[[7]] In the translation these divisions are indicated, for purposes of reference, by numbers and letters, which are not, of course, in the original. So also in the Instruction of Amenemhê'et (Appendix).
[[8]] Pwenet: the identification is not certain.
[[9]] Fragments of another are in the British Museum.
[[10]] It has been thought to be as late as the Seventeenth (about 1600 B.C.), but the balance of opinion favours the above-mentioned period.
[[11]] The inscriptions and sculptures from this tomb have not yet been published, but a work dealing with it will shortly appear. The above titles, excepting the first, are from Lepsius, Denkmäler aus Ägypten und Äthiopien, Abth. II. 48, Berlin, 1849-68.