[712] See above, [p. 208]; also an article in Liv. Annals of Arch., i. pp. 41 ff.

[713] Ausgrabungen in Boghaz-Köi, 1907, by Hugo Winckler; Mitteil. der Deuts. Orient-Ges., 1907, No. 35. Also an article, Die in Sommer 1906 ... Ausgr., in Orient. Lit.-Zeitung, ix., No. 12, pp. 621 ff.

[714] See above, [p. 312].

[715] See above, [p. 313].

[716] [Pl. LXXXIII.], from the north wall of the temple of Rameses II. at Abydos.

[717] In this case the head is shaved. There is another form of pigtail which must be distinguished from this, being in fact only the hair so cut and drawn together behind the head that it ends in the same way. Cf. De G. Davies, Tell el Amarna II. (temp. Amenhetep IV. Akhenaten), Pl. XL. (bottom row); also ‘the people of Dapur in the land of the Amorites,’ S. wall of the great hall in the Ramesseum (T in Murray’s Handbook for Egypt, 1907, p. 414), where also the square shield and triangular bow should be noted.

[718] This type may be freely recognised, e.g. in the Ramesseum and at Abydos, Petrie, Racial Types, pp. 146-148, republished in his History of Egypt, iii. p. 48, fig. 17. Cf. our ‘living Amorite,’ Pl. LXXXIV. and p. 12, n. 1.

[719] Petrie, Racial Types, pp. 55, 143-145, in his History, iii. p. 48, fig. 17 (i); Maspero, The Struggle of the Nations, p. 353; Sayce, The Hittites, 1903, p. 11.

[720] Cf. [Pl. LXIX. (ii)], and compare the type with that from Sinjerli, [Pl. LXXV. (ii)].

[721] Their language, which might have formed a clue, is equally problematical. There is strong temptation to regard both as Caucasian.