];
home of the Egyptian lion, [291]
DE'MET-ER. Figure in mysterious cult, [58];
myth of, [77];
story of, [121]
DE'MON-S. Gods as, [102];
equivalent, Genii, [102];
cure of those possessed by, [268], [269]
DEMON OF SILENCE. Tehuti-nekht and the, [222]
DEM-OT'IC. Represents vulgar dialect of Saïte period, [183], [184], [186];
papyrus, [188], [189], [195]
DEN. Equivalents, Udy-mu or Hesepti, [63];
fifth king of the First Dynasty, [63]
DEN-DE'RAH. Tree of Osiris at, [72];
temple of Hathor at, [165]
DÊR-EL-BA'HAR'I. Edifices at, [317]
DEVOURER OF THE WEST. A monster; protector of Osiris, [119]
DI'ANA. Equivalent Bast or Bubastis, [149]
DI'NO. Story related by, [103]
DI-OD'OR-US. Tale related by, [11];
on the Apis, [284];
the crocodile and, [290];
his statement re cats, [293]
DI-ON-Y'SI-US. Soteles and, [307]
DI-OS'PO-LIS, PARVA. Equivalent, How, [72], [73]
'DIRECTOR OF THE SOLDIERS.' Priest's title at Mendes, [53]
DIVINE SPEECH. Thoth was the personification of the, [106]
DIVINE WIFE. Amen represented by a, [300]
DIVINITIES. Of Egypt, [257];
of Egypt, identified by Herodotus with those of Greece, [303];
favourite, [310]
DOG, THE. Worship of, [294];
held in honour, [294];
confusion of, with the jackal, [294]
DO'RA. A city of Zakkala, [232]
D'OR-BI'NEY, MME ELIZABETH, [224]
D'ORBINEY PAPYRUS. Title, [224];
translated repeatedly, [224];
owner, Sety Merenptah (Sety II); more than three thousand years old;
hero of the story is Bitou, [224]
DRA'CO. Identified with Reret, [181]
DRAUGHTS. Setne and Nefer-ka-ptah play a game of, [268]
DREAMS. The gods and, [273]
DU'A AND SEF. Alternatives, [292]
DU'AT. Abode of the dead, [82];
reference to, [104], [108], [151], [152], [161], [173];
believed to be formed of body of Osiris, [114];
description of, [116];
Osiris journeys through the, [117], [118];
the wicked and the, [122];
gods presiding over the, [126];
Ptah and the dead in the, [144]
DU-AT'I. A god of the Duat, [115]
DWELLER IN THE HENNU BOAT. Book of the Dead and the, [111]
DYNASTY. Fifth, [17];
Book of the Dead revised during First, [18];
Fifth and Sixth, [19];
Pharaoh buried during First, [22];
pyramid during Third, [24];
pyramidal architecture from Fourth to Twelfth, [24];
art of mummification in Twenty-first, [27];
custom of Eighteenth, [28], [29];
date of Twelfth, [35];
division of dynasties, [36];
Eighteenth, [41];
Third, [46];
worship of Set in Twenty-second, [101];
king of the Eleventh, [111];
king of the First, [111];
Twenty-sixth, [111];
bas-relief of the Second, [112];
fully formed Book of the Dead in Sixth, in vogue in Second,

and probably First, [113];
Theban Recension in vogue from Eighteenth to Twenty-second, [114];
priests of Ra at Heliopolis during Fifth, [132];
Sixth, [133];
scarabs dating from Fourth, [137];
Amen, deity of Egypt in Fifth, [137];
temple built in honour of Amen, during Twelfth, [138];
military successes of Eighteenth, [159];
Second, [144];
Twenty-second, [146];
Third, [151], [154];
Twelfth, [152];
Anqet had temple built in Eighteenth, [156];
Theban monarchy at beginning of Eighteenth, [157];
papyrus of Eighteenth, [171];
inscriptions belonging to First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, [182], [183];
tales, letters, of the Twelfth, [183];
papyri of the Eighteenth and Twenty-first, [183];
Demotic dialect traced to Twenty-fifth, [184];
Egyptian system of writing in Syria under the Eighteenth, [184];
hieroglyphic character in inscriptions of First;
practically unaltered from Fourth, [185], [186];
Demotic form of script in Twenty-sixth, [186];
king of Twelfth, [190];
tale of Twelfth, [191];
three sons of Rud-didet reigned during Fifth, [204], [205];
tale of the Nineteenth, [224];
story of the Eighteenth, [228];
Prince of Joppa's rebellion in Eighteenth, [249];
Baal known to the Egyptians under the Eighteenth, [277];
Nineteenth, [277];
Qetesh's title on inscriptions of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth, [279];
cult of Apis traced to the Second, [284];
the Middle Kingdom from Ninth to Seventeenth, [317];
New Empire period from Eighteenth to Thirty-first, [317]
E
EARLY BURIALS. Preservation of body, [21]
EARTH-GOD. Gab, the, 246
EAST. Dwelling-houses in the, [41];
names of power common over all the, [259]
EASTERN. Fable, makers of, [1]
'EATER OF THE DEAD.' Anubis protects the dead man against, [105]
ED'FÛ. Shrine of Heru at, [86];
reference to, [88], [92], [93], [176];
Horus in the text of, [92];
name of Baal in texts of, [277];
temple of Horus at, [320]
ED'STRÖM, DAVID, [322]
E'GYPT. Ancient, [1];
Upper, [2];
Lower, [2];
religion, [2], [3], [4];
gods of, [4];
early dwellers in, [5];
early graves in, [6];
totemism in religion of, [8], [9], [11];
totemic origin of divinities of, [8];
standards of, [9];
fable current in, [11];
certain animals not eaten in, [11];
animals worshipped in, [11];
creation myth of, [15];
divided into provinces, [17];
religious thought in, [19];
Pyramid Texts of, [24];
architecture, [24];
description of Nile valley in Upper, [33];
origin of its people, [34];
dynastic ancient history of, [35];
dynasties, [35];
traditions of, [37];
expeditions sent to, [38], [39];
sanitary conditions of, [41];
Ai ascended throne of, [42];
domestic life of, [43];
explorations in, [43];
pyramids and necropolis in Upper, [43];
native monarchy, [43];
invaders of, [44];
horse and camel, importation into, [45];
feudal system throughout, [45];
commercial affairs, [45];
corn, staple produce of, [45];
tribute to, [45];
Greek trade in, [46];
theologians and philosophers in, [54];
crypts of, [57];
early Grecians influence from, [58];
wood in, [60];
under Osiris, [66];
body of Osiris brought to, [69];
tombs of Osiris in, [70];
conception of resurrection in, [79];
Isis, great corn-mother of, [81];
her myth real to people of, [83];
Thothmes king of, [85];
promised to Thothmes by Harmachis, [86];
the sun in early, [94];
first historical king of, [110];
victorious wars of, [112];
sun-worship in, [130];
cult of Ra in, [132];
priestly subterfuges in, [133];
worship of beetle in, [136];
votaries of Amen powerful in, [137];
goose sacred in, [141];
dominion of Amen-Ra in, [142];
vulture symbol on crowns of, [143];
god of medicine in, [151];
famine in, [154];
sun-gods of, [156];
State religion of, [157];
Tell-el-Amarna in, [158];
new cult introduced into, [159];
cult of Aten supreme in, [161];
pantheon of ancient, [163];
temple of Hathor in Upper, [165];
division into Higher and Lower [170];
worship of Hapi in, [171];
fair women in, [176];
language of, [186];
natives of, [190];
lyric and folk poetry, [205];
superiority of, in story, [207];
the nobles of, [211];
Horus goes to, [217];
Anapou and Bitou, in, [224];
Ounamounou visits, [232]-[236];
civil war in, [240]-[245];
Queen Hatshepsut designed to reign over, [246];
Aahmes, wife of King of, [246];
Thothmes III King of, [249];
no equal of Thoutii in all, [249];
amulets used in, [263];
alchemy originated in, [269], [270];
metal-working in, [270];
animal transformation in, [270];
Mena, first historical king of, [284];
the crocodile a protector of, [290];
worship of the cat in, [293];
not rich in trees, [297];
the arts were indigenous to ancient, [311]
E-GYP'TIAN-S. Phases of religion, [1];
faith of, [2];
pantheon, [2], [19], [63], [130], [141], [157];
mythology, [3], [156], [175];
religion, [3], [4], [7], [14], [18], [21], [48], [159], [257], [304];
literature, [4], [187], [190], [194], [196], [197];
religious tales, [4];
beliefs of, [5], [6];
manuscripts, [7];
fetishism in, [7];
amulets, [7];
animal-worship of, [9];
standards, [10], [11];
totemic nature of deities, [10];
transformation of gods, [12];
conception of the creation, [12];
source of religious system, [14];
theology, [17];
idea of God, [18];
Khnemu and Egyptian religion, [21];
idea of preservation of human body, [21];
funerary, [22];
mummification, [27], [28];
details of tomb furniture, [29];
ka, the, [31];
dignity conferred on the dead by the, [32];
preparation for death, [32];
race origin, [34], [35];
priest; Manetho an, [35];
divisions of history, [36];
systems of dating, [36];
earliest antiques, [37];
description of ruins, [37];
key to hieroglyphic writing, [37];
preservation of antiquities, [38];
contributions to archæology, [38];
architects, [40];
monuments, [40];
mode of life, [44];
domestic animals, [44];
trade, [46];
agriculture, [46];
law was traditional, [47];
religion paramount consideration, [48];
inventive faculty, [48];
peasants, [49], [50];
fatalists, [49];
character, [50];
love of justice, [51];
priesthood, [52];
dutiful sons, [54];
abilities of priests, [54];
mysteries of priestcraft, [56]:
kings enlarged buildings of predecessors, [60];
Osiris texts; complete legend of Osiris not found in, [64];
Isis beloved by, [80];
St. George an hero of, [87];
Horus the child honoured by the, [95];
myth re eclipses of the sun and moon, [96];
Set in disrepute with the, [101];
tombs; jackal-trails as guides to, [105];
confusion of their deities' attributes, [107];
texts dealing with welfare of the dead, [110];
origin; mysteries of the Cabiri of, [122];
everlasting punishment and the, [123], [124];
idea of temporary punishment; scenery of infernal regions, [124];
description of their heaven, [125], [126], [128];
material mind of the, [135];
Tem, one of first gods of; day divided into three parts by, [136];
scarabs, [137];
skill in manufacture of automata, [142];
creative deities, [144];
pre-dynastic, [152];
the royal line, [157];
art, [160], [311]-[326];
Aten cult failed to appeal to the, [161];
moon and the, [164], [168];
Hathor and the, [168], [169];
Hapi, as god of the Nile, in close relationship to the, [170];
burial ceremonies, [174];
goddesses; cow-horns worn by all, [174];
minor gods of pantheon, [180];
language, [182];
language divides into progressive stages, Old, Middle, and Late;
Coptic is latest form language took, [183], [184];
ancient system of writing of native origin, [184], [185];
by decipherment of Rosetta Stone alphabet of lost language
discovered, [186];
kelebi, the intoxicating beverage of the, [196];
respect for the dead, by [238];
Rhampsinites dupes the, [240];
control over native deities aimed at by, [253];
medicine, [268];
word kemt; 'alchemy' and, [269];
gods; question re the totemic origin of, [272];
ghost; charm against, [272];
astrological knowledge of, [272], [273];
attitude of, toward 'other gods,' [275];
new gods furnished to, [276];
Asiatic gods borrowed by, [276]-[282];
religious ideas, [280]-[282];
transmigration of souls believed by, [302];
Twilight of the gods, [310];
art; the Thinite, the first great period of, [312];
art, the Saïte, the last period of, [319], [320];
artists of the Saïte period, [319];
jewellery, decline of, [319];
painting of Saïte period, [320];
artists, influenced by Romans and Italian craftsmen, [320], [321]
E-GYP-TOL'O-GIST-S. Works by, [3];
on totemism, [3], [8];
Dr. Wallis Budge, [8];
hieroglyphic described by, [18];
dynastic divisions and, [35];
Isis as wind of heaven not believed in by, [81];
Egyptian magic regarded as a degraded form of religion by, [252];
tree-worship accepted as a fact by, [297]
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY. Reference to, [28], [29];
house of official of, [41];
kings of, [139];
Anqet had temple built in, [156];
Theban monarchy at beginning of the, [157];
papyrus of, [171];
hieratic papyri of the, [183];
Egyptian system of writing under the, [184]
EL-EPH-AN-TI'NÉ. City of; alternative, Abu, [152], [153], [154], [155], [156]
EL-EU-SIN'I-AN. Mysteries, [58], [79]
EL-EU'SIS. Celebrations connected with, [58];
mysteries of, [121]
ELEVENTH DYNASTY, [111], [114]
EL-KAB. Paheri, prince of, [120]
EL-O'HIM. Reference to, [133]
EMBROIDERIES. Of bygone Persia, [311]
EMPIRE, NEW. Equivalent, New Kingdom, [27];
reference to, [36];
temple-building and, [59];
goddess Taurt and, [175]
ENCHANTMENTS. The war of, [217]-[219]
ENGLAND. Patron saint of, [87]
EN'NE-ADS. Equivalent, 'Companies of the Gods,' [16]
ER-MAN. Reference to, [55], [182]
'ETERNITY AND EVERLASTINGNESS.' Title given to Osiris, [79]
ETHIOPIA. Also, queen of, [66]
E-THI-O'PI-AN-S. Religion in Egypt and the, [159];
origin, Hathor of, [165];
Pharaoh Ousimares sees a, [211]-[215];
King of Nubia and, [213];
the magic of the, [215];
Horus in guise of Ethiopian, [218];
Se-Osiris and the, [218]
EU-DOX'US. Statement of, re Typho, [102]
EU-DOX'US OF CNI'DUS. Astronomer; the Apis oracle and, [286]
EU-PHRA'TES. Reference to, [177]
EUR'OPE. Worship of Isis greatly in Western, [84];
Hell of mediæval, [123]
EUR'O-PE'AN-S. Egypt opened to, [37], [38];
height of, [50]
EVIL ONE, THE. Set as, [90], [92]
EXPELLER OF DEMONS. Title given to god Khonsu, [178]-[180]
'EYE OF RA.' Hathor as, [164], [279]
F
FAR'NELL. Hecate and, [175]
FAY-ÛM, THE. Temple on the border of the, [55];
Krokodilopolis in the, [290]
FEN'RIS-WOLF, [132]
FIELD OF REEDS. Equivalent, Sekhet Aaru, [115];
seven halls of, [115];
divided fifteen regions of, [116]
FIELD OF THE GRAIN GODS. Osiris in the, [117]
FIFTH DYNASTY. Period of the, [17];
Egyptian pantheon and, [19];
priests of Ra and, [132];
Amen, deity of Egypt in, [137];
inscriptions in language of, [183];
three sons of Rud-didet reigned during, [204], [205]
FIGURE-S. [1]. Wax; employed by Hui in his conspiracy against Rameses III, [262];
used by sorcerers in Middle Ages, [263].
2. Clay, one found in the Highlands, [263]
FIR'MIC-US MAT-ER'NUS. Ceremony described by, [72]
FIRST CATARACT. Reference to, [153], [156]
FIRST DYNASTY. Reference to, [18];
Pharaoh buried during, [22];
fifth king of the, [63];
centre of Osiris-worship existed at Abydos in the, [63];
Book of the Dead in vogue in, [113];
inscriptions belonging to, [182], [183];
hieroglyphic character met with first in inscriptions of, [185], [186]
'FIRST PROPHET OF AMEN.' Title of priest at Thebes, [53]
FISHES. Enchantment of, [266]
FLAME OF THE SUN. Addressed as an individual, [6]
FOURTH DYNASTY. Pyramidal structure and, [24];
scarabs dating from, found in Egyptian tombs, [137];
inscriptions in language of, [183];
reference to, [185], [205]
FRANCE. Sends expedition to Egypt, [38]
FRAZER, PROFESSOR. On myth of Osiris, [70];
Osiris and, [73], [74], [78];
the works of, [253]
FRENCH. Art, [321]
FUTURE LIFE, [270]
G
GAL'LA. Reference to, [34], [35]
GAUL. Worship of Isis and false mystic of, [84]
GAZELLE, LAKE OF THE. Pimonî and Kamenophis fight at, [242]-[245]
GEB. Offspring of Shu and Tefnut, [14];
one of the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
equivalent, Kronos, [65];
father of Horus the Elder, [84];
of Nephthys, [97];
and of Set, [99];
Seker and, [145];
reference to, [153], [166], [173], [181];
the earth-god, [246];
mummy magic and, [274]
GE-HEN'NA. Reference to, [123]
GENESIS. Book of, [133]
GEN'II. Gods looked upon as, [102];
equivalent, Demons, [102]
GERMANICUS. Apis oracle and, [286]
GHOST. The Egyptian; charm against, [272]
GI'ZEH. First pyramid situated at, [25];

Khafra entombed in second pyramid of, [25];
reference to, [197];
the 'Sphinx' at, the, [292]
GNOS'TICS. Reference to the, [152]
GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS. Quotation from, [8]
GODDESS-ES. Isis and Nephthys, twin, [246];
Hathor, of love, [246];
Nut, the sky-, [246];
Tefnut, [246];
Neith, goddess of Sais, [246];
Selk the scorpion, [246]
GOD-S. The, of Amenti, [209]
the immutable law of, [211];
the nine, and Bitou, [225];
Amen-Ra's Court in the land of the, [246];
Amen-Ra king of the, [246];
Queen Aahmes, and the, [246], [247];
return of, to the land of Punt, [247];
coercion of the, [256];
the secret of their names, [261];
animal form of many of the, [272];
presided over certain periods of time, [272];
foreign, inclusion in Egyptian pantheon, [275];
merchants sought those who ruled the sea, [276];
Egyptians furnished with new, [276];
borrowed—as Baal, Ashtaroth; Anthat, Reshpu, and the goddess
Qetesh, [276];
the greatest, Baal, [276];
Semitic and African influence on ideas regarding Egyptian, [280]-[282];
of Egypt identified by Herodotus with those of Greece, [303];
Twilight of the, [310]
GOLDEN ASS. Work by Apuleius, [106]
'GOLDEN ONE, THE.' Hathor designated, [164];
in the south, Lady of Teka, in the west Lady of Saïs, [164]
GOODWIN. Reference to, [248]
GRÆCO-ROMAN SCHOOL, [311]
GREAT BEAR. Reference to, [181]
GREAT GOD. See Zaalaêr
GREAT RIVER. Reference to, [88]
GREAT SEER. Signification; distinctive title of priest, [53]
GRECIAN. Mysteries of priestcraft, [56]
GREECE. History of, [37];
trade with, [46];
mysteries of ancient, [57];
cult of Isis in, [80], [84]
GREEK-S. Religious tales of Plutarch, [4];
give name of nome to provinces of Egypt, [17];
deities of the pantheon, [19];
deities; earlier forms, [20];
trade; Naucratis, centre of, [46];
early travellers in Egypt, [54];
Anu the Heliopolis of the [54];
religious mysteries, [58];
legend of Osiris as given by writers, [64];
reference to myths of Demeter and Persephone, [77];
myth of the Black Hog, [97];
'Book of Thoth' and Alexandrian, [108];
ceremonies, initiatory, [121];
oracle of Jupiter-Ammon, and, [142];
identified Hathor with Aphrodite, [168];
Khonsu compared with Heracles by, [176];
pantheon, [180];
language, [184], [185], [186];
ideas, Egyptian story tinged with, [188];
fable, [195];
myth, [205];
story in, [206]
GRIFFITHS, MR. F. LL., [206]
GUATEMALA. Reference to Kiche Indians of, [12]
H
HA'DES. 1. Place; gods of, [58];
dogs dispatched with the deceased on the way to, [105];
the Maya Hades, referred to in the Popol Vuh, [121];
road to, [175];
the rich man in, [210];
those guilty of bad deeds in, [211].
2. Greek deity; attributes of, ascribed by Greeks to Sarapis
(Osiris-Apis), [287]
HAKT. Goddesses, [203]
HALL OF AUDIENCE. Pharaoh Ousimares in, [211]-[219]
HAM'ITES. Immigrants from Arabia thought to be, [34]
HAM-IT'IC. Syntax, [34];
dynastic Egyptians said to be, [35]
HAN'NI-BAL. Oracle of Jupiter-Ammon, and, [142]
HAP. A chosen bull, appointed to be a god, [284]
HA'PÎ. The ape-headed, represented on canopic jars, [28];
one of the four helpers of Horus, [96];
god of the Nile, [153];
in Egyptian pantheon; identified with Osiris, [169];
crowned with papyrus and lotus plants, [169], [170];
festival held in honour of, [170];
female companions of; hymn to, [171]
HĀPU. Amen-hetep, son of, [303]
HAR-MAC-HIS. Greek name for Horus the Elder, [84]-[86]
HAR-POC'RA-TES. Equivalent, Horus the Child, son of Osiris and Isis, [69]
HARRIS PAPYRUS, THE. [228], [248];
contains many spells and charms, [262]
HA'THOR. Worship of, [18], [163], [169];
in Pyramid Texts of Unas and Teta, [21];
Mut identified with, [143];
temple of, at Memphis, [147];
reference to, [148], [173], [175];
mythological significance, [162];
general description of, [163], [164];
patron deity of love, [165], [246];
myth of Ra and, [166]-[168];
intoxication festivals of, fall in month of Thoth, [168];
identified with the star Sept and Aphrodite by the Greeks, [168], [169];
personification of the female principle, [169];
Ashtoreth identified with, [278];
Qetesh identified with, [279];
goddess Heqt identified with, [295];
the Memphite, [298];
sycamore sacred to, [298];
Lady of the Underworld, a, [298];
identified with Aphrodite, [306];
Isis confused with, [308]
HA'THORS. The Seven, [169], [226];
the Doomed Prince and the, [228], [229]
HAT-I'BI. The Princess of Alasia, [236]
HATME'HIT. Female counterpart of the Ram, [288]
HAT-SHEP-SUT. The story of the birth of, [245]-[248];
daughter of Amen-Ra and Aahmes, [246], [247];
body of, fashioned by Khnum, [247];
Hekt imparts breath of life to, [248];
birth of, [248];
temple created to, [248];
designed to rule over Egypt, etc., [246];
Bes and, [281]
HAU. Osiris grapples with the serpent, [117]
HEALTH. One of Ra's appellations; 'God of Light and,' [269]
HEBREW. Reference to the, [31], [133], [265];
comparison of Egyptian literature with, [187]
HE'CAT-E. Greek goddess; goddess of the lower world;
goddess of fertility, [175], [176]
HE'HU AND HE'HUT. Gods personifying fire, [12]
HEK'ER. Night of, [57]
HEKT. Frog-headed goddess, wife of Khnemu; a form of Hathor, [175];
the goddess of birth; fills the body of Hatshepsut with
the breath of life, [247]
HEL-I-O'POL-IS. Names of great gods at, [14];
characteristics of gods at, [16];
gods recognized by priests of, [16];
caste of priests ruling at, [17];
chief local god of, [17];
priest's title at, [53];
equivalent, On, [54];
Anubis fused with Horus, at, [105], [106];
worship of Ra centred in, [132];
priests of, [99], [133];
original local god of, [133];
temple re-built, [134];
reference to, [136];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142];
Aten first worshipped in neighbourhood of, [157];
Aten's last refuge, [160];
Hathor of, [169];
sacred tree of Nut at, [174];
chamber in, called the Plan-room, [202];
Ierharerou, the King-priest of, [240];
record re the cuirass of Ierharerou in temple at, [245];
stones as incorporations of the sun-god at, [280];
worship of the bull Mnevis at, [288];
lions kept in temple at, [291];
the ancient tree in the 'Great Hall' of, [298];
the obelisk of, [318]
HEL-I-O-POL'ITAN RECENSION. A version of the Book of the Dead,, [113]
HE'LI-OS. Rhea, wife of, [65];
equivalent, Ra, [65]
HELL. Reference to, [123]
HEL-LEN'IC. Supremacy, period of, [35];
Greek mysteries, pre-, [57];
myth, [77]
HEN-EN-NI-SUT. Peasant lays his case before the Lord Stewart
Meruitensa at, [222]-[224]
HEN-EN-SET-EN. Peasant of Salt Country trades with, [220]
HENKH-IS-ES'UI. East wind called, [180]
HEN-MEM'ET. Dwellers in heaven, [126]
HEN'U. Seker-boat known as, [145]
HEQT. Goddess, identified with Hathor, [295]
HER'AC-LES. Reference to, [176]
HER-AK-LE-OP'OL-IS. Hathor of, [169]
HER'MES. Greek name for Thoth, [65], [108]
HERMITAGE COLLECTION. At St. Petersburg, [191]
HER-MON'THIS. Goddess Rat-Tauit worshipped at, [84];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142]
HER-MOP'OL-IS. Seat of worship of Thoth, [106];
equivalent, Khemennu, [111];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra at, Magna, [142];
reference to, [176];
worship of the Ram of Mendes in, [288];
cult of the ibis at, [295], [296]
HER-OD'OT-US, [54], [56], [57], [59], [148], [149], [237], [288], [293], [296], [302], [303]
HERO-GODS. Deification of certain national heroes as, [303], [304]
HER'U-BE-HUD'ETI. Equivalent, Horus, [84];
waged war against Set, [86];
principal shrines of, [86];
represented force of good against that of evil, [87];
festival of, [100];
reference to, [130]
HER'U-TA-TA-F. Son of Cheops, [112];
reference to, [151];
of great learning, [152];
equivalent, Hordedef, [201]
HES-EP'TI. Equivalents, Udy-mu or Den, fifth king of the First Dynasty, [63], [111]
HET-BEN-BEN. Temple built to his god by Amen-hetep, [159]
HET-RESHP. Reshpu's chief centre of worship at, [280]
HI-ER-AC-ON'POL-IS. Mace-head of Narmer found at, [63]
HIP-POC'RAT-ES. I-em-hetep a species of Egyptian, [152]
HIP-POL'Y-TUS, [58]
HIPPOPOTAMUS, THE. Book of Slaying, [89];
worship of, in Egypt, [294];
goddess, Ta-urt the, [294];
the monster called Amemt, [294]
HOB'NIL. A deity of the ancient Maya, [29];
equivalent, Kan, [29]
HOLY OF HOLIES, [53], [61]
HOLY PLACE, [61]
HOR-BE-HÛD'TI. Alternative, Horus [92];
his worshippers alluded to him as Edfû, [93]
HOR-DED'EF. Otherwise Her-tata-ef, a son of Khufu, [201], [202]
HOROSCOPE-S. Casting of, by Egyptians, [272], [273]
HORSE-S. Use of in war of, by Egyptians, [279]
HOR'US. Sacred eye representative of, [7];
depicted with head of hawk, [11];
one of the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
nine gods of, [16];
chief of company, [17];
worshipped in six nomes, [18];
manifestation of, [21];
heads of the four sons of, on canopic jars, [28];
hawk-worship of, [34];
officiating priest represents, [54];
Horus the Child, son of Isis, equivalent Harpocrates, [69];
does battle with Set, [70];
resurrection beliefs and, [79];
stung by scorpion, [83];
his beauty, [85];
confused in the legend with Horus the Elder, [91], [93];
originally a sun-god; his symbol, the winged disk, [92];
Horus the Child represented the rising sun, [94];
type of resurrection, [95];
absorbed the attributes of all other Horus-gods, [96];
eyes of, [97];
reference to, [103];
children of, [125];
the son of Tririt (the sow), [214];
the son of Tnahsit (the negress), [214], [217];
the son of Triphît (the princess), [214];
the King of Nubia and, [213], [214];
King of the Negroes and, [216];
in the court of Amen-Ra, [246];
one of the more important amulets, the Eye of, [263], [264];
Sebek, the helper and protector of child, [289];
the lion identified with, [291];
the falcon sacred to, [296];
the boy, issues from the cup of a lotus, [299];
identified with Apollo, [303], [306];
the Child (the Greek Harpocrates) one of the best loved Egyptian gods, [308];
Isis and, represented in a figure, [308];
the temple of, at Edfû, [320]
HOR'US THE ELDER. Worshipped in Egypt; equivalent, Heru; believed to be
the son of Geb and Nut, [65];
regarded as face of heaven; Harmachis of the Greeks, [84];
one of the chief forms of the sun-god Ra; personalities;
worship; monument to, [85];
in form of Heru-Behudeti, waged war against Set, [86];
wins great battles, [88], [89];
continues to be victorious; at Thalû takes the form of fierce lion, [90];
Horus the Child and, confused; different versions of the myth, [91], [93];
followers of, [93];
story of sun-worshippers amalgamated with legend of, [94];
associated with Set, [99];
combats Set, [100];
reference to, [106], [107], [130], [155], [158], [159], [160], [162], [164], [174], [176];
in Book of the Dead, [119];
the eye of, [127];
helps Osiris, [128];
steersman, Ra's barque, [131];
Saturn was called, [181];
Mars identified with, [181]
HOR'US THE YOUNGER. Called by the Greeks Harpocrates; son of a Horus-god
and the goddess Rat-Tauit, [84]
HOW. A sepulchre at, [72]
HOW-A'RA. Pyramid of Amenemhat III at, [26]
HOWITT. Reference to, [258], [259]
HOZ'AN-EK. A deity of the ancient Maya, [29];
equivalent, Cauac, [29]
HU. God of taste, [181]
HUBERT. The works of, [253]
HU'I. Official at court of Rameses III, [262], [263]
HU-NEF'ER. Papyrus of, [140]
HU-ZAY'UI. West wind called, [180]
HYK'SOS. Period of, [4];
Set identified with their gods, [101];
overran Egypt, [139];
kings, [157];
war against the, [194]
I
IB'IS, THE. Worship of, [295]-[297];
details of, given by Herodotus, [296];
last resting-place at Eshmunên in, [303]
IDEAS. Fusion of Greek and Egyptian, [306]
I-EM-HET'EP. Temple of, at Memphis, [147];
son of Ptah; god of medicine, [150], [151];
worship of, [151];
of human origin, who became deified because of great medical skill, [152];
reference to, [154], [207]
I-ER-HA-RE'ROU. The king-priest of Heliopolis, [240];
civil war between Kamenophis and Prince Pimonî, [240]-[245];
cuirass of, [240];
Minnemai, the son of, [245]
IM-HO'TEP. Hero-god, [303], [304];
worshipped under the name of Asklepios, [310]
IMPRESSIONIST GROUP. See Art
INDIAN-S. Bilquila, and the soul, [6];
reference to writer, [10];
Cheyenne tribe; claim of, [10];
Kiche tribe, [12];
Klamath, [74]
I'SIS. Buckle sign of, [7];
one of, the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
birth of, [65];
wife of Osiris ruled in his absence, [66];
grief at death of Osiris, [67];
goes to Byblos, [68];
procures coffin of Osiris, [69];
sets up shrines, [70];
temple of, [71], [73];
hymn addressed to Osiris by, [75];
myth of, [80]-[84];
equivalent, Ast; worship of, [80];
identified with Maāt, goddess of justice, [82];
attributes, symbols and equivalents, [83];
said to have cut off head of Set, [91];
lays magic spells on her son's boat, [91];
Plutarch and, [98];
her sister Nephthys and, [99];
reference to, [17], [79], [95], [101], [118], [136], [147], [148], [155], [156], [171], [174], [175], [203]
I'SIS AND NEPH'THYS. Twin goddesses, [246];
Isis and Ra's secret name, [259];
Isis and Horus at one time hid in the swamps of the Delta, [264];
in Egypt and Greece Sarapis regarded as the male counterpart of Isis, [287];
the scorpion sacred to Isis, [295];
the goose sacred to Isis, [297];
Set, the dark brother of Isis, [300];
Isis identified with Demeter, [303], [306];
Isis a popular deity, [308];
Isis the goddess of Alexandria, [308];
confused with Hathor, [308];
Isis and Horus postured in a figure, [308];
reference to temple of Isis at Philæ, [320]
ITALY, [224]
I-U'AA. Father of Tyi, wife of Amen-hetep III, [157]
IX. A deity of the ancient Maya, [29];
equivalent, Zaczini, [29]
J
JACKAL, THE. Sacred to Anubis, [294];
associated with the dead, in Egyptian mythology, [294]
JAH'VEH. Reference to, [133];
Jews reading sacred name pronounce it 'Adonai,' [259]
JAPAN-ESE. God of the Ainu of, [146];
her painting, [311], [325]
JAVANESE. The soul and, [32]
JOP'PA. A town of Palestine,

[248]-[251]
JOYCE, MR. T. ATHOL, [121]
JUDGMENT SCENE, THE. Monster, Amemt, in, [294]
JU'NO. Reference to, [102]
JUPI-TER-AMMON. A great oracle known as, [142]
JUPPI-TER. Dodecagon of, [102]
K
KA. Island of the, [194]; the body of Queen Hatshepsut's, [247]
KAG-EM'NI. Books of proverbs attributed to; of great age, [187]
KA'HÛN. Poor houses at, [41]
KAI-EK'HOS. A king of the Second Dynasty; Manetho traces the cult of Apis to, [284]
KA'KU. One of the three children of Rud-didet, [203];
real name of, [205]
KAM-BY'SES. The Apis bull and, [304];
Usa-hor-res-net, physician of, [304]
KAM-EN'O-PHIS. Prince of Mendes; civil war between Prince Pimonî and, [240]-[245];
cuirass of Ierharerou seized by, [240];
his four nomes, [242]
KAN. A deity of the ancient Maya; equivalent, Hobnil, [29]
KAN-ZIC-NAL. A deity of the ancient Maya; equivalent, Muluc, [29]
KAR'NAK. Assa mentioned in tablet at, [26];
temple of, [61];
Imhotep and Amenophis adored at, [303], [304];
the hypostyle hall at, [317];
the famous Avenue of Sphinxes at, [318]
KEK'U-I AND KEK'U-IT. Gods, [12]
KEMT. Word 'alchemy' derived from Egyptian word, [269]
KERH AND KER'HET. Personified Night or Chaos, [12]
KES'ET, Hathor of, [169]
KH. Sign, the determinative of the name Set, [280]
KHAF'RA. Entombed in second pyramid of Gizeh, [25];
family, [25];
tells tale of magic to his father, [198]-[199]
KHAL'U. The country of, [229]
KHAM'O-ÎS. The envoys of, [235]
KHAR'TOUM, [38]
KHEM-EN'NU. Equivalent, Hermopolis, [111]
KHEM'I, [190]
KHEN'SU. The Moon-god; a form of Amen, [141];
son of Bast, [148];
apes in temple of, [294]
KHEP'ER-A. Deity; laid foundation in Maāt, [13];
magical skill of, [13];
tears of, [14];
states he is Osiris, [14];
Nu identified with him, [14];
a form of the sun, [21];
Harmachis refers to his identity with, [86];
Af Ra transformed into, [118];
in Book of the Dead, [119];
Ra as, [136];
type of resurrection, [137];
reference to, [146]
'KHE'RI-HEB.' Priests, [261]
KHNEM'IT. The diadem and crown of, [317]
KHNEM-NEF'ERT, QUEEN. Sarcophagus of, [111];
reference to, [112]
KHNEM'U. Worship of, [18], [152], [153];
probably a totemic deity, [21];
in Book of the Dead, [119];
creation of universe and; fashioned the animals, [144];
symbol of, [152], [153];
female counterparts; attributes, [153];
the Nile flood and, [154];
King Tcheser and, [155];
reference to, [156], [172];
Hekt, wife of, [175];
worship of the Ram of Mendes and, [288]
KHNEM'U-RA. Power of, [154]
KHNUM. Fashions the body of Queen Hatshepsut, [247], [248]
KHNUM'U. God; and the priest Ra-user, [203]
KHNU'MU-HO'TEP. Coffin of, [324]
KHON'SU. Lunar deity, identified with Thoth, [176];
Expeller of Demons, [178]-[180]
KHON'SU IN THEBES NEF-ER-HET'EP. One of the forms of Khonsu, [178];
gives protection to Expeller of Demons, [179], [180]
KHORP HEM'TI-U. Distinctive title of priest, [53]
KHU. The Spirit-souls, [117]
KHU'FU. Equivalent, Cheops, [25];
first pyramid and, [25];
reference to, [152];
magic story related to, [197]-[202]
KHUT. Isis, called, [83];
the serpent called, [130]
KICHE-S. Tribe referred to, [12];
all forms of worship fused in one by the, [133]
KING ARTHUR. Reference to, [87]
KINGDOM. The Old, the Middle, and the New, [36]
KOM-ES-SAGHA. The temple of, [317]
KOM-OM'BOS. The pronaos of, [320]
KO-RE'. Figure in mysterious cult, [58];
alternative, Persephone, [58];
myth of, [77];
reference to story of, [121]
KRAM'AT. Of the Malays, [261]
KROK'-O-DIL-O'-POL-IS. The crocodile, incarnation of the god Sebek,
dwelt in lake near, [11];
the centre of the worship of the crocodile, [290]
KRO'NOS. Loved by Nut, [65];
equivalent, Geb, [65]
L
LAB'Y-RINTH. Crocodiles buried in the subterranean, [290];
Herodotus not allowed to enter, [290]
'LADY OF THE SYCAMORE.' The Memphite Hathor was called, [298]
LAKE MOERIS, [55]
LAND OF PUNT, [193]
LANE. Reference to, [261]
LATE KINGDOMS. Reference to, [4]
LATIN. Reference to supremacy, [35]
LEF-É'BURE. Reference to, [259]
LE-O-NAR'DO DA VIN'CI. Reference to, [314]
LE-ON-TOP'O-LIS. City of, [291]
LEP'SIUS. Researches into Egypt, &c., by, [38];
theory of, re Osiris, [73];
monuments recovered by, [160];
animal stories and, [195]
LET-OP'OL-IS. Canal of, [202]
LETTER. Pharaoh Ousimares and the sealed, [211];
read to Pharaoh Ousimares by Se-Osiris, [213]-[215]
LEY'DEN, [37], [195]
LIB'YA. Oracle of Jupiter-Ammon in, [142]
LIB'YAN. Home of Osiris, [64];
desert, [76];
Isis of Libyan origin, [80], [82];
aggression in the Delta, [140]
LIB'YAN PERIOD, THE, [300]
LIFE, DOUBLE HOUSE OF. Equivalent, Library of Magical Books;
written by Thoth, [265]-[268]
'LIGHT AND HEALTH.' One of Ra's appellations, [269]
LION-S, THE. Worship of, [291], [292];
identified the sun-god Horus, [291];
the Delta the home of the Egyptian, [291];
Leontopolis, the centre of the cult of, [291];
kept in the temple at Heliopolis, [291];
the ancient lion-god Aker, [291];
Sef and Dua, two guardian, [292];
statues of, familiar under Greek name of 'Sphinxes,' [292];
Amen-hetep III and his boast re, [292];
Rameses II and Rameses III both kept a tame, [292]
LOCAL GODS. Confusion in consequence of, [2];
distinctive marks of, [2]
LOGIC Prehistoric, [255], [256]
LONDON, [194]
LOS'KI-EL. On resurrection, [79]
LOTUS, THE. In Egyptian symbolism, [299];
boy Horus issues from cup of, [299];
the symbol of resurrection, [299]
LOUIS XIV. Painting under, [321]
LOUVRE, [37], [72], [206]
LOVE. Hathor, the goddess of, [246]
LUX'OR. Buildings at, [317]
LY-COP'O-LIS. Inhabitants of, [101];
worship of the Ram of Mendes in, [288];
the wolf venerated at, [294]
LY-SAN'DER. Consulted the oracle of Jupiter-Ammon, [142], [143]
M
MAA. God of sight, [181]
MAĀ KHER'U ('Right speaking'). Etymological meaning, [261]
MAĀT. Signifies law, &c., [53];
goddess of justice, identified with Isis, [82];
closely resembles Thoth; one of the original goddesses;
symbolized by ostrich feather, [108];
appellations, [109];
path of Ra across the sky planned by, [131]
MAC'BETH. Reference to, [143]
MACH-I-A-VEL'LI. Reference to, [187]
MAF'TET. Reference to the goddess, [16]
MAGIC-AL. Chapter on, in tale of the Magicians, [132], [206];
force in Egypt, [261];
formulæ ('right speaking') in Egypt, [261];
versus Magic; tale of, [215]-[219];
cane, King Thothmes', [249], [250];
Egypt the mother of, [252];
Egyptian, is assumed to be a degraded form of religion, [252];
Professor Maspero's statement re, [252];
Dr. Budge's statement re, [252];
the antiquity of Egyptian, [254], [255];
Frazer, Marrett, Hubert and Mauss, on origin of, [253], [256];
the savage of the Egyptian Stone Age and, [254];
difference between other systems and Egyptian, [256];
statement of Professor Maspero re, [257];
names of power in connexion with Egyptian, [258];
force, in Egypt, [261];
its recognized representatives, [261];
formulæ, Book of the Dead and, [262];
conspiracy, of Hui, [262], [263];
words of power, inscribed on amulets, [263];
the gibberish of, [265];
Books—the Double House of Life, or Library of, [265];
medical, [268];
powers, belief re, in Egypt, [270];
mummy, [273], [274];
Amenophis author of a book on, [303]
MAGICIAN-S. Tale of the, [132], [152];
none in Memphis equal to Se-Osiris, [211];
Pharaoh Ousimares' chief, [215];
war of enchantments between Horus and Pharaoh's chief, [217]-[219];
coercion of the gods by, [256]
MAH-Î-TOU'AS-KHÎT. Wife of Setne; prays to Imhetep for a son, [207], [212];
her prayer is answered, [208]
MALAY-S. Depict the soul in bird-shape, [32];
magical force in Egypt and the kramat of the, [261]
MALAYSIA. Belief occurring in, [6]
MA'NA. Of the Melanesians, [261]
MAN-AKH'PHRÊ-SI-AM'ON. See Pharaoh Manakhphrê-Siamon
MAN-E'THO. Divided Egyptian history into dynasties, [35];
chronology of, [35];
cult of Apis traced by, to Kaiekhos, [284];
the Sarapis statue and, [307]
MANHOOD. Superstition regarding new name given at initiation rites
conferring, [259]
MAN'U. The mountain of sunset, [125]
MAN'ZET. The barque, [131];
model of the, in temple at Heliopolis, [134]
MAR'DUK. Slew Assyrian monster Tiamat, [132]
MAR-E-O'TIS. District of, [46]
MA-RI-ETTE. Reference to, [38], [169], [287], [288]
MARETT. The works of, and the origin of magic, [253]
MARS. A war-god, [19];
reference to, [102];
identified with Horus, [181]
MAS-A'I. Reference to, [34]
MAS-PE'RO, SIR GASTON. Reference to companies of gods, [16];
contributions to Egyptian archæology, [38];
reference to, [41], [42], [64], [112], [113], [257];
translated "True History of Setne and his Son, Se-Osiris," [206];
his statement re Egyptian magic, [252]
MĀ'TER. Governor of King Tcheser, [154], [155]
MAT-KA-RÉ, QUEEN. Papyrus of, [320]
MAUN-DE-VILLE, SIR JOHN. Allusion to writings of, [190]
MAUSS. The works of, and the origin of magic, [253]
MA'YA OR MA'YAS. Of Central America, [29];
use of funerary jars by, [29];
belief in resurrection, [79];
abode of god of death and the, [101];
ostrich feather and the, [109];
description of their Hades, [121]
MAYPOLE. Custom of bringing in the, reference to, [72]
MEC'CA. Reference to, [2]
MEDITERRANEAN. Civilizing stock on southern shores of, [34];
theory re people of, [34]
MEDICAL MAGIC. Egyptian medicine and, [268]
MEDICINE. Secrets of, divulged to men by certain deities among
North American tribes, [261];
medical magic in the practice of Egyptian, [268]
ME-DI'NET-HABÛ. Temple of Rameses III at, [317]
ME-DUM. First pyramid structure at, [24]
ME'HEM-ET ALI. Egypt opened to Europeans under, [37];
preservation of ancient monuments undertaken by, [38]
MEH-URT. Seven Wise Ones offspring of goddess Meh-urt, [147]
MEL-AN-ES'IAN-S. Magician, sends forth his soul in form of eagle, [6];
magical force in Egypt and the Mana of the, [261]
MEL-CAR'THUS. King of Byblos, [68];
elder son of, goes to Egypt with Isis, [69]
MEM'NON. Colossal figures of, at Thebes, [318]
MEM'PHIS. Walls still exist at, [40];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142];
Ptah, greatest of the gods, at, [144];
Seker ruled over, [145];
centre of worship of several gods, [147];
reference to the triad of, [150];
worship of I-em-hetep of ancient date in, [151];
Ammen-hetep built temples at, [157];
Se-Osiris leads Setne to unknown place in mountains of, [209];
no scribe or magician in, equal to Se-Osiris, [211];
Nefer-ka-Ptah's tomb at, [266], [267];
a priest of, who served Ashtoreth with the moon-god Ah, [278];
sacred bulls of, [287];
Apis, the bull in the temple of Ptah in, [302]
ME'NA. The first historical king of Egypt, [110];
Apis and, [284]
ME'NA'S CONQUEST. Reference to, [35]
MEN'DES. 1. Kamenophis, Prince of, [240].
2. The great god; Kamenophis swears by, [241].
3. City of; high priest's title at, [53];
centre of worship of Osiris, [63];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra, [142];
worship of the Ram of Mendes in the, [288];
the god Pan worshipped with a goat at, [288];
the stele of, found by Mariette, [288]
MEN-KAU-HOR. Pyramid constructed by, [26]
MEN-KAU-RA. Corpse of, placed in Upper pyramid, [25];
revision of parts of Book of the Dead undertaken in his reign, [112]
MEN-NI-US AG-RIP'PA. [195]
MEN'TU. The god of war, [246]
MEN'TU-HET'EP. A king of the Eleventh Dynasty, [111], [112]
ME'NU. Festival of, [57]
ME'NU'QET. Ruled over Field of Reeds, [116]
MER-AST'ROT. One of sons of Rameses II, named after Ashtoreth, [279]
MER'CU-RY. Reference to, [150];
Set and, [181]
MER-EN-PTAH. Anena, a scribe who executed the original d'Orbiney papyrus,
lived in reign of, [224]
MER-OE. The Bull of; one of Amen's appellations, [214]
MERT, WESTERN WATERS OF. Horus overtakes allies of Set at the, [90]
MER-U-IT-EN'SA. High Steward of Henenseten, [220]-[224]
MES-EK-TET. Barque believed to contain evening sun, [131];
model in temple at Heliopolis, [134];
reference to, [146]
MES'EN. Shrine of Heru at, [86]
MESK-HENT. Goddesses, [203]
MES-NET. A chamber behind the sanctuary at Edfû, [93]
MES'NIU. Equivalent, Mesnitu; followers of Horus, [93]
MES'-TI. The man-headed, represented on canopic jars, [28];
one of the four helpers of Horus, [96]
MES'TRO-VIC, I-VAN'. Reference to the statuary of, [315], [322]
MEXICAN ARCHÆOLOGY. Mr. Joyce's book on, [121]
MEXICAN-S. Teocalli, [24];
practised mummification, [29];
their belief in resurrection, [79];
abode of god of death and the, [101];
bird and serpent combined in their god, [130];
goddess festival of a, [175]
MEXICO. Dogs sacrificed in, [104];
warriors of, and paradise of sun god, [135];
unlucky days in, [174]
MIDDLE KINGDOM. Reference to, [4];
toward end of, usual to adorn walls of pyramids with texts, [23];
practice of embalming in time of, [27];
comprised Dynasties IX to XVIII, [36], [317];
Aten, obscure local deity under the, [157];
language of, [183];
reference to, [186]-[188];
story of Saneha dates from, [190];
craft of building during, [317]
MI'MIR. Odin and, [14]
MIN. Symbol of, [7];
reference to, [146];
alternative for Amsu, [279]
MIN-ER'VA. Reference to Temple of, [56]
MIN'NEM-AI. Prince of the Eupuantine; son of Ierharerou, the King-priest
of Heliopolis, [245];
recaptures his father's cuirass, [245]
MIT-AN'NI. Tushratta, king of the, [278]
MNEV'IS. Worship of bull, at Heliopolis, [288]
MOERIS, LAKE. College of priests at, [55];
crocodiles held sacred at, [290]
MOHAMMEDAN. Egyptian realms of bliss compared with, [128]
MO-MEM'PHIS. Hathor of, [169]
MOON-GOD. A form of Amen, known as Khensu, [141]
MORAVIAN BRETHREN. Reference to Loskiel, one of the, [79]
MOUNTAIN OF THE SUNRISE. Afra directs his course to the, [118]
MOU-TOU-BAAL. A prince of Syria; Pakrourou meets, [243];
overthrows the bands of Sebennytos, [244]
MUL'UC. One of the four deities of the ancient Maya, [29];
equivalent, Kanzicnal, [29]
MUMMY MAGIC. [273], [274];
oil used in connexion with, [274]
MUT. Female counterpart of Amen-Ra; worship centred at Thebes; once
mentioned in Book of the Dead,143;
reference to, [176];
the vulture the symbol of, [297]
MY-KEN-Æ'AN. Wall-scenes, figures copied from Taurt on, [175]
MYS'TÆ. Hall of the, [58]
MYTH-OL'OGY. Reference to the wicked dead in Hindu, Burmese and Malay, [272];
the, of Egyptian gods, [280]-[282];
the cat found throughout Egyptian, [293];
the jackal in Egyptian, [294];
other animals in Egyptian—see Animals, [295]
N
NA-HAI-RA'NA. Homage to King Rameses at, [177];
the Doomed Prince and the chief of, [229]
NAME-S OF POWER. Use of, in connexion with Egyptian magic; [258];
Professor Rhys and, [258];
Howitt and, [258], [259];
superstition re in many Australian tribes and in Abyssinia,
Chile, Senegambia, and North America, [259];
many Egyptians received two names, [259];
common over all the East, [259];
Jews reading sacred name, Jahveh, pronounce it Adonai, [259];
legend re Isis, and Ra's secret name, [259];
Osiris threatened to be named aloud, [260], [261];
Lane on, [261];
secret of name divulged by deities to men, [261]
NAPOLEON. Military expedition of, into Egypt, [37], [321]
NAR-MER. Mace-head of, [63]
NATCH-URA. Female companion of Hapi, [171]
NATIVITY. Tables of, found in later papyri, [272]
NAU-CRAT'IS. Centre of Greek trade in Egypt, [46]
NAVILLE, M. Opinion of, on chapter of Book of the Dead, [112]
NEB'HAT. Goddess, [203]
NEB'KA. Story regarding, [198], [199]
NEB-KA-N-RA. King; Meuitensa, Lord Steward of, [224]
NEB-SEN'I PAPYRUS. Book of the Dead, and, [111]
NEBT-HET. Equivalent, Nephthys, [97]
NEF-ERAKA-RA. Pyramid of, [26]
NEF-ER'ET, PRINCESS. Reference to the statue of, [324]
NEF-ER-KA-PTAH. Thoth's Library of Magical Books lodged in tomb of,

[266];
Ahura, wife of, [266];
plays game of draughts with Setne, [268];
Setne commanded by Pharaoh to return Thoth's book to, [268]
NEF-ERT. Statue of, [50]
NEF-ER-TEM. Reference to, [147];
son of Ptah; symbolized by the lotus-flower; one of the triad of Morphis, [150];
the lotus and, [299]
NEGROES. Reference in sealed letter read by Se-Osiris to land of
the, [214], [215], [216]
NE'HA-HER. Serpent in underworld, [117]
NEITH. Arrow of, [7];
equivalent, Net, [21];
reference to, [156];
origin, [276]
NEKH'BET OR NEKHEBET. Goddess; Horus and, [89], [90];
Serpent, the symbol of, [93];
reference to, [143];
female companion of Hapi, [171];
the vulture, the symbol of, [297]
NE-O-LITH'IC. Origin; Egyptian mysteries of, [59];
Nubians, [76];
savages; Book of the Dead and, [122]
NEPH'THYS. One of the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
reference to, [17];
birth of, [65];
sister-goddess to Isis, [77], [246];
female counterpart of Set; daughter of Geb and Nut, and mother of
Anubis; assists Isis, [97];
Book of the Dead and, [97];
equivalent, Nebt-het, [97];
magical powers of, [98];
protects Osiris, [98];
personification of darkness, [98];
prepares the funeral bed of Osiris and guards his corpse, [99];
later representation, [99];
reference to, [103], [147], [155], [174];
Book of the Dead and, [156]
NEP'RA. Mention of, in hymn to Hapi, [171]
NES'ERT (Flame). Name of Sekhmet, [147]
NEW EMPIRE. Equivalent New Kingdom, [27];
reference to, [36];
temple-building and advent of, [59]
NEW EMPIRE ART. Described, [317]-[319];
period witnessed the completion of the hypostyle hall at Karnak,
the temple of Rameses III at Medinet-habû, and the great assembly
of ecclesiastical edifices at Dér-el-Bahari, [317];
buildings at Luxor, [317], [318];
rock-cut temples at Bêt-el-Wálî and Abu-Simbel, [318];
Memnon at Thebes and the Avenue of Sphinxes at Karnak, [318];
the statues of Thothmes III; Amenophis, the son of Hapu,
and Queen Tyi, [318];
re bas-relief, the likenesses of Seti I (Abydos), Septah Meneptah,
and Queen Aahmes, [318]
NEW KINGDOM. Process of mummification during period of, [27];
equivalent, New Empire, [36];
wealth and power of gods in, [52];
symbol of winged disk in, [92];
language, [183]
NILE. Dynastic Egyptians along the banks of the, [35];
description of house on banks of the, [42];
inundation of, [48], [83];
dead carried across the, [62];
country, shrines to Osiris in, [63];
Osiris supposed god of the, [64];
coffin of Osiris on the, [67];
moon-god identified with the, [76];
Ra, voyages on the, [88], [89];
sacrifice thrown into, [103];
belief of early dwellers by the, [128];
gods of the, [153];
flood of the, [154], [155];
reference to the, [161], [168], [169], [194], [201], [205];
source of all wealth and provender, [170];
Bitou made Prince of the Upper, [228];
temple to Queen Hatshepsut erected in the valley of the, [248];
cows cast into the sacred waters of the, [284], [303];
the Apis and the, [285]
NILE VALLEY. Divinities worshipped in, [1];
totemism non-existent in the, [3];
practice of magic in, [7];
funeral processions along, [30];
belief in, regarding soul, [32];
characteristics of, [33];
inhabitants of, [34];
language of, [34];
religion of, [34];
inhabitants of, little affected by time, [44];
feudal system in, [45];
nature of soil, [46];
worship of Ra in, [132];
worship of Amen in, [137], [141];
Egyptian system of writing traced within the, [184];
fables early popular in, [194]
NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS. Pony totem worshipped by, [11];
celebrations by, almost identical with that of Eleusis, [58];
initiatory ceremonies of, [122];
eagle a symbol of the sun among, [130]
NORTH LAND. Promised to Thothmes by Harmachis, [86]
NORTHERN MARSHES. Horus born in the, [85]
NU. Deity of the firmament and the rain, [12];
things created from out of, [13];
children of, [13];
eye of, [14];
identified with Khepera, [14];
alluded to in the Pyramid Texts, [21];
primeval abyss of, [108];
great mass of celestial waters called, [118];
has place in Book of the Dead, [119];
Pet, a contradistinction to word, [125];
Mut, original female counterpart of, [143];
reference to, [170], [173]
NU'BI-A. Researches in, [38];
explorations of, [43];
monuments in, [43];
battles between Horus and followers of Set, in, [90];
power of Amen-Ra in, [142];
Māter, ruler of, [154];
cult of Anqet in Northern, [156];
reference to, [194];
reference to King of, in sealed letter read by Se-Osiris, [213];
Queen Hatshepsut designed to reign over, [246]
NUBIANS. Racial origin, [34];
moon-god of the Neolithic, [76]
NUN. The oldest of the gods; Ra seeks counsel of, [166]
NUT. Deity of the firmament and the rain, [12];
one of great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
reference to, [17];
equivalent, Rhea, [64];
Thoth, [65];
five children of, and, [65];
frequently portrayed in a sycamore tree, [72];
mother of Horus the Elder, [84];
mother of Nephthys, [97], [172];
mother of Set, [99];
personification of the morning, [118];
mother of Hathor, [165];
follower of Ra, [166];
daughter of Shu and Tefnut; wife of Geb, and mother of Osiris
and Isis; personification of sky, [172];
counterpart of Nu, [172];
the spouse of Nu, and of Geb, [173];
general appearance, [173];
frequently represented in form of cow, [173];
the sycamore sacred to, [174], [298];
place of origin, Denderah, [174];
office in the underworld, [174];
portrait of, painted on coffins as a charm, [174];
the sky-goddess; in the Court of Amen-Ra, [246]
O
OB'EL-ISK-S. Of Heliopolis, [317]
OCH'US. Persian monarch reigning over Egyptians, and nicknamed the Ass, [103]
OD'IN. Reference to eye of, [13]
OLD KINGDOM. Alternative, the Pyramid Age, [22];
comprised dynasties I to VIII, [36];
domestic architecture of, [43];
decapitation, a mode of death in, [47];
language of, [183];
monuments, &c., of a model for the New Empire, [301];
reference to the priests of the, [305];
statues in the, [315]
OL-YM'PUS. Worship of, [9];
the high place of deities, [10]
ON. Equivalent for Heliopolis, [54], [113], [114];
worship of Ra in, [132]
'OPENER OF THE WAYS.' Equivalent for Up-uaut, [105]
ORACLE-S. The Apis, in the temple of Ptah, [286];
not of Egyptian origin, [303]
'ORE, BLACK.' See Black powder, also Alchemy.
ORENDA. Of the North American Indians; reference to, [261]
ORIENT, ANCIENT. The peoples of, invoked evil beings equally with good, [258]
ORIENTALS. Like Egyptians, fatalists, [49];
like Egyptian labourers, sing while at work, [205]
OR-I'ON. Stars of, [75]
OS-I'RIS. Myth of, [6], [64];
coffin of, [7];
one of the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
account of creation according to worshippers of, [14];
cause of primeval matter, [14];
one of the first of the company of gods, [17];
mummification arose out of the cult of, [22];
sacredness of man's body taught by priests of, [26];
Pharaohs identified with, [27];
night journey of, [30];
religion in Nile valley and, [34];
dark realm of, [48];
son of, [54];
annual commemoration of sufferings and death of, [56];
birthday of, [57];
one of principal figures in Egyptian pantheon, [63];
equivalent, As-ar, [63];
god of the dead and the underworld, [63], [76], [77];
origins extremely obscure, [63];
centre of Osiris-worship at Abydos, [63];
shrines to, [63];
dwells peaceably in underworld, [64];
usually figured as wrapped in mummy bandages, [64];
African in origin, [64];
son of Nut, [65];
his birth, [65], [174];
Pamyles proclaims birth of, [66];
education by Pamyles, [66];
prophecies concerning, [66];
wife rules for, [66];
Set invites banquet, [67];
gets into fatal chest, [67];
death of, [67];
coffin enclosed in pillar at Byblos, [68];
his many tombs, [70];
promising to return to earth when his wrongs are avenged, [70];
Sir G. Frazer on myth of, [70];
use of corn and; cultivation of vine and; corn-spirit and tree-spirit, [71];
myth of, as tree-spirit, [72]-[73];
identified with sun-god, Ra, [73];
lunar significance, [74]-[75];
pigs sacrificed to, [75];
hymn addressed by Isis to, [75];
god of fertility, [77];
personification of Ra, [78];
typical of bodily resurrection, [79];
Book of the Dead and, [79], [80];
in his guise of the corn dies and is restored to life again by Isis, [81];
reference to, [88], [90]-[93], [98], [99], [100], [103], [104], [107], [109], [110],
[114]-[116], [122], [128], [137], [139], [141], [145]-[147], [153], [155], [156], [167], [208];
represented 'yesterday,' [95];
journey of, in the underworld, [116], [117];
his journey as Af Ra through the Duat, [118];
description of his rôle as judge of the dead, [119];
Osirian paradise consisted of converse with, [134];
struggle between priesthoods of Ra and, [135];
worship of, [135];
overshadows Ra; identified with Tem, [136];
Hapi identified with, [169];
identified with Venus, [181];
seen in a vision by Setne, [209], [210];
on right hand of Amen-Ra in the land of the gods, [246];
threatened to be named aloud in the port of Busiris, [260], [261];
invoked in connexion with spells over crocodiles, [264];
black powders identified with the body possessed by, [270];
mummy magic and the god, [274];
the Apis and, [284]-[287];
the spirit of, infused into the ox, [285];
a dual god with the Apis, [287];
worship of Ram of Mendes, and, [288];
crocodiles, friend and foe of, [289];
the falcon sacred to, [296];
Set the dark brother of, [300];
identified with Dionysos, by Herodotus, [303];
identified with Pluto, [306];
reference to the vignette of the Judgment before, [320];
a study of, in Saïte statuary, [320]
OUN-AM'OU-NOU. The chief priest of the temple of Amen-Ra;
visits coasts of Egypt, [232]-[236];
arrives at Tanis, [232];
arrives at Dora, city of Zakkala, [232];
Prince Badîl sends food to, [232];
reaches Tyre, [233];
sails in direction of Byblos, [233]
OUS-I-MAR'ES, PHARAOH. Name of king in "History of Setne
and his son Se-Osiris," [206], [207];
see Pharaoh Ousimares.
OUS-I-MAN'THOR. Son born to Setne, [219]
OXFORD. Reference to museum at, [37]
P
PACH'ONS. Month of; sacrifices to Set during, [100]
PA-HER'I. Prince of El Kab, [120]
PAINTING. Of Japan, derived from China, [311];
in England, Scotland, Germany, and France, imported
chiefly from the Low Countries, [311];
the materials of, [315]-[317];
of Saïte period, [320];
French, [321]
PAK'ROU-ROU. Ally of Ierharerou, King-Priest of Heliopolis, [240];
meets Moutoubaal, a prince of Syria, [243]
PALÆOLITHIC MAN. Sleep a puzzle to, [255]
PALERMO STONE. Inscription called the, [18]
PALESTINE. Theory that stoneworking race immigrated to Egypt from, [34];
researches into, [38];
spoil of conquered, loaded temple of Amen, [139];
reference, to, [191], [194];
Joppa, a town in Thontii and, [248]
PAL'LAS ATH-E'NÉ. Alluded to, [19]
PAM-IL'I-A. Festival of, [66]
PAM-Y'LES. Heard voices at birth of Osiris, [65];
education of Osiris entrusted to, [66]
PAN. Worshipped at Mendes, according to Herodotus, [288]
PAN-OP'OL-IS. One of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142]
PANTHEON, EGYPTIAN. Foreign gods, inclusion in, [275];
Sebek and the rites of all the other gods in the, [289];
Ta-urt, the hippopotamus goddess, identified with every goddess in the, [294]
PAP-Y'RI. Medical, containing formulæ to be employed against
the demons of disease, [269]
PAP-Y'RUS. Reference to, of Ani, [6], [57];
the Nebseni, [111];
the Turin, [111];
of Setna, [184];
the Harris, [248], [262];
the d'Orbiney; in the British Museum, [224];
story of "The Doomed Prince" in the Harris, [228]-[232];
story of "How Thontii took the Town of Joppa," inscribed in the Harris, [248];
A Tale of Setna, related in a, of the Ptolemaic period, [265]-[268];
of Queen Mat-ka-ré, [320], [324]
PAR'A-DISE. Material delights of, [127];
animal transformations in, [129]
PARIS. Cult of Isis carried on in, to-day, [80]
PASSION-PLAY. Ceremony in hall of Mystæ, in the nature of a, [58]
PAÜNI. Sacrifices during the month, [102]
PÉ. City given to Horus by Ra, [97]
PEASANT. The workman and the; story of, [220]-[224]
PELUCE. A main approach into Egypt; Setuan and his army encamp there, [219], [220]
PE'PI. Description of homage rendered to deity in text of, [15];
material for the study of Egyptian pantheon in Pepi the First, [19];
texts found in the tomb of, [113];
the Pyramid of, [114]
PERIOD-S. Religion of the Late, [299]-[303];
the Ptolemaic, [304]-[306];
the Decadent, [301];
the Libyan, [299];
the Hellenic, [306];
the Thinite, the first great, of Egyptian art; the Memphite,314;
the New Empire, [317]-[319];
the Saïte, [319], [320]
PER-SEPH'ON-E. Alternative, Kore, [58];
mention of, [77]
PERSIA-N. 1. History, intertwined with that of Egypt, [37];
2. Conquest, reference to, [35];
currency unknown in Egypt until, [45].
3. Rule, religion under, [304]
PERU. Place origins in, [10];
condor typified orb of day in ancient, [130];
creation legends of, [133];
solar cult of, [134]
PERUVIANS. Mummification practised by, [29];
sacrificed dogs at burials, [104];
forms of worship of, [133]
PES'EDT. Company in nine deities designated as the, [16];
strange gods absorbed in the leader of the, [16];
no name given to the third, [17];
entire, unified in Amen, [141]
PET. Egyptian name for heaven, [125]
PET-EK-HOU'SOU. Brothers of Pimonî; overthrow Anoukhoron, [244]
PETRIE, PROFESSOR FLINDERS. Authority on Egyptology, [35];
supports Manetha's chronology, [35];
dating of Egyptian history according to, [36];
scientific investigation under, [39];
Egyptian tombs, and, [105];
monuments and temples in honour of Aten, recovered by, [160]
PETROGRAD. Egyptian tale preserved in Hermitage Collection at, [191]
PET-U-BAS'TIS. A portrait of, in Saïte statuary, [320]
PE'UN. Courtier; King Amasis, and, [197]
PHAN-E'MOTH. Month, [75]
PHA-OPH-I. Sacrifices during the month, [102]
PHA'RAOH-S. Place of burial, [22];
women, servants, and dogs slaughtered at grave of, [23];
identified with Osiris, [27];
head of feudal system, [45];
attire of, [49];
ecclesiastical party, and, [52];
lotus and papyrus as emblem of union, on thrones of, [170];
mention of a, [192], [193], [194], [200], [201], [202], [207];
entices Bitou's wife, [226];
slays Bitou in form of sacred bull (Apis), and in form of trees, [226], [227];
unknowingly makes Bitou his successor, [228];
sons of the, and the higher offices of the 'kheri-heb' priests, [261];
gave lavishly to the cult of the Apis bull, [286];

decline in the ancient faith of the, [299];
the ancient faith of the, foreign religions penetrate the land of the, [309];
Christianity triumphs in the land of the, [309]
PHARAOH MANAKH'PHRÊ-SIAMON. Reference to, in sealed letter read by
Se-Osiris, [213]-[219]
PHARAOH MY-CER-I'NUS. Work in Cairo Museum shows, seated, [313]
PHARAOH OUS-I-MAR'ES. The sealed letter and, [211];
Se-Osiris reads sealed letter to, [213]-[215];
Setne, son of, [212]
PHAROAH PET-OU-BAS'TIS. Civil war in Egypt during reign of, [240]-[245]
PHID'I-AS. Reference to the Elgin Marbles of, [314];
Egyptian art remains inferior to those of Greek origin wrought
in time of, [323]
PHIL-A-DEL'PHUS. See Ptolemy II
PHIL'AE. Temples of, [43];
great temple of Isis at, [71], [73];
shrine of Heru at, [86];
temple of I-em-hetep at, [151];
shrine of Anqet at, [156]
PHŒNICIA. Reference to, [194]
PHŒNICIAN-s. Egypt and the, [46];
their alphabet taken from Egyptian hieratic, [185];
Reshpu corresponds to god known by, [280]
PHŒ'NIX, THE. The mythical bird; the bennu gave rise to, [296];
fables of, recounted by Herodotus and Pliny, [296];
rose from sacred tree in the 'Great Hall' of Heliopolis, [298]
PHRA-HAR'MAKH-IS. God who intervenes between Anapou and Bitou, [225]
PILOT-GODS. Craft of Osiris steered by, [116]
PIM-O'NÎ, PRINCE. Alternative, 'Pimonî of the strong fist';
successor of Ierharerou, the King-Priest of Heliopolis, [240];
Petekhousou brother of, [244]
PLAN-ROOM. Chamber in Heliopolis; designs of House of Thoth, in, [202]
PLINY. Statement of, re the soul of Aristeas, [6];
the prophecies at the procession of the Apis, and, [286];
fables of the phœnix recounted by, [296]
PLUTARCH. Religious tales of, [4];
principal authority for legend of Osiris, [64];
quotation from his De Iside el Osiride, [64];
gives particulars of grave of Osiris, [73];
statement by, regarding Osiris, [74];
quotation from, [74]-[75];
throws light upon myth of Nephthys, [98];
quotation from, regarding Set and the Ass, [101];
statement on Anubis, [104];
gives the astronomical significance of Anubis, [105];
his allegation regarding the form in which Isis
lamented death of Osiris, [297];
the Legend of Sarapis and, [306], [307]
PLUTO. One of the chief figures in the Eleusinian mystery, [58];
husband of Persephone; god of grain and growth, [77];
reference to, [102]
POP'OL VUH. Story of creation recorded in the, [12];
reference to, [58], [133];
book of the Central Americans, resembling Book of the Dead, [121];
story of wonderful crop of maize, in, [122]
POL-Y-THE-IS'TIC WORSHIP. A national tendency, among Egyptians, [275]
PORCELAIN. Of mediæval China, [311]
POST-IMPRESSIONIST-S. See Art
POWER, NAMES OF. See Names
POW-HAT'ANS. Their belief re the souls of their chiefs at death, [5]
PRAYER-S. Prescribed, in connexion with medical magic in Egypt, [269]
PREDESTINED PRINCE. Alternative "The Doomed Prince," [228]-[232];
Story of the, discovered by Goodwin, [248]
PRIEST-S. The 'kheri-heb,' the recognized representations of
magic in Egypt, [261];
the higher offices filled by sons of the Pharaohs, [261];
new order known as the 'priesthood of the beneficent gods,' [305];
the Theban, regarded as sages, [305];
reference to the, of the old kingdom, [305]
PRIESTESSES. In Thebes, consecrated to the service of Amen, [305]
PRINCE, THE. Work by Machiavelli, [187]
PRINCE, THE DOOMED. The story of, [228]-[232];
doomed, to three evil fates—to die by a crocodile, a serpent,
and a dog, [231]
PRO-CON-NES'US. Aristeas of, [6]
PROPHECIES. The Apis Oracle, and, [286]
PRUSSIA. Reference to expedition sent by, into Egypt, Nubia, Syria,
and Palestine, [38]
PSAM-MET'ICH-US I. Founded town of Naucratis, [46];
story of the days of, [197]
PTAH. A form of the sun-god, [21];
temple of, [53];
Book of the Dead, and, [119];
greatest of the gods at Memphis; derivation of name, uncertain, [144];
alluded to in Pyramid Texts, [144];
a master architect and framer of everything in the universe, [144];
partakes of the nature of Thoth, and also of Shu, [145];
as Ptah-Seker represents union of creative power with that of
chaos or darkness, [145];
absorbs attributes of Seker; also connected with Tenen, [146];
had variants which took attributes of Min, Amsu, and Khepera;
described as, triune god of the resurrection, [146];
centre of worship at Memphis, [147];
female counterpart, Sekhmet, [147];
Seven Wise Ones, and, [147];
reference to, [150], [154], [171], [207];
Pharaoh Manakhphrê-Siamon swears by, [215];
the Apis oracle in temple of, [286];
Apis, the bull of the temple of, [302]
PTAH-ANKH. One of the Pyramid Age sculptors, [315]
PTAH-HOT'EP. Books of proverbs or instructions attributed to, [187]
PTAH OF ANKH'TAUI. Temple of, [198]
PTAH-SEK'ER. One of the gods alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
represents union of creative power with that of chaos or darkness, [145]
PTAH-SEK'ER-AS'AR. Equivalent, Ptah-Seker-Osiris, [146]
PTAH-SEK'ER-O-SIR'IS. See Ptah-Seker-Asar.
PTOL-EM-Æ'US. Demise of King of foretold by oracle of Sebek, [291]
PTOL-E-MA'IC. Period; travelling courts instituted in, [47];
Saïte Recension employed to the end of the, period, [114];
forms small figures of Amen-Ra made in, [141];
period; references to, [152], [186], [196]
PTOL'EM-IES. Reference to text of the, [151]
PTOL'EM-Y II, PHIL-A-DEL'PHUS. Temple of Mendes rebuilt by, [288];
Apis and Mnevis provided for, by, [305]
PTOLEMY III. Decree of Canopu, belonging to, [186]
PTOLEMY SO'TER. Identification of Sarapis with Pluto, assigned by
tradition to reign of, [306]
PUNT. Queen Hatshepsut designed to reign over, [246]
PYRAMID AGE. Equivalent to the Old Kingdom, [22]
PYRAMIDION, HOUSE OF THE. Temple built to his god by Amen-hetep, [159]
PYRAMID-S. Ritual texts and spells inscribed in the, [183];
the Sphinx and the; monuments of bygone Egypt, [314];
the Monna Lisa of Leonardo da Vinci and the Elgin Marbles
of Phidias, evoked by the, [314];
age sculptors; Ptah-Ankh, one of the, [315];
days; craft of painting on sun-dried clay, during, [316]
PYRAMID TEXTS. Allusion to the, [12];
mention of deities in the, [15], [19]-[21];
a double group of eighteen gods mentioned in the, [16];
inscriptions antedating the, [18];
material for study of Egyptian pantheon found in the, [19];
origin of, [24];
Set alluded to in the, [99];
reference to, [63], [110];
Ptah alluded to in the, [144];
Bast mentioned in, [148];
Sebek referred to in the, [289];
revival of the, [301]
PYTHAGOREANS. Typho and the, [102]
Q
QEB. One of the first company of gods, [17]
QEBH-SEN'NÛF. The falcon; represented on canopic jars, [28]
QET'ESH. An Egyptian goddess borrowed from Semitic Asia, [276];
in Syria, worshipped as a nature goddess, [279];
in Egypt identified with one of the forms of Hathor, [279];
considered by some authorities to be an aspect of Ashtoreth, [279];
one other appellation, the 'eye of Ra,' &c., [279];
prayed to for gifts of life and health, [279];
associated as one of a trinity with Amsu or Min and the god Reshpu, [279]
QU-EB'UI. North wind, called, [180]
QU-ER'TI. Cavern from which flowed Nile flood, [154]
QUET'ZAL-CO-ATL. Reference to the Mexican god, [130]
R
RA. Ferry-boat of, [6];
representation of, [11];
the creative faculty and, [13];
darts of, [16];
name joined to that of Tem, [17];
a form of the sun-god, [21];
night journey of, [30];
comparison with Osiris, [63];
equivalent, Helios, [65];
pronounced curse upon Nut, [65];
Thoth turns curse aside, [65];
identified with Osiris, [73], [78];
Horus the elder one of the chief forms of, [85];
Harmachis refers to his identity with, [86];
Horus assists, [88];
shrine erected to Horus, by desire of, [89];
prisoners of Horus brought before, [90];
at one time identified with Horus, [92];
Horus legends and, [93];
grants request of Horus, [96];
gives Horus the city of Pé, [97];
reference to, [100], [101], [103];
eyes of, [105];
mental powers of, [106];
reference to eye of, [107];
boat of, [108];
solar doctrine of, [114];
alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
dwells in heaven, [125];
helps Osiris to climb into heaven, [128];
position in Egyptian pantheon, [130];
number of sun-cults became fused in that of, [130];
bird and serpent associated in, [130];
daily voyage of, [131];
worship of, in Egypt, [132];
how progeny of, first gained Egyptian throne, [132];
worship of, supreme in Nile valley, [132];
power of his priests, [133], [134];
temple at Heliopolis dedicated to, [134];
his sphere more spiritual than that of Osiris, [134];
struggle between priesthoods of Osiris and, [135];
cult of, foreign elements in, [135];
overshadowed by Osiris, [136];
reference to, [137], [138];
fusion with Amen, [139], [140];
temple of, at Memphis, [147];
reference to, [148], [151], [153], [158], [160], [162], [164], [165], [171], [174],
[176], [181], [202], [203], [205];
Hathor and myths of, [166]-[168];
Isis and the secret name of, [259];
invoked in connexion with spells, [264];
one of the spells in Thoth's Library of Magical Books enabled
a man to see, [266];
word 'recipe' said to be an invocation to the 'god,' [269];
'God of Light and Health,' one of the appellations of, [269];
Qetesh termed the 'eye of,' &c., [279];
worship of Ram of Mendes, and, [288];
Sebek connected with, [289];
the lion identified with, [291];
the 'Sphinx' at Gizeh, the symbol of the sun-god, [292];
the falcon sacred to, [296]
RA-TEM. Blending of Ra and Atum, [133]
RA-HAR-MACH-IS. Worship of, restored by Thothmes IV, [157];
obelisk built by Amen-hetep IV, [158]
RA-HER'U-AKH'TI. See Ra-Heru-Khuti
RA-HER'U-KHU'TI. Ruled over a region of Field of Reeds, [116];
equivalent, Ra-Heru-Akhti; Aten adopted the title of high-priest of, [157]
RA-HOR-AKH'TI. The reign of, [88]
RAM'ES-ES. Pyramid of, cannot be placed satisfactorily, [26];
tale illustrating the healing power of Khonsu, located in the
time of King, [176]-[180]
RAM'E-SES II. Anena, a scribe who executed the original d'Orbiney papyrus,
lived in reign of, [224];
a temple to Baal existed at Tanis under, [277];
named one of his sons Mer-Astrot, after Ashtoreth, [279];
tame lion kept by, [292];
the New Empire during time of, a model for the Late period, [301]
RAM'-E-SES III. Power of god Amen in time of, [52];
temple built for Khonsu at Thebes by, [176];
the conspiracy of Hui against, by means of magical books, [262], [263];
goddess Anthat honoured by, [277];
tame lion kept by, [292];
reference to temple of, at Medinet-habû, [317]
RAMESSIDES. Baal especially esteemed by, [277]
RAMESSID DYNASTY. High-priest of Amen-Ra raised to royal power at
end of the, [140]
RAM OF MENDES. The cult of; ascribed by Manetho to Kaiekhos, [288];
worship of, in the Deltaic cities Hermopolis, Lycopolis, and Mendes, [288];
Herodotus relates Pan was worshipped with the, [288];
Ptolemy II Philadelphus rebuilds temple of, [288];
appellation, Khnemu, [288];
worshipped both by conquered and conquerors, [306]
RAM, THE. Reference to, [288]
RA-OSIRIS. The two gods blended in one, [78];
equivalent, Afra, [78];
punishment of the wicked mitigated in the Duat by appearance of, [122];
enemies of, and the souls of the doomed, [123]
RA-SEK-EN-EN. Nationalist prince portrayed in fable, [194]
RAT. Female counterpart of Ra, [132]
RAT-TAU'IT. Goddess worshipped at Hermonthis; mother of Horus the younger, [84]
REALM OF SEK'ER A separate realm of the dead, [117]
RECENSION. The Heliopolitan, Theban, and Saïte, of
Book of the Dead, [113], [114]
'RECIPE.' Word is said to be an invocation to Ra, whose symbol it is, [269]
RED MAN. Reference to imaginings of the, [15]
RED SEA. Crossed by immigrants from Arabia to Egypt, [34]
RELIGION-S. Egyptologists regard Egyptian magic to be a degraded form of, [252];
numerous strata in Egyptian, [257];
Egyptian magic more in common with, than most other systems, [258];
evolution of, on Egyptian soil, [258];
Semitic and African influence on Egyptian, [280]-[282];
Egyptian; symbolism of, mostly expressed by means of animals, [283], [284];
of the Late period, [299]-[303];
under Persian rule, [304];
the Ptolemaic period, [304]-[306];
under the Decadent period, [301];
the Libyan period, [299];
Egyptian, thrown into obscurity by the devotees of Christianity, [300];
the Alexandrine conquest and Egyptian, [304];
under Greek rule, [306];
foreign, penetrate the land of the Pharaohs, the alien faith which
finally triumphed was Christianity, [309]
RENAISSANCE. An architectural, [308], [309];
Italian masters of the, owed much to the Græco-Roman school, [311];
colours in many old Egyptian works better than those in divers
Italian frescoes of the, [316];
the Romans and the Italian masters of the, [321]
RER'ET. Goddess; evil influence of Set and, [101];
a form of Isis, [101];
equivalent, Taurt, [175];
identified with Draco, [181]
RESH'PU. An Egyptian god borrowed from Semitic Asia, [276];
Syrian god, associated as one of a trinity with Qetesh, [279];
his cult in Egypt, [280];
chief centre of worship, Het-Reshp, [280];
in Syria regarded as a god of war, [280];
corresponds to the god known by Phœnicians and worshipped
in Cyprus and Carthage, [280]
RE-STAU. Hidden things in, [57];
the other world of Seker, [57]
RHAMP-SI-NI'TES. The story of, handed down to us by Herodotus, [237]-[240];
Egyptians duped by, [240]
RHAMP-SIN-I'TUS, KING. Reference to, [194];
See Rhampsinites
RHE'A. Equivalent, Nut, [64];
reference to, [102]
RHIND. Scottish archæologist, [38]
RHYS (pron. Reece), PROFESSOR. The Celtic belief re the name
being the 'soul,' and, [258]
RIGHT SPEAKING (MAĀ KHERU). Term applied to a certain formula which
a magician once found effective and which had to be always repeated
exactly, [261]
RO'DIN. Reference to the sculptor, [315], [323]
RO'MAN-S. Pantheon; reference to deities in, [19], [20];
oracle of Jupiter-Ammon consulted by, [142];
Ptah identified with Vulcan by the, [144];
plebeians; reference to, [195];
cult of Sarapis extended under the, [287];
period; cult of the crocodile lasted far into the, [291];
Italian masters of the Renaissance, and the, [321]
ROME. Professor Sergi of, [34];
history of, traced through Egyptian history, [37];
cult of Isis flourished in, [80];
worship of Isis took an orgiastic character in, [84];
the Theban priests much sought after by travellers from, [305]
ROSELLINI. His expedition to Egypt, [38]
ROS-ET'TA STONE. Came into British possession 1801, [37];
decipherment of the, [38];
progress not made in reading of hieroglyphic writing until discovery
of the, [185];
its lingual inscription consisted of fourteen lines of hieroglyphs,
thirty-two lines of Demotic, and fifty-four lines of Greek; by
comparison and decipherment, Egyptian alphabet discovered,
and clue found to lost language, [186]
RUD-DID'ET. Wife of a priest of Ra, [202], [204]
S
SAA. God of the sense of touch, appears in boat of Ra, [181];
son of Geb; personification of intelligence, human and divine, [181]
OTH. Archangel; mentioned with Osiris and the Greek gods, [309]
SACKVILLE, LADY MARGARET. Reference to lines written by, [326]
SAF'EKHT. The goddess of learning; the palm-leaf the symbol of, [298];
the sacred tree in the 'Great Hall' of Heliopolis and, [298]
SA'HAL. Island of, [154];
worship of Anqet centred at, [156]
SAHARA DESERT. Reference to, [33]
SAH-RA. One of the three children of Ruddidet, [203];
name of second King of Fifth Dynasty and, [205]
SAÏS. Reference to, by Herodotus, [56];
centre of Amen-Ra at, [142];
Lady of, [164];
Neith, goddess of, [246]
SAÏTE. [1]. Recension; chapter of Book of the Dead recited
on special occasions, [57];
reference to, [113];
date of, [114].
written upon coffins and papyri, [114].
2. Period, reference to, [152], [184];
the last, of Egyptian art, [319], [320];
incursions of the Persians, Greeks, and Romans during the, [319];
Egyptian artists of, [319];
edifices of—the pronaos of Komombos, the temple of Isis
at Philæ, the kiosk of Nectanebu, the Mammisi and temple
of Horus at Edfû, [319], [320];
structures, influenced by foreign ideas, [320];
paintings of, [320]
SAK'HE-BU. Lord of, [202]
SAK-KA-RA. Equivalent, Saqqara, [37];
Maspero at, [113]
SAL-CA-MAY'HUA. Indian writer; tribal origins and, [10]
SAMOTHRACIAN. Mysteries; Hecate and, [175]
SAN'E-HA. Story of, [190], [191]
SAQ-QA-RA. Pyramidal building copied at, [24];
pyramid of Menkauhor at, [26];
Assa mentioned on tablet at, [26];
equivalent, Sakkara, [37];
Seker, god of death, at, [57]
SAR'A-PIS. The Grecian equivalent, Osiris-Apis, [287];
Greeks ascribed the attributes of Hades to, [287];
in Egypt and Greece regarded as the male counterpart of Isis, [287];
the cult of, in Britain, [287];
known to the Egyptians as Asar-Hapi, [306];
worshipped by Greeks and Egyptians, [306];
to Greeks, deceased bull took form of, [306];
Ptolemy, surnamed the Saviour, and the Legend of, [307];
another version of the legend, [307], [308];
Soteles and Dionysius sent to Alexandria to remove the statue, [307];

the people of Sinope and the statue of, [307];
statue brought to Egypt, [307];
Pluto and statue of, [307]
SA REN'PUT I. The portico of, [317]
SAT'ET. God; reverenced at Elephantine, [152];
female counterpart of Khnemu, [153];
a form of the star Sept, [153];
equivalent, Setet; goddess of the inundation, [155];
as a form of Isis and counterpart of Osiris, appears in
Book of the Dead, [156]
SA'TI. As a force which sent forth Nile flood, Isis was called, [83]
SA'TI-TEM'UI. The terrible serpent, [116];
preys on the dead, [116]
SAT'URN. Appellation, Horus (bull of heaven), [181]
SCANDINAVIAN. Myth; reference to, [132]
SCAR'ABS. Placed in coffin of deceased, [301]
SCORPION-S. Selk the goddess of, [247];
sacred to Isis, [295]
SCOT. Character of the, compared with Egyptian, [50]
SCULPTURE. The full-length at Cairo of the 'Sheikh-el-Beled'
(real name Ka-aper), [315];
during the New Empire period, [317];
during the Saïte period, [320];
reference to works of Chinard and Houdon, [322]
SEB'EK. The crocodile, the incarnation of the god, [11], [289];
alluded to in the Pyramid Texts, [21], [289];
equivalent, Sobk,55;
sight restored by, [289];
helper of child Horus, [289];
representation in religious art, [291]
SECOND DYNASTY. Reference to bas-relief of, [112];
Book of the Dead in vogue in, [113];
reference to, [144]
SEF AND DUA. Alternatives, 'Yesterday' and 'To-morrow';
two guardian lions, [292]
SEK'ER. Sanctuary of, [57];
realm of, [78], [117];
antiquity of, [117];
identified with Night-sun, [145];
sometimes confounded with Sept and with Geb, [145];
ruled portion of underworld, [145];
attributes of, absorbed by Ptah, [146];
temple of, at Memphis, [147];
groups of Seven Hathors mentioned in Litanies of, [169]
SEK'ER-BOAT. Ceremonies connected with, which typified revolution
of the sun, [145];
known as Henu; mentioned in Book of the Dead,145;
description of; body of Osiris and, [146];
probably form of Mesek-tet-boat, [146]
SEK'ER-O-SI'RIS. Souls of dead among servitors of, [210]
SEK'HET AA'RU. Equivalent, Field of Reeds; pleasant portion of the Duat, [115];
centre of kingdom of Osiris, [116];
souls here under rule of Ra-Heru-Khuti, [116]
SEK'HET HET-E-PET. Delectable part of the Duat, [115]
SEKH'MET-BAST-RA. Amalgamation of three gods, representation of, [148]
SEKH'MET or SEK'MET. Temple of, at Memphis, [147];
female counterpart of Ptah; identified with Hathor;
personification of destroying heat of sun, [147];
alternative, Nesert; attributes of Seven Wise Ones and, [147];
Bast amalgamated with, [148];
reference to, [150];
named in myth of Ra and Hathor, [167]
SEMITIC. Vocabulary, imposed on people in Nile valley, [34];
dynastic Egyptians had some element of the proto-, [35];
Egyptians related to, [182];
resemblances between Coptic and, [183]
SEMITIC ADONAI. The Greek Adonis; Aten and, [160]
SEMITIC INFLUENCE. African and, on Egyptian religious ideas, [280]-[282]
SEN'EF-ER-U. The cult of the dead in time of, [112];
tale of magic of the days of King, [199], [200]
SENEGAMBIA. Superstition among tribes of, re new name given
at initiation ceremonies, [259]
SEN-NACH'ER-IB. King of Assyria; defeated by Setnau, [219], [220]
SEN-U-SERT. Pyramid of, [26];
equivalent, Usertsen, [133], [190];
story of Saneha and, [190], [191]
SE-O-SI'RIS. The son of Setne; noted for his wisdom, [208];
recites from the magical books to Setne, [209];
leads Setne to unknown place in mountains of Memphis, [209];
shows Setne a vision of the gods of Amenti, [209]-[211];
no scribe or magician in Memphis his equal, [211];
reads sealed letter to Pharaoh Ousimares, [212]-[219];
his former identity as chief magician of Pharaoh Manakhphrê, [218];
disappears as a shadow, [219]
SEPT. Astronomical symbol of Isis, [83];
Seker and, [145];
goddess Bast entitled 'the lady of Sept,' [148];
equivalent, Sothis, [148];
reference to, [156];
Hathor identified with, [168]
SEP'TAH MEN-EP'TAH. Likeness of, example of bas-relief during
Saïte period, [318]
SER-A-PE'UM. The famous; discovered by Mariette, [287];
votive statues and stelæ found in the chapels of, [287]
SER-BON'IAN LAKE. Temple to Ashtoreth on shores of, [278]
SER'GI, PROFESSOR. Reference to, [34]
SERVICE OF ANTIQUITIES. Reference to, [38]
SET. One of the great gods at Heliopolis, [14];
birth of, [65];
enemy to his brother, Osiris, [66];
alternative, the Greek Typhon, [66];
causes death of Osiris, [67];
discovers coffin of Osiris, [69];
Horus battles with, [70];
as a prisoner is set at liberty by Isis, [70];
pigs possibly symbolical of, [75];
Isis imprisoned by, [82];
represented face of heaven by night, [84];
reference to Horus's war against, [86], [87], [88];
schemes against Horus, [89], [96];
Horus takes prisoner one whom he wrongly thinks to be Set, [90];
end of, [91], [92];
symbol of darkness, [92];
reference to, [17], [95], [98], [103], [104], [106];
assumes form of black hog, [96];
causes temporary blindness to Horus, [97];
Nephthys, sister and wife of, [97];
cult of, [99];
friend to the dead; assisted Osiris to reach heaven; mortal
enemy of Horus the Elder, [99];
derivation of name, [99];
god of sin and evil; storms, earthquakes, eclipses, &c.,
attributed to, [100];
animals regarded as children of, [100];
the 'Great Bear' abode of, [101];
goddess Reret and, [101];
decline of worship of, [101];
Plutarch the ass, [101];
likens to; alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
helps Osiris climb into heaven, [128];
reference to birth of, [174];
identified with Mercury, [181];
Baal identified with, [277];
name of Baal substituted for, in texts of Edfû, [277];
Kh, the usual determinative of the name Set, [280];
the evil one who preys upon every 'Osiris,' [289];
revulsion of feeling against, [300];
the brother of Isis and Osiris, [300];
confused with the dragon Apep, [300];
identified with Typhon by Herodotus, [303], [306]
SET'EM. God of hearing, [181]
SET'I I. Reference to bas-relief at Abydos giving likeness of, [318]
SET-NAU. A priest of 'Vulcan,' [219];
defeats the Assyrians under King Sennacherib, [219], [220]
SET'NE. ancient story of him and his son, Se-Osiris, [206]-[208];
Se-Osiris recites from the magical books to, [209];
led by Se-Osiris to unknown place in mountains of Memphis, [209];
Se-Osiris grants a vision of the gods of Amenti to, [209]-[211];
son of Pharaoh Ousimares, [212];
Mahîtouaskhît wife of, [212];
Se-Osiris, son of, [212];
Se-Osiris disappears as a shadow from, [219];
Ousimanthor, son of, [219];
a tale of, related in a papyrus of the Ptolemaic period, [265]-[268];
his study in the manuscripts in the Library of Magical Books, [265];
his offer to the king's wise men re book written by Thoth, [266];
Ahura, wife of Nefer-ka-Ptah, and, [266];
plays draughts with Nefer-ka-Ptah, [268];
Ahura's prophecy regarding, [268];
commanded by Pharaoh to return Thoth's magical book to Nefer-ka-Ptah, [268]
"SET'NE AND HIS SON SE-OSIRIS." The true History of, [206]-[219]
"SET'NE AND THE MUMMIES." Reference to story of, [206]
SET'Y II. See Sety Merenptah, [224]
SET'Y MER-EN'PTAH (SETY II). Owner of original d'Orbiney papyrus, [224]
SEVEN HATHORS, THE. A selection of forms of the goddess Hathor, [169];
Bitou's wife and, [226]
SEVEN WISE ONES. Offspring of goddess Meh-urt; came forth from pupil of Ra,
form of, seven hawks, [147];
together with Thoth, presided over learning and letters, [147]
SHAÏS. Battle by Horus at, [90]
'SHEIKH-EL-BEL'ED' (KA-APER). See Sculpture
SHEM'SHU-HER'U. Gods of heaven, followers of Horus, [126]
SHEP'SES-KAF. Buried in pyramid called 'the Cool,' [25]
SHESH'ONK. A Libyan governor; capital at Bubastis and Bast
the goddess of locality, [300]
SHOM'OU. Month of, [232]
SHU. Child of Nu, [13];
followed by eye of Nu, [14];
gives birth to several gods, [14];
represents daylight, [14];
one of the first company of gods, [17];
god of the atmosphere; Af Ra and, [118];
alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
reference to, [153], [155], [157], [166], [173], [176];
god in the court of Amen-Ra, [246];
mummy magic and the gods Geb and, [274]
SILENE. The moon-goddess; her game with Thoth, [65]
SILENCE. The Demon of; Tehuti-nekht threatens to send the sekhti to, [222]
SI'NAI. Reference to Mount, [10]
SINAI PENINSULA. Explorations in, [43]
SINAITIC PENINSULA. Hathor of the, [169]
SIN'OPE. People of, and the Sarapis statue, [307]
SIR'IUS. Inundation of Nile marked by rising of the star, [48];
equivalent, Sothis, [168]
SI'UT. Staff of priests at, [54]
SIXTH DYNASTY. Egyptian pantheon and, [19];
Book of the Dead and, [113];
power of priests of Ra at close of, [133];
inscriptions in language of, [183]
SKY-GODDESS. Nut, the, [246]
SLEEP. The phenomenon of, a puzzle to the Palæolithic man, [255];
Egyptian desiring illumination through dream and, [273]
SMEN'DES. Prince; Ounamounou and, [234], [235]
SMITH, DR. ELLIOT. Reference to, [50]
SOBK OF THE ISLAND. Temple of, [55];
equivalent, Sebek, [55];
called by Greeks Soknopaios, [55]
SOK-NO-PAI'OS. Greek name for temple of Sobk, [55]
SOMALI. Branch of race peopling southern shores of Mediterranean, [34]
SO'THIS. Equivalent, Sirius, [48];
reference to, [148], [168]
SOUL-S. Of the dead; delivered to Amait or Sekerosiris, [209], [210];
prehistoric logic and the destination of the, [255], [256];
Herodotus and transmigration of, [302]
SOUTH LAND. Promised to Thothmes by Harmachis, [86];
encounter between Horus and Set in the, [89]
SO-TEL'ES. The Sarapis statue and, [307]
SPANIARD. Character of, compared with Egyptian, [50]
'SPEAKING, RIGHT' (Maā Kheru). See Maā Kheru
SPELLS. Charms and; the Harris Papyrus contains many, [262];
the use of, universal, [264];
gods invoked in connexion with, as Ra, Amon, Osiris, Isis and
Horus, &c., [264], [265];
Nefer-ka-Ptah copies those in Thoth's Library of Magical Books, [267];
provision of, in the Book of the Dead to enable the deceased
to transform himself, [270], [271]
SPHINX-ES. Reference to Harmachis, the, [85], [86];
the Greek name for the statues of lions, [292];
characteristics of Egyptian lion-statue different from Grecian, [292];
that at Gizeh the symbol of the sun-god Ra, [292];
the Pyramids and the, [314];
the Monna Lisa of Leonardo da Vinci and the Elgin Marbles
of Phidias evoked by the, [314];
the famous Avenue of, at Karnak, [318]
SPHRAG-IS'TÆ. An order of priests, [103]
SPIRIT. The wandering, of man, during sleep, [255], [256]
SPIR'IT-ISM. Animism, the mother of, [254], [255]
SPIRIT-SOULS. The place of, in Field of Reeds, [116];
equivalent, 'Khu,' [117]
SQUIRE. Reference to his translation of Plutarch's De Iside et
Osiride, [101]
ST. GEORGE. Reference to, [87]
STONE-S. Trees and, looked upon as incorporations of deity, [280]
STORY, THE. Of the Shipwrecked Sailor; a Tale of the Twelfth Dynasty, [191];
of the Two Brothers, [224]-[232];
of Rhampsinites, [237]-[240]
STRA'BO. Early Greek traveller in Egypt, [54];
his account of the crocodile, [290];
his assertion re the statues of sacred animals, [306]
SUMATRA. The Battas of, and the soul, [32]
SUN-GOD. Stones as incorporations of deity in Heliopolis, [280];
lion identified with the, Horus, [291];
Ra the; the 'Sphinx' at Gizeh the symbol of, [292];
Ra; ass figures as a personification of the, [295]
SUNRISE, MOUNTAIN OF THE. Af Ra directs his course to the, [118]
SYRIA-N. Researches into, [38];
explorations in, [43];
spoil of conquered, loaded the temple of Amen, [139]-[142];
Egyptian religion and, [159];
Egyptian system of writing in, [184];
Queen Hatshepsut designed to reign over, [246];
Thoutii the prince of a town in, [248];
origin; words and expressions of, in spells, [265];
cult of Anthat in, [277]
T
TABLES OF NATIVITY. Found in later papyri, [272]
TAK'HOS. Galley of; Minnemai recaptures his father's shield from the, [245]
TAN-A-IT'IC. Mouth, of the Nile, where body of Osiris drifted to, [67]
TAN'IS. Scientific system of investigation inaugurated at, [39];
shrine of Heru at, [86];
Ounamounou, chief priest of Amen-Ra arrives at, [232];
under Rameses II, a temple to Baal existed at, [277];
eastern quarters of, dedicated to Ashtoreth, [278]
TAN-TAM-OU'NOU. Prince; Ounamounou and, [234], [235]
TANT-NOU-IT. An Egyptian singer who cheers Ounamounou, [236]
TAT'U. Pillar; erected at close of annual festival of Osiris, [72]
TA-URT. Identified with Mut, [143];
mother and nurse of the gods; counterpart in Apet, [174];
known as Rert or Reret; identified with Isis, Hathor, Bast, [175];
her image in faience, favourite amulet, [175];
road to Hades and, [175];
popularity during New Empire, [175];
the hippopotamus-goddess, [294]
TA-UT. Horus the child, the dead, and judges of the, [95]
TCHA'BU. Mentioned in hymn to Hapi, [171]
TCHES'ER. Third king of Third Dynasty; seeks help of Khnemu, [154], [155]
TEF'NUT. Child of Nu, [13];
followed by eye of Nu, [14];
father of several gods, [14];
represents moisture, [14];
one of the first company of gods, [17];
reference to, [166];
goddess, in the Court of Amen-Ra, [246]
TE-HU'TI-EM-HEB. Scribe sent to heal daughter of Prince of Bekhten, [178]
TE-HU'TI-NEKHT. Son of Asri, serf to the High Steward Meruitensa, [220];
story of peasant and, [220]-[224]
TEK'A, LADY OF. Pseudonym for the sun when high in the south, [164]
TELL-EL-AMAR'NA. System of water-supply found at, [41];
remains of houses at, [42];
Amenhetep IV built capital, dedicated to Aten, on the site of, [158]
TEM. Chief of the first company of gods, [17];
name joined to that of Ra, [17];
Harmachis refers to his identity with, [86];
alluded to in Book of the Dead, [119];
equivalent, Atmu, [119];
or Atem, [136];
original local deity of Heliopolis, [136];
one of the forms of Ra, [136];
identified with Osiris, [136];
god of the rising sun, [150];
the lord of Heliopolis, the great god; Pimonî swears by, [241]
TEMPLE-S. TO Queen Hatshepsut, [248];
Egyptian desiring illumination, and, [273];
Egyptian; representations of Bes in 'Birth Houses' in, [281];
representations of Bes in Hatshepsut's, [281];
apes kept in, [294];
epoch of building, in Egypt, [305];
of Dendereh, Edfû, Kom Ombo, Philæ, &c., [305];
Ptolemy and, [305];
re the, of Kom-es-Sagha, [317];
of Isis at Philæ, [320]
TEN'EN. Ptah and, [146];
co-ordinated with Ptah, [147]
TEN'U, UPPER. Allusion to, [191]
TE'TA. Pyramid Texts of, [16], [19];
various gods alluded to in Text of, [21];
Maspero and Pyramid of, [113];
original texts of Heliopolitan Recension in Pyramid of, [114];
Ptah mentioned in Pyramid Text of, [144]
TEZ-CAT-LI-PO'CA. Mexican deity; reference to, [82]
THAL'Û. Horus does battle at, [90]
THEBAN. Description of, house, [42];
action of, priests, [140];
establishment of, monarchy, [157]
THEBAN RECENSION. Supplies names of deities, [2];
equivalent, Book of the Dead, [2];
reference to, [113], [143];
written upon papyri and painted upon coffins in hieroglyphs, [114];
particulars of Field of Reeds in, [115];
god Saa mentioned in, [181]
THEBES. Ruins of, [43];
title of priest at, [53];
college of priests at, [54];
Pamyles and birth of Osiris at, [65];
temple of Amen-Ra at, [131];
reference to princes and priests of, [138];
one of the centres of Amen-Ra at, [142];
temple of Mut at, [143];
Amen-hetep built temples at, [157];
obelisk in honour of Ra-Harmachis of, [158];
Hathor of, [169];
Apet of, [175];
temple of Khonsu at, [176];
reference to, [178];
Minnemai, Prince of the Eupuantine, son of Ierharerou, advances from, [245];
shrine built to Anthat at, [277];
devotees prayed to Qetesh for a good burial west of, [279];
crocodile held sacred at, [290];
ape of Khensu at, [294];
priests of Amen's cult rulers at, [300];
Amen represented at by a Divine Wife, [300];
hero-gods Imhotep and Amenophis adored at, [303], [304];
priestesses in, consecrated to service of Amen, [305];
figures of Memnon at, [318]
THI'NITE PERIOD, THE. See Period
THIRD DYNASTY. Development of pyramid during, [24];
trade opened with Egypt in, [46];
reference to, [151];
famine during, [154]
THOTH. Representation of, [11], [106];
festival of, [57];
Nut calls to for help, [65];
curse of Ra, and, [65];
Greek equivalent, Hermes, [65];
reference to, [75], [79], [105], [147], [150], [151], [181];
Horus sought aid of, [88];

watches conflict between Horus and allies of Set, [89];
myth of; birth coeval with that of Ra; principal seat of worship
Hermopolis, [106];
equivalent, Tehuti, [106];
originally, a moon-god, [107];
recorder of souls, [107];
secret of success in prayer and, [108];
his formula to open gates of Duat, [108];
believed to be author of Book of the Dead and Book of
Breathings, [108];
Goddess Maāt and Greek name, Trismegistos, or Hermes the Thrice
Great, [108];
Books of, forty-two in number, [108];
alluded to in Book of Dead, [119];
the scribe of the gods, [119];
assisted Maāt in connexion with course of Ra, [131];
intoxication festivals in month of, [168];
Khonsu and, [176];
Dedi and House of, [201], [202];
Setne sees, seated on throne with Osiris and Anubis, [209];
the judgment of Anubis and,209;
guides Amen-Ra to chamber of Queen Aahmes, [246], [247];
Library of Magical Books, written by, [265];
dog-headed ape in Judgment Scene who reports weighing results to, [294];
the ibis associated with, [295];
the sacred tree of Heliopolis, and, [298]
THOTH'MES. Legend of, and the Sphinx, [85];
dreams that the Sphinx speaks, [86]
THOTH'MES III. King of Egypt (Eighteenth Dynasty); the Prince of Joppa
rebels against, [249];
Thoutii offers to kill Prince of Joppa for, [249], [250];
Anthat shrine and, [277];
worship of Ashtoreth and, [278]
THOTH'MES IV. Worship of Ra-Harmachis, and, [157]
THOU'TII. An Egyptian officer, [248];
story re the town of Joppa, [248]-[251];
story of taking of Joppa is inscribed on the Harris Papyrus, [248];
Joppa and the stratagem of, [248], [249];
Arabian Nights and story of, [248], [249];
story of, discovered by Goodwin, [248];
slays the Prince of Joppa, [250], [251]
THRACE. Greek Hecate an importation from, [175]
THU'AU. Mother of Tyi, [157]
TIA'MAT. Assyrian monster, counterpart of Apep; slain by Marduk, [132]
TIME. Certain gods presided over certain periods of, [272]
TIMES, THE. Reference to article in the, on the Popol Vuh, [133]
TIMOTHEUS THE INTERPRETER. The Sarapis statue and, [307]
TNAH'SIT. Mother of Horus, [214], [217]
TOR'RENT, SIR, OF PORTUGAL. Old romance of, [205]
TO'TEM-IC. Origin of many of Egyptian gods, [272]
TO'TEM-ISM. Definition of, [8]
TRANSFORMATION. Animal, [270]-[273];
reference to Dr. Budge's Egyptian Magic, and, [271];
provision of spells in the Book of the Dead to enable the
deceased to undergo, [270], [271]
TRANSMIGRATION. Of souls, Herodotus and, [302]
TREE-S. Stones and, looked upon as incorporations of deity, [280];
worship of sacred, in Egypt, [297]-[299];
Wiedemann, and worship of, [297];
the ancient sacred, in the 'Great Hall' of Heliopolis—place where
Apep slain and from which the phœnix rose, [298];
Thoth and the goddess Safekht and the sacred, [298];
the palm-tree (symbol of Safekht), [298];
the sycamore (sacred to Nut and Hathor), [298];
the Memphite Hathos called the 'Lady of the Sycamore,' [298];
the Nile acacia worshipped by twenty-four nomes, [298], [299];
the Corda myxa; the Zizyphus Spina Christi; the
Juniperus Phœnica; and the Tamarisk Nilotica, [299];
every temple had its sacred, [299]
TRIS-MEG-IS'TOS. Greek name for Thoth, [108]
TRO-CHO-Ï-DES. Vault described by Herodotus, [56]
TRUTH. Goddess of, [53]
TUA-MUT'EF. The jackal, on canopic jars, [28];
one of the four helpers of Horus, [96]
TU'AT. Dark halls of the, [27]
TURIN. Egyptian antiquities removed to, [37];
papyrus of, [111];
fable in museum at, [194], [195]
TUSCANY. Government of, sends expedition to Egypt, [38]
TUSH'RAT-TA. King of the Mitanni; mention of Ashtoreth in letter of, [278]
TWELFTH DYNASTY. Pyramidal architecture ends with, [24];
date of, [35];
temple built in honour of Amen during, [138];
Khnemu and inscriptions subsequent to, [152];
tales, letters, &c., of the, [183];
first king of, [190];
tale of, in Hermitage Collection at St. Petersburg, [191]
TWENTY-FIFTH DYNASTY. Contracts common during, [47];
Demotic dialect traced back to, [184]
TWENTY-FIRST DYNASTY. Mummification during, [27];
the 'dynasty of priest-kings,' [140];
hieratic papyri of the, [183]
TWENTY-SECOND DYNASTY. Worship of Set in the, [101];
reference to, [146]
TWENTY-SIXTH DYNASTY. Period of the, [111];
reference to, [114];
Demotic form of script in use in, [186]
TWILIGHT OF THE GODS. The obliteration of the Egyptian faith, [310]
TY'I OR THI. Wife of Amenhetep III, [157]
TY'PHON. Greek form for Set, [66];
finds body of Osiris, [74];
reference to, [98], [100];
equivalent, Typho, [102];
detestation of, [102];
likened to the Ass, [103]
TYRE. Ounamounou, chief priest of Amen-Ra, reaches, [233]
U
U'AG. Festival of, [57]
U-AZ'ET. Horus attended by the goddess, [89], [90];
representation, [93]
UBA-AN'ER. Chief figure in magic story told by Khafra to his father Khufu, [198], [199]
UD'Y-MU. Equivalents, Den and Hesepti; fifth king of the First Dynasty, [63]
UK-I-YO'É SCHOOL, THE. Reference to the great Japanese artists of, [311]
UN'AS. Names of gods of the Little company given in text of, [17];
reference to, [19];
Pyramid Texts of, [21];
a text comprising the Book of the Dead as a whole in the reign of, [112];
some texts identical with those of Teta, [113];
the Pyramid of, contains original texts of Heliopolitan Recension, [114];
reference to inscription of King, [152];
first mention of the god, Hapi in Text of, [169]
UNDERWORLD. Bes underwent a transformation in, [282];
Osiris the great god of the, [287];
lion-headed deities in the, [292];
jackal associated with the, in Egyptian mythology, [294];
a Hathor, Lady of the, [298];
change in popular conception of the, [309];
still the Duat, governed by Osiris or Sarapis, [309], [310]
UNKNOWN, THE. Terrors of, personified in the monster serpent Apep, [295]
UPPER EGYPT. Civil war between the Delta and, [240]-[245]
UPPER DARLING. Natives of, [11]
UPPER PYRAMID. Tenanted by corpse of Menkaura, [25]
UP-U'AUT. Assists Anubis in guiding souls of the dead through underworld;
personification of the winter solstice, [105];
name signifies 'Opener of the Ways,' [105];
equivalent, Ap-uat, [105]
UR MA. Distinctive title of priest, [53]
UR'NES. Second part of the Duat, [117]
US'A-HOR-RES-NET. Kambuses' physician, [304]
US'ER-KA-F. First king of Fifth Dynasty, high priest of the god Ra, [132]
US'ER-REF. One of the three children of Ruddidet, [203];
name of first king of Fifth Dynasty, and, [205]
US'ERT. AS goddess of the fruitful earth, Isis named, [83]
USH-AB'TI FIGURES. Buried with the deceased, [301]
UT'CHATS. Eyes of Ra; their symbolization, [105]
UT-EN-NU. Beings in heaven, [126]
V
VALE OF THE ACACIA. Bitou goes to the, [225]
VAM'PIRE. The idea, of great antiquity; figured as a ghost, [272];
charm against to-day in the Balkan peninsula, [272]
VENUS. Reference to, [102];
Osiris, god of, [181]
VESTA. Reference to, [102]
VIRGINIA. Powhatans of, [5]
VISION. Se-Osiris grants to Setne a, of gods of Amenti, [209]-[211]
VUL'CAN. Romans identified Ptah with, [144];
Setnau, priest of, [219];
temple of, [220]
W
WAITE, A. E. Reference to his Hidden Church of the Holy Grail, [270]
WAR. Mentu, the god of, [246];
between peoples, was war between their respective deities, [276];
Baal, the terrible god of, [276];
Ashtoreth, the terrible goddess of, [278];
Reshpu regarded in Syria as a war god, [280]
WERE'WOLF. Idea of, unknown in ancient Egypt, [272]
WEST ASIATIC. Invader; story of, confused with legend of Horus, [94]
WESTCAR. Papyrus, containing a tale of magic, [197]-[199]
WESTERN WATERS OF MERT. Horus overtakes allies of Set at the, [90]
WIE'DE-MANN. Quotation from, [12];
Bes derived from Besa according to, [281];
worship of sacred trees, and, [297]
WINGED DISK. Symbol of the sun, [60];
myth of, [88]
WINGED SUN DISK. The legend, related in texts of Edfû, [277]
WOLF, THE. Venerated at Lycopolis, [294]
WORKMAN. The Peasant (Tehuti-nekht) and the; story of, [220]-[224];
son of Asri, [220]
WORSHIP. Egyptian animal—provoked merriment of cultured Greek and
ridicule of early Christian writers, [271];
polytheistic, a national tendency among Egyptians, [275];
of sacred animals in Egypt—the bull, [284]-[288];
the crocodile, [289]-[291];
the lion, [291], [292];
the cat, [293];
the dog, [294];
the hippopotamus, [294];
the ibis, [295]-[297];
of trees in Egypt, [297]-[299];
of animals during the Late period, [302]-[304]
X
XPI'YA-COC AND XMU'CAN-E. Ancient serpents, [12]
XQUIQ. (Pron. Shqueek), Daughter of lord in underworld, [122]
Y
YORK. Cult of Sarapis in, [287]
YOUNG. Helped decipher Rosetta stone, [187]
Z
ZAAL-A'ÊR. The Great God Iphphon and, invoked in a magical spell, [265];
the Hebrew appellation Ablanathanalb, Abrasilôa, [265]
ZAC'ZI-NI. One of the four deities of the ancient Maya, [29];
equivalent, Ix, [29]
ZAK-KA-LA. Dora, city of; Badîl Prince of; Ounamounou arrives at, [232];
vessels sent from to prevent Ounamounou from reaching Egypt, [236]
ZAZ'A-MANKH. Chief reciter and scribe of the rolls of court of King
Seneferu, [199], [200]
ZEUS. Amen identified with, [305], [306]
ZO'SER, KING. Imhotep, author and architect under, [303]


Table of Contents

Chap. 1 Introductory

[Local Gods][Animism][Fetishism and Totemism][Creation Myths][The 'Companies' of the Gods][The Egyptian Idea of God][Deities of the Pyramid Texts][Early Burials][The Pyramid][Pyramidal Architecture]['Lost' Pyramids][Mummification][Funeral Offerings][The Ka][The Ba].

Chap. 2 Exploration, History and Customs

[The Nile Valley][Racial Origin][Egyptian Exploration][Early Researches][Town Planning][Palaces and Mansions][Life and Law in Ancient Egypt][Commerce][Agriculture][Legal Code][Science][The Peasantry][Costume].

Chap. 3 The Priesthood: Mysteries and Temples

[The Priesthood][The College of Thebes][Mysteries][The Greek Mysteries][The Egyptian Temple][The Holy Place].

Chap. 4 The Cult of Osiris

[Isis][Isis as the Wind][Manifold Attributes of Isis][Horus][The Dream of Thothmes][Heru-Behudeti][The Myth of the Winged Disk][The Slaughter of the Monsters][Other Horus Legends][The Black Hog][Nephthys][Set][Set and the Ass][Anubis][Thoth][Thoth as Soul-Recorder][Maāt][The Book of the Dead][A 'Discovery' 3400 Years Old][The Three Recensions][The Place of Reeds][The Journey of Osiris][The Place of Punishment][The Egyptian Heaven][How the Blessed Lived].

Chap. 5 The Great Gods

[The Seven Wise Ones][Bast][The Festival of Bast][Nefer-Tem][I-em-hetep][Khnemu][The Legend of the Nile's Source][Satet][Anqet][Aten][A Religion of One God][ A Social Revolt][Aten's Attributes][A Hymn to Aten][Hathor][Hathor as Love-Goddess][The Slaying of Men][The Forms of Hathor][Hapi, the God of the Nile][Counterparts of Hapi][Nut][Taurt][Hekt][Khonsu][Minor Deities].

Chap. 6 Egyptian Literature

[The Shipwrecked Sailor][The Fable of the Head and the Stomach][The Rebuking of Amasis][Tales of Magic][The Parting of the Waters][The Visit of the Goddesses][Lyric and Folk Poetry][The True History of Setne and his son Se-Osiris][A Vision of Amenti][The Reading of the Sealed Letter][The Contents of the Letter][Magic versus Magic][The War of Enchantments][How Setnau Triumphed over the Assyrians][The Peasant and the Workman][Story of the Two Brothers][The Treachery of Bitou's Wife][The Doomed Prince][The Visit of Ounamounou to the Coasts of Egypt][The Story of Rhampsinites][Civil War in Egypt: The Theft of the Cuirass][The Birth of Hatshepsut][How Thoutii took the Town of Joppa].

Chap. 7 Magic

[Antiquity of Egyptian Magic][The Wandering Spirit][Coercing the Gods][Names of Power]['Right Speaking'][A Magical Conspiracy][Amulets][Spells][The Tale of Setne][A Game of Draughts with the Dead][Medical Magic][Alchemy][Animal Transformation][Dreams][Mummy Magic].

Chap. 8 Foreign and Animal Gods: The Late Perod

[Ashtoreth][Semitic and African Influence][Sacred Animals][Apis][The Apis Oracle][The Crocodile][The Lion][The Lion Guardian][The Cat][The Dog][The Hippopotamus][Other Animals][The Ibis][Sacred Trees][The Lotus][Religion of the Late Period][A Religious Reaction][The Worship of Animals][Religion under Persian Rule][The Ptolemaic Period][Fusion of Greek and Egyptian Ideas][The Legend of Sarapis][An Architectural Renaissance][Change in the Conception of the Underworld][Twilight of the Gods].

Chap. 9 Egyptian Art

[The Materials of Painting][New Empire Art][Egyptian Art Influences][Artistic Remains][Egyptian Colour-harmonies][The Great Simplicity of Egyptian Art].