[150]. E. Naville, The Store-city of Pithom and the Route of the Exodus (1885).

[151]. Zeitschrift für Aegyptische Sprache, 1872, p. 18; see also J. de Rougé, Géographie ancienne de la Basse-Égypte, pp. 93-95.

[152]. Cf. the articles of Sayce and Hommel in the Expository Times for August, October, and November 1896, pp. 521, 18, and 89.

[153]. See Sayce, The Higher Criticism and the Monuments, p. 249.

[154]. E. Naville, Goshen and the Shrine of Saft el-Hennah, Fourth Memoir of the Egypt Exploration Fund (1887).

[155]. Brugsch, Egypt under the Pharaohs (Eng. tr.), second edit., ii. p. 133.

[156]. Flinders Petrie, Tel el-Amarna, pp. 40-42.

[157]. See above, p. [115].

[158]. For Khar, the Horites of the Old Testament, see Maspero, Struggle of the Nations, p. 121.

[159]. On the road from Assuan to Shellâl, ‘Messui, the royal son of Kush, the fan-bearer on the right of the king, the royal scribe,’ has left his name and titles on a granite rock (Petrie, A Season in Egypt, No. 70). Below the inscription is Meneptah in a chariot, with Messui holding the fan and bowing before him.