[791] Though Akhenaten himself may have claimed the title, it was employed before his conversion.
[792] Cf. the position of Hattusil and Putukhipa, in the seal of the treaty with Rameses II., below, [p. 349].
[793] On this point see below, [p. 353].
[794] See what is said above ([p. 64]) about the surviving elements of the Hittite constitution in the state of Lydia.
[795] Winckler, B. K. Tablets, op. cit., p. 35.
[796] We infer, from the synchronisms with Egypt and Mitanni, between 1360 and 1340 B.C.; he and his successor overlap by their reigns those of Amenhetep III. and Sety I. Mutallu and Hattusil were contemporary with Rameses II.
[797] On this interesting expression, occurring in the preamble to the Amorite treaty, temp. Hattusil, see Winckler, Ausgrabungen, etc., 1907, p. 43, note. We have still to learn the nature of the Hittite burial rites, but this reference is significant.
[798] E.g. Gasga (Assyrian Kaskâ), Tibia, Zikhria; cf. Winckler, op. cit., p. 18.
[799] ? Manapa-Sanda.