Zoan (Sân, Tanis), [15], [19], [39], [41], [42], [48], [78], [267].


Footnotes

[1.] Hosea ix. 6; Isaiah xix. 13; Jeremiah ii. 16. [2.] Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh (first edition), p. 44. [3.] Pap. Anastasi, i. p. 23, line 5. [4.] Horner, in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 1855-58. [5.] Brugsch's translation, Egypt under the Pharaohs, Eng. trans. first edition, i. p. 266. [6.] Ramses ii. reigned from b.c. 1348 to 1281; if the stela of Sân had been erected in the twenty-eighth year of his reign, four hundred years would take us back to b.c. 1720. The Syrian wars were concluded by the treaty with the Hittites in the twenty-first year of his reign. [7.] This is the length of the reign as given by Manetho, and with this agree all the dated monuments of Hor-m-hib, with the exception of a fragment in the British Museum (Egyptian Inscriptions, 5624), which has been supposed to refer to his seventh and twenty-first years. But the king to whom these dates refer is uncertain, and Dr. Birch may be right in considering that Amenôphis is meant. [8.] See Maspero's exhaustive paper “The List of Sheshonq at Karnak,” in the Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute, xxvii. (1893-94). [9.] Sharpe, History of Egypt, i. p. 346. [10.] The inscription of Sheri, the prophet of Send, part of which is in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford and part at Cairo, makes Per-ab-sen the successor of Send. He will have corresponded to the Khaires of Manetho. [11.] In an inscription now at Palermo a King Ahtes is mentioned by the side of Nefer-ar-ka-Ra. [12.] In the tomb of Mera, discovered by Mr. de Morgan at Saqqârah in 1894, Akau-Hor stands between Unas and Teta. [13.] One of the kings of the seventh dynasty was Dad-nefer-Ra Dudu-mes, whose name is conjoined with those of the sixth dynasty kings at El-Kab, and who built at Gebelên. [14.] The last five names are thus given by Lauth. [15.] The names of these six kings are found only on scarabs, and are placed here by Professor Petrie. [16.] Ameni is mentioned in a papyrus along with Khiti. [17.] According to Lauth, the Turin papyrus gives nineteen kings to the tenth dynasty, and 185 years. [18.] According to Petrie's arrangement. Lieblein further includes in the dynasty, Ra-snefer-ka, Ra ..., User-n-Ra, Neb-nem-Ra, and An-âa. [19.] According to Lieblein the Turin papyrus makes the sum of the eleventh dynasty 243 years, Neb-khru-Ra reigning 51 years. [20.] According to Brugsch. [21.] His name has been found by Mr. de Morgan at Dahshûr. [22.] According to Maspero, thirteen years. [23.] Maspero: Andû. [24.] Monuments of Nehasi, “the negro,” have been found at Tel Mokdam and San. [25.] In the eighteenth year of Aahmes, Queen Amen-sit is associated with him on a stêlê found at Thebes. [26.] According to Dr. Mahler's astronomical determination. Thothmes counted sixteen years of his sister's reign as part of his own. Hashepsu was only his half-sister, his mother being Ast, who was probably not of royal blood. The mother of Hashepsu was Hashepsu i. [27.] Called Khuri[ya] in one of the Tel el-Amarna tables. Hence the Horos of Manetho. [28.] There is a contract in the Louvre drawn up at Thebes in the sixteenth year of his reign. [29.] According to Wiedemann.