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<title>Chapter 2: Of the Empire of Egypt</title>
<title type="short">Chapter II</title>
<author xml:id="in"><persName key="nameid_1" sort="Newton, Isaac" ref="nameid_1" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Isaac Newton</persName></author>

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<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>2006-01-11</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, Imperial College</publisher>
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<note type="metadataLine">1728, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 16,517 words.</note>
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<linkGrp n="document_relations" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/normalized/"><ptr type="next_part" target="THEM00188">Chapter 3: Of the Assyrian Empire [<hi rend="italic">Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms</hi> (1728)]</ptr><ptr type="parent" target="THEM00183"><hi rend="italic">Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms</hi> (1728)</ptr><ptr type="previous_part" target="THEM00186">Chapter 1: Of the Chronology of the First Ages of the Greeks [<hi rend="italic">Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms</hi> (1728)]</ptr></linkGrp>
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<sourceDesc><bibl type="simple" n="custodian_3" sortKey="zz-the_chronology_of_ancient_kingdoms_amended_(london:_1728)." subtype="Printed"> <hi rend="italic">The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended</hi> (London: 1728).</bibl>
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<title>The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended</title>
<title type="short">Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms</title>
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<pb xml:id="p191" n="191"/>
<fw type="pag" place="topRight">191</fw>
<head rend="center" xml:id="hd1">CHAP. II</head>
<head rend="center" xml:id="hd2"><hi rend="italic">Of the Empire of</hi> Egypt.</head>
<p xml:id="par1"><hi rend="dropCap">T</hi><hi rend="smallCaps">he</hi> <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> anciently boasted of a very <lb xml:id="l1"/>great and lasting Empire under their Kings <lb xml:id="l2"/><hi rend="italic">Ammon, Osiris, Bacchus, Sesostris, Hercules, Mem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l3"/>non</hi>, &amp;c. reaching eastward to the <hi rend="italic">Indies</hi>, and west<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l4"/>ward to the <hi rend="italic">Atlantic Ocean</hi>; and out of vanity <lb xml:id="l5"/>have made this monarchy some thousands of years <lb xml:id="l6"/>older than the world: let us now try to rectify <lb xml:id="l7"/>the Chronology of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, by comparing the <lb xml:id="l8"/>affairs of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> with the synchronizing affairs of <lb xml:id="l9"/>the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Hebrews</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par2"><hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> the conqueror loved two women, <lb xml:id="l10"/><hi rend="italic">Venus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ariadne</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Venus</hi> was the mistress of <lb xml:id="l11"/><hi rend="italic">Anchises</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cinyras</hi>, and mother of <hi rend="italic">Æneas</hi>, who <lb xml:id="l12"/>all lived 'till the destruction of <hi rend="italic">Troy</hi>; and the <lb xml:id="l13"/>sons of <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ariadne</hi> were <hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi>; as <lb xml:id="l14"/>above<hi rend="italic">:</hi> and therefore the great <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> flourish<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l15"/>ed but one Generation before the <hi rend="italic">Argonautic</hi> <lb xml:id="l16"/>expedition. This <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <note n="a">Vide Her<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l17"/>mippum a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l18"/>pud Athe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l19"/>næum, l. I.</note> was potent at sea, <lb xml:id="l20"/>conquered eastward as far as <hi rend="italic">India</hi>, <lb xml:id="l21"/>returned in <lb xml:id="l22"/>triumph, brought his army over the <hi rend="italic">Hellespont</hi>; <lb xml:id="l23"/>conquered <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, left music, dancing and poetry <lb xml:id="l24"/>there; killed <hi rend="italic">Lycurgus</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Pen<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l25"/>theus</hi> the grandson of <hi rend="italic">Cadmus</hi>; gave the King<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l26"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">dom</fw><pb xml:id="p192" n="192"/><fw type="pag" place="topLeft">192</fw>dom of <hi rend="italic">Lycurgus</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Tharops</hi>; and one of his <lb xml:id="l27"/>minstrells, called by the <hi rend="italic">Greeks Calliope</hi>, to <hi rend="italic">Oea<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l28"/>grus</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Tharops</hi>; and of <hi rend="italic">Oeagrus</hi> and <lb xml:id="l29"/><hi rend="italic">Calliope</hi> was born <hi rend="italic">Orpheus</hi>, who sailed with the <lb xml:id="l30"/><hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi>: this <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> was therefore contem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l31"/>porary to <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>; and both being Kings of <lb xml:id="l32"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and potent at sea, and great conquerors, <lb xml:id="l33"/>and carrying on their conquests into <hi rend="italic">India</hi> and <lb xml:id="l34"/><hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, they must be one and the same man.</p>
<p xml:id="par3">The antient <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, who made the fables of <lb xml:id="l35"/>the Gods, related that <hi rend="italic">Io</hi> the daughter of <hi rend="italic">Ina<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l36"/>chus</hi> was carried into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and there became <lb xml:id="l37"/>the <hi rend="italic">Egyptian Isis</hi>; and that <hi rend="italic">Apis</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Pho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l38"/>roneus</hi> after death became the God <hi rend="italic">Serapis</hi>; and <lb xml:id="l39"/>some said that <hi rend="italic">Epaphus</hi> was the son of <hi rend="italic">Io</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Sera<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l40"/>pis</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Epaphus</hi> are <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, and therefore <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi> and <lb xml:id="l41"/><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, in the opinion of the ancient <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> who <lb xml:id="l42"/>made the fables of the Gods, were not above <lb xml:id="l43"/>two or three Generations older than the <hi rend="italic">Argo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l44"/>nautic</hi> expedition. <hi rend="italic">Dicæarchus</hi>, as he is cited by <lb xml:id="l45"/>the scholiast upon <hi rend="italic">Apollonius</hi>, <note n="b">Argonaut. <lb xml:id="l46"/>l. 4. v. 272.</note> represents them <lb xml:id="l47"/>two Generations older than <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, saying that <lb xml:id="l48"/>after <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>, Reigned <lb xml:id="l49"/><hi rend="italic">Sesonchosis</hi>. He seems to have followed the opi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l50"/>nion of the people of <hi rend="italic">Naxus</hi>, who made <hi rend="italic">Bac<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l51"/>chus</hi> two Generations older than <hi rend="italic">Theseus</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l52"/>for that end feigned two <hi rend="italic">Minos's</hi> and two <hi rend="italic">A<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l53"/>riadnes</hi>; for by the consent of all antiquity <lb xml:id="l54"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p193" n="193"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">193</fw><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> were one and the same King <lb xml:id="l55"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: this is affirmed by the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, as well <lb xml:id="l56"/>as by the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>; and some of the antient My<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l57"/>thologists, as <hi rend="italic">Eumolpus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Orpheus</hi>, <note n="c">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l58"/>l. 1. p. 7.</note> called <hi rend="italic">O<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l59"/>siris</hi> by the names of <hi rend="italic">Dionysus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sirius</hi>. <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> <lb xml:id="l60"/>was King of all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and a great conqueror, <lb xml:id="l61"/>and came over the <hi rend="italic">Hellespont</hi> in the days of <lb xml:id="l62"/><hi rend="italic">Triptolemus</hi>, and subdued <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, and there killed <lb xml:id="l63"/><hi rend="italic">Lycurgus</hi>; and therefore his expedition falls in <lb xml:id="l64"/>with that of the great <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>. <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <lb xml:id="l65"/>and <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> lived about the same time, and by <lb xml:id="l66"/>the relation of historians were all of them Kings <lb xml:id="l67"/>of all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and Reigned at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l68"/>dorned that city, and were very potent by land <lb xml:id="l69"/>and sea: all three were great conquerors, and car<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l70"/>ried on their conquests by land through <hi rend="italic">Asia</hi>, <lb xml:id="l71"/>as far as <hi rend="italic">India</hi>: all three came over the <hi rend="italic">Helles<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l72"/>pont</hi>, and were there in danger of losing their <lb xml:id="l73"/>army: all three conquered <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, and there put <lb xml:id="l74"/>a stop to their victories, and returned back <lb xml:id="l75"/>from thence into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: all three left pillars <lb xml:id="l76"/>with inscriptions in their conquests: and there<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l77"/>fore all three must be one and the same King <lb xml:id="l78"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; and this King can be no other than <lb xml:id="l79"/><hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>. All <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, including <hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi>, <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi> and <lb xml:id="l80"/><hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, had no common King before the expul<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l81"/>sion of the Shepherds who Reigned in the lower <lb xml:id="l82"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; no Conqueror of <hi rend="italic">Syria</hi>, <hi rend="italic">India</hi>, <hi rend="italic">Asia minor</hi> <lb xml:id="l83"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">and</fw><pb xml:id="p194" n="194"/><fw type="pag" place="topLeft">194</fw>and <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi>, before <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>; and the sacred history <lb xml:id="l84"/>admits of no <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> conqueror of <hi rend="italic">Palestine</hi> be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l85"/>fore this King.</p>
    <p xml:id="par4"><hi rend="italic">Thymætes</hi> <note n="d">Apud Dio<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l86"/>dorum l. 3. <lb xml:id="l87"/>p. 140.</note> who was contemporary to <hi rend="italic">Orpheus</hi>, <lb xml:id="l88"/>and wrote a poesy called <hi rend="italic">Phrygia</hi>, of the actions <lb xml:id="l89"/>of <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> in very old language and character, <lb xml:id="l90"/>said that <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> had <hi rend="italic">Libyan</hi> women in his ar<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l91"/>my, amongst whom was <hi rend="italic">Minerva</hi> a woman born <lb xml:id="l92"/>in <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, near the river <hi rend="italic">Triton</hi>, and that <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <lb xml:id="l93"/>commanded the men and <hi rend="italic">Minerva</hi> the women. <lb xml:id="l94"/><hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="e">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l95"/>l. 3. p. 131. <lb xml:id="l96"/>132.</note> calls her <hi rend="italic">Myrina</hi>, and saith that she <lb xml:id="l97"/>was Queen of the <hi rend="italic">Amazons</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, and there <lb xml:id="l98"/>conquered the <hi rend="italic">Atlantides</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Gorgons</hi>, and then <lb xml:id="l99"/>made a league with <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>, sent <lb xml:id="l100"/>to her by his father <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> for that <lb xml:id="l101"/>purpose, and passing through <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> subdued <lb xml:id="l102"/>the <hi rend="italic">Arabians</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Syria</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cilicia</hi>, and came <lb xml:id="l103"/>through <hi rend="italic">Phrygia</hi>, <hi rend="italic">viz.</hi> in the army of <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>, <lb xml:id="l104"/>to the <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi>; but passing over into <hi rend="italic">Eu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l105"/>rope</hi>, was slain with many of her women by the <lb xml:id="l106"/><hi rend="italic">Thracians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Scythians</hi>, under the conduct of <lb xml:id="l107"/><hi rend="italic">Sipylus</hi> a <hi rend="italic">Scythian</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Mopsus</hi> a <hi rend="italic">Thracian</hi> whom <lb xml:id="l108"/><hi rend="italic">Lycurgus</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Thrace</hi> had banished. This <lb xml:id="l109"/>was that <hi rend="italic">Lycurgus</hi> who opposed the passage of <lb xml:id="l110"/><hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> over the <hi rend="italic">Hellespont</hi>, and was soon after <lb xml:id="l111"/>conquered by him, and slain: but afterwards <lb xml:id="l112"/><hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> met with a repulse from the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, un<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l113"/>der the conduct of <hi rend="italic">Perseus</hi>, who slew many of <lb xml:id="l114"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">his</fw><pb xml:id="p195" n="195"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">195</fw>his women, as <hi rend="italic">Pausanias</hi> <note n="f">Pausan. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l115"/>c. 20. p. 155.</note> relates, and was as<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l116"/>sisted by the <hi rend="italic">Scythians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Thracians</hi> under the <lb xml:id="l117"/>conduct of <hi rend="italic">Sipylus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mopsus</hi>; which repul<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l118"/>ses, together with a revolt of his brother <hi rend="italic">Danaus</hi> <lb xml:id="l119"/>in <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, put a stop to his victories: and in <lb xml:id="l120"/>returning home he left part of his men in <hi rend="italic">Col<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l121"/>chis</hi> and at <hi rend="italic">Mount Caucasus</hi>, under <hi rend="italic">Æetes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l122"/>metheus</hi>; and his women upon the river <hi rend="italic">Thermo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l123"/>don</hi> near <hi rend="italic">Colchis</hi>, under their new Queens <hi rend="italic">Mar<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l124"/>thesia</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Lampeto</hi>: for <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="g">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l125"/>l. 3. p. 130 <lb xml:id="l126"/>&amp; Schol. A<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l127"/>pollonii. l. 2.</note> speaking of <lb xml:id="l128"/>the <hi rend="italic">Amazons</hi> who were seated at <hi rend="italic">Thermodon</hi>, <lb xml:id="l129"/>saith, that they dwelt originally in <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l130"/>there Reigned over the <hi rend="italic">Atlantides</hi>, and invading <lb xml:id="l131"/>their neighbours conquered as far as <hi rend="italic">Europe:</hi> <lb xml:id="l132"/>and <hi rend="italic">Ammianus</hi>, <note n="h">Ammian: <lb xml:id="l133"/>l. 22. c. 8.</note> that the ancient <hi rend="italic">Amazons</hi> break<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l134"/>ing through many nations, attack'd the <hi rend="italic">Atheni<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l135"/>ans</hi>, and there receiving a great slaughter re<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l136"/>tired to <hi rend="italic">Thermodon</hi>: and <hi rend="italic">Justin</hi>, <note n="i">Justin. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l137"/>c. 4.</note> that these <hi rend="italic">Ama<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l138"/>zons</hi> had at first, he means at their first com<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l139"/>ing to <hi rend="italic">Thermodon</hi>, two Queens who called them<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l140"/>selves daughters of <hi rend="italic">Mars</hi>; and that they con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l141"/>quered part of <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi>, and some cities of <hi rend="italic">Asia, <lb xml:id="l142"/>viz.</hi> in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Minerva</hi>, and then sent <lb xml:id="l143"/>back part of their army with a great booty, <lb xml:id="l144"/>under their said new Queens; and that <hi rend="italic">Marthe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l145"/>sia</hi> being afterwards slain, was succeeded by her <lb xml:id="l146"/>daughter <hi rend="italic">Orithya</hi>, and she by <hi rend="italic">Penthesilea</hi>; and <lb xml:id="l147"/>that <hi rend="italic">Theseus</hi> captivated and married <hi rend="italic">Antiope</hi> the <lb xml:id="l148"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">sister</fw><pb xml:id="p196" n="196"/><fw type="pag" place="topLeft">196</fw>sister of <hi rend="italic">Orithya</hi>. <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> made war upon the <lb xml:id="l149"/><hi rend="italic">Amazons</hi>, and in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Orithya</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pen<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l150"/>thesilea</hi> they came to the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war: whence <lb xml:id="l151"/>the first wars of the <hi rend="italic">Amazons</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi> and <lb xml:id="l152"/><hi rend="italic">Asia</hi>, and their settling at <hi rend="italic">Thermodon</hi>, were but <lb xml:id="l153"/>one Generation before those actions of <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> <lb xml:id="l154"/>and <hi rend="italic">Theseus</hi>, and but two before the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war, <lb xml:id="l155"/>and so fell in with the expedition of <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>: <lb xml:id="l156"/>and since they warred in the days of <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi> and <lb xml:id="l157"/>her son <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi>, and were a part of the army of <lb xml:id="l158"/><hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, we have here a further argu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l159"/>ment for making <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> contempo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l160"/>rary to <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, and all three one and the same <lb xml:id="l161"/>King with <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par5">The <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> reckon <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> to be <lb xml:id="l162"/>sons of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi>, and the <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> name of <hi rend="italic">Ju<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l163"/>piter</hi> is <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>. <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi> in his 11th and 12th <lb xml:id="l164"/><hi rend="italic">Dynasties</hi>, as he is cited by <hi rend="italic">Africanus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Euse<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l165"/>bius</hi>, names these four Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, as reign<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l166"/>ing in order; <hi rend="italic">Ammenemes, Gesongeses</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Seson<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l167"/>choris</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Ammenemes, Ammenemes</hi> who <lb xml:id="l168"/>was slain by his Eunuchs, and <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> who <lb xml:id="l169"/>subdued all <hi rend="italic">Asia</hi> and part of <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Gesongeses</hi> <lb xml:id="l170"/>and <hi rend="italic">Sesonchoris</hi> are corruptly written for <hi rend="italic">Seson<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l171"/>chosis</hi>; and the two first of these four Kings, <lb xml:id="l172"/><hi rend="italic">Ammenemes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesonchosis</hi>, are the same with <lb xml:id="l173"/>the two last, <hi rend="italic">Ammenemes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, that <lb xml:id="l174"/>is, with <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>; for <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <lb xml:id="l175"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">saith</fw><pb xml:id="p197" n="197"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">197</fw>saith <note n="k">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l176"/>l. 1. p. 9.</note> that <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> built in <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> a magnificent <lb xml:id="l177"/>temple to his parents <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Juno</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l178"/>two other temples to <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi>, a larger to <hi rend="italic">Ju<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l179"/>piter Uranius</hi>, and a less to his father <hi rend="italic">Jupiter <lb xml:id="l180"/>Ammon</hi> who reigned in that city: and <note n="l">Apud Dio<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l181"/>dor. l. 3. <lb xml:id="l182"/>p. 141.</note> <hi rend="italic">Thymæ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l183"/>tes</hi> abovementioned, who was contemporary to <lb xml:id="l184"/><hi rend="italic">Orpheus</hi>, wrote expresly that the father of <hi rend="italic">Bac<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l185"/>chus</hi> was <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, a King Reigning over part of <lb xml:id="l186"/><hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, that is, a King of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> Reigning over <lb xml:id="l187"/>all that part of <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, anciently called <hi rend="italic">Ammonia</hi>. <lb xml:id="l188"/><hi rend="italic">Stephanus</hi> <note n="m">Step. in <lb xml:id="l189"/><foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἀμμώνια</foreign>.</note> saith <foreign xml:lang="gre">Πασα ἡ Λιβύη ὁύτως ἐκαλειτο <lb xml:id="l190"/>ἀπὸ Ἄμμωνος.</foreign> <hi rend="italic">All</hi> Libya <hi rend="italic">was anciently called</hi> <lb xml:id="l191"/>Ammonia <hi rend="italic">from</hi> Ammon: this is that King of <lb xml:id="l192"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> from whom <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> was called <hi rend="italic">No-Ammon</hi>, <lb xml:id="l193"/>and <hi rend="italic">Ammon-no</hi>, the city of <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, and by the <lb xml:id="l194"/><hi rend="italic">Greeks Diospolis</hi>, the city of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Se<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l195"/>sostris</hi> built it sumptuously, and called it by his <lb xml:id="l196"/>father's name; and from the same King the <lb xml:id="l197"/><note n="n">Plin. l. 6. <lb xml:id="l198"/>c. 28.</note> River called <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, the people called <hi rend="italic">Ammo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l199"/>nii</hi>, and the <note n="o">Ptol. l. 6. <lb xml:id="l200"/>c. 7.</note> promontory <hi rend="italic">Ammonium</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Arabia <lb xml:id="l201"/>fælix</hi> had their names.</p>
<p xml:id="par6">The lower part of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> being yearly over<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l202"/>flowed by the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi>, was scarce inhabited before <lb xml:id="l203"/>the invention of corn, which made it useful: <lb xml:id="l204"/>and the King, who by this invention first peo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l205"/>pled it and Reigned over it, perhaps the King <lb xml:id="l206"/>of the city <hi rend="italic">Mesir</hi> where <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> was afterwards <lb xml:id="l207"/>built, seems to have been worshipped by his sub<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l208"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">jects</fw><pb xml:id="p198" n="198"/><fw type="pag" place="topLeft">198</fw>jects after death, in the ox or calf, for this bene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l209"/>faction: for this city stood in the most conve<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l210"/>nient place to people the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and from <lb xml:id="l211"/>its being composed of two parts seated on each <lb xml:id="l212"/>side of the river <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi>, might give the name of <lb xml:id="l213"/><hi rend="italic">Mizraim</hi> to its founder and people; unless you <lb xml:id="l214"/>had rather refer the word to the double people, <lb xml:id="l215"/>those above the <hi rend="italic">Delta</hi>, and those within it: and <lb xml:id="l216"/>this I take to be the state of the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l217"/>'till the Shepherds or <hi rend="italic">Phœnicians</hi> who fled from <lb xml:id="l218"/><hi rend="italic">Joshuah</hi> conquered it, and being afterwards <lb xml:id="l219"/>conquered by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, fled into <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> <lb xml:id="l220"/>and other places: for there was a tradition <lb xml:id="l221"/>that some of them fled into <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>; and St. <lb xml:id="l222"/><hi rend="italic">Austin</hi> <note n="p">D. Augu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l223"/>stin. in ex<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l224"/>posit. epist. ad Rom. <lb xml:id="l225"/>sub initio.</note> confirms this, by telling us that the <lb xml:id="l226"/>common people of <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> being asked who they <lb xml:id="l227"/>were, replied <hi rend="italic">Chanani</hi>, that is, <hi rend="italic">Canaanites. Inter<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l228"/>rogati rustici nostri</hi>, saith he, <hi rend="italic">quid sint, Punice <lb xml:id="l229"/>respondentes Chanani, corrupta scilicet voce sicut <lb xml:id="l230"/>in talibus solet, quid aliud respondent quam Cha<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l231"/>naanæi? Procopius</hi> also <note n="q">Procop. de <lb xml:id="l232"/>bello Van<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l233"/>dal. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l234"/>c. 10.</note> tells us of two pillars <lb xml:id="l235"/>in the west of <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>, with inscriptions signify<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l236"/>ing that the people were <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> who fled <lb xml:id="l237"/>from <hi rend="italic">Joshuah:</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Eusebius</hi> <note n="r">Chron. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l238"/>p. 11.</note> tells us, that these <lb xml:id="l239"/><hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> flying from the sons of <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi>, built <lb xml:id="l240"/><hi rend="italic">Tripolis</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>; and the <hi rend="italic">Jerusalem Gemara</hi>, <note n="s">Gemar. ad <lb xml:id="l241"/>tit. Shebijth. <lb xml:id="l242"/>cap. 6.</note> that <lb xml:id="l243"/>the <hi rend="italic">Gergesites</hi> fled from <hi rend="italic">Joshua</hi>, going into <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>: <lb xml:id="l244"/>and <hi rend="italic">Procopius</hi> relates their flight in this manner. <lb xml:id="l245"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἐπεὶ</foreign></fw><pb xml:id="p199" n="199"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">199</fw>
<foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἐπεὶ δὲ ἡμας ὁ της ἱστορίας λόγος ἐνταυθ᾽ ἤγα<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l246"/>γεν. ἐπάναγκες εἰπειν ἄνωθεν, ὅθεν τε τὰ Μαυρου<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l247"/>σίων ἔθνη ἐς Λιβύην ἠλθε, καὶ ὅπως ὠικήσαντο. Ἐ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l248"/>πειδὴ Ἑβραιοι εξ Αἰγύπτου ἀνεχώρησαν, καὶ ἄγ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l249"/>χι των Παλαιστίνης ὁρίων   ἐγενόντο. Μωσης μεν <lb xml:id="l250"/>σοφὸς ἀνὴρ, ὃς ἀυτὸς της ὁδου ἡγήσατο, θνήσκει. <lb xml:id="l251"/>διαδέχεται δὲ την ἡγεμονίαν Ἰησους ὁ του Ναυη <lb xml:id="l252"/>παις. 
ὃς ἔς τε τὴν Παλαιστίνην τὸν λεὼν τουτον <lb xml:id="l253"/>εἰσήγαγε. 
καὶ ἀρετὴν ἐν τωι πολέμωι κρείσσω ἣ <lb xml:id="l254"/>κατα ἁνθρώπου φύσιν ἐπιδειξάμενος, τὴν χώραν <lb xml:id="l255"/>ἔσχε.
καὶ τὰ ἔθνη ἅπαντα καταστρεψάμενος, τὰς <lb xml:id="l256"/>πόλεις εὐπετως παρεστήσατο, ἀνίκητος τε παντά<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l257"/>πασιν ἔδοξεν εἰναι. 
τότε δὲ ἡ ἐπιθαλασσία χώ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l258"/>ρα, ἐκ Σιδωνος μέχρι των Αἰγύπτου ὁρίων, Φοι<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l259"/>νίκη ξύμπασα ὠνομαζετο. 
βασιλεὺς δὲ εἰς τὸ παλαιὸν ἐφειστήκει. ὥσπερ ἅπασιν ὡμολόγηται, ὃι Φοινίκων τὰ ἀρχαιότατα ἀνεγράψαντο. 
ἐν<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l260"/>ταυθ᾽ ὤκηντο ἔθνη πολυανθρωπότατα, Γεργε<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l261"/>σαιοί τε καὶ Ἱεβουσαιοι, καὶ ἄλλα ἄττα ὀνόματα <lb xml:id="l262"/>ἔχοντα, ὁις δὴ ἀυτὰ ἡ των Ἑβραίων ἱστορία κα<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l263"/>λει. ὁυτος ὁ λαὸς ἐπεὶ ἄμαχόν τι χρημα τὸν ἐ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l264"/>πηλύτην στρατηγὸν εἰδον. ἐξ ἠθων των πατρίων <lb xml:id="l265"/>ἐξαναστάντες, ἐπ᾽ Αἰγύπτον ὁμόρου ὀύσης ἐχώρη<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l266"/>σαν. ἔνθα χωρον ὀυδένα σφίσιν ἱκανὸν ἐνοικήσα<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l267"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">σθαι</fw><pb xml:id="p200" n="200"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">200</fw>σθαι ἑυρόντες, ἐπεὶ ἐν Αἰγύπτω πολυανθρωπία ἐκ <lb xml:id="l268"/>παλαιου ἠν.
ἐς Λιβύην μέχρι στηλων των Ἡρα<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l269"/>κλέους ἔσχον. ἐνταυθα τε καὶ ἐς ἐμὲ τηι Φοίνικων <lb xml:id="l270"/>φωνηι χρώμενοι ὤικηνται</foreign>. <hi rend="italic">Quando ad Mauros nos <lb xml:id="l271"/>historia deduxit, congruens nos exponere unde orta <lb xml:id="l272"/>gens in Africa sedes fixerit. Quo tempore egressi <lb xml:id="l273"/>Ægypto Hebræi jam prope Palestinæ fines venerant, <lb xml:id="l274"/>mortuus ibi Moses, vir sapiens, dux itineris. Suc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l275"/>cessor imperii factus Jesus Navæ filius intra Palæ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l276"/>stinam duxit popularium agmen; &amp; virtute usus <lb xml:id="l277"/>supra humanum modum, terram occupavit, genti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l278"/>busque excisis urbes ditionis suæ fecit, &amp; invicti <lb xml:id="l279"/>famam tulit. Maritima ora quæ a Sidone ad Ægypti <lb xml:id="l280"/>limitem extenditur, nomen habet Phœnices. Rex <lb xml:id="l281"/>unus</hi> [Hebræis] <hi rend="italic">imperabat ut omnes qui res Phœ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l282"/>nicias scripsere consentiunt. In eo tractatu nume<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l283"/>rosæ gentes erant, Gergesæi, Jebusæi, quosque aliis <lb xml:id="l284"/>nominibus Hebræorum annales memorant. Hi homi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l285"/>nes ut impares se venienti imperatori videre, dere<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l286"/>licto patriæ solo ad finitimam primùm venere Æ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l287"/>gyptum, sed ibi capacem tantæ multitudinis locum <lb xml:id="l288"/>non reperientes, erat enim Ægyptus ab antiquo <lb xml:id="l289"/>fœcunda populis, in Africam profecti, multis con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l290"/>ditis urbibus, omnem eam Herculis columnas usque, <lb xml:id="l291"/>obtinuerunt</hi>: <hi rend="italic">ubi ad meam ætatem sermone Phœnicio <lb xml:id="l292"/>utentes habitant</hi>. By the language and extreme <lb xml:id="l293"/>poverty of the <hi rend="italic">Moors</hi>, described also by <hi rend="italic">Proco<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l294"/></hi><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">pius</hi>,</fw><pb xml:id="p201" n="201"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">201</fw><hi rend="italic">pius</hi>, and by their being unacquainted with <lb xml:id="l295"/>merchandise and sea-affairs, you may know that <lb xml:id="l296"/>they were <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> originally, and peopled <lb xml:id="l297"/><hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> before the <hi rend="italic">Tyrian</hi> merchants came thither. <lb xml:id="l298"/>These <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> coming from the East, pitched <lb xml:id="l299"/>their tents in great numbers in the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l300"/>in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Timaus</hi>, as <note n="t">Manetho <lb xml:id="l301"/>apud Jose<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l302"/>phum cont. <lb xml:id="l303"/>Appion. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l304"/>p. 1039.</note> <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi> writes, <lb xml:id="l305"/>and easily seized the country, and fortifying <lb xml:id="l306"/><hi rend="italic">Pelusium</hi>, then called <hi rend="italic">Abaris</hi>, they erected a <lb xml:id="l307"/>Kingdom there, and Reigned long under their <lb xml:id="l308"/>own Kings, <hi rend="italic">Salatis, Bæon, Apachnas, Apophis, <lb xml:id="l309"/>Janias, Assis</hi>, and others successively: and in <lb xml:id="l310"/>the mean time the upper part of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> called <lb xml:id="l311"/><hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi>, and according to <note n="u">Herod. l. 2.</note> <hi rend="italic">Herodotus, Ægyptus</hi>, <lb xml:id="l312"/>and in Scripture the land of <hi rend="italic">Pathros</hi>, was under <lb xml:id="l313"/>other Kings, Reigning perhaps at <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l314"/><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">This</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Syene</hi>, and <note n="x">Jerem. <lb xml:id="l315"/>xliv. 1. <lb xml:id="l316"/>Ezek. xxix. <lb xml:id="l317"/>14.</note> <hi rend="italic">Pathros</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l318"/><hi rend="italic">Elephantis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Heracleopolis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Mesir</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l319"/>other great cities, 'till they conquered one an<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l320"/>other, or were conquered by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians:</hi> <lb xml:id="l321"/>for cities grew great in those days, by being <lb xml:id="l322"/>the seats of Kingdoms: but at length one of <lb xml:id="l323"/>these Kingdoms conquered the rest, and made <lb xml:id="l324"/>a lasting war upon the Shepherds, and in the <lb xml:id="l325"/>Reign of its King <hi rend="italic">Misphragmuthosis</hi>, and his son <lb xml:id="l326"/><hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi>, called also <hi rend="italic">Tethmosis, Tuthmosis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Tho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l327"/>mosis</hi>, drove them out of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and made <lb xml:id="l328"/>them fly into <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Syria</hi>, and other places, <lb xml:id="l329"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">and</fw><pb xml:id="p202" n="202"/> and united all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into one Monarchy; and <lb xml:id="l330"/>under their next Kings, <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>, en<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l331"/>larged it into a great Empire. This conquering <lb xml:id="l332"/>people worshipped not the Kings of the Shep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l333"/>herds whom they conquered and expelled, but <lb xml:id="l334"/><note n="y">Manetho <lb xml:id="l335"/>apud Por<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l336"/>phyrium <foreign xml:lang="gre">περὶ <lb xml:id="l337"/>ἁποχης</foreign> l. 1. <lb xml:id="l338"/>sect. 55. <lb xml:id="l339"/>Et. Euseb. <lb xml:id="l340"/>Prep. l. 4. <lb xml:id="l341"/>c. 16. p. 155.</note> abolished their religion of sacrificing men, <lb xml:id="l342"/>and after the manner of those ages Deified <lb xml:id="l343"/>their own Kings, who founded their new Do<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l344"/>minion, beginning the history of their Empire <lb xml:id="l345"/>with the Reign and great acts of their Gods <lb xml:id="l346"/>and Heroes: whence their Gods <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <lb xml:id="l347"/><hi rend="italic">Rhea</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Uranus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Titæa</hi>; <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>; <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> <lb xml:id="l348"/>and <hi rend="italic">Bubaste</hi>; and their Secretary <hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi>; and Ge<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l349"/>nerals <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pan</hi>; and Admiral <hi rend="italic">Japetus, <lb xml:id="l350"/>Neptune</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>; were all of them <hi rend="italic">Thebans</hi>, <lb xml:id="l351"/>and flourished after the expulsion of the Shep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l352"/>herds. <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> places <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, and the <lb xml:id="l353"/><hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> reported that <note n="z">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l354"/>l. 3. p. 101.</note> the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> were a <lb xml:id="l355"/>colony drawn out of them by <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, and that <lb xml:id="l356"/>thence it came to pass that most of the laws <lb xml:id="l357"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> were the same with those of <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, <lb xml:id="l358"/>and that the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> learnt from the <hi rend="italic">Ethio<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l359"/>pians</hi> the custom of Deifying their Kings.</p>
<p xml:id="par7">When <hi rend="italic">Joseph</hi> entertained his brethren in <lb xml:id="l360"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, they did eat at a table by themselves, <lb xml:id="l361"/>and he did eat at another table by himself; <lb xml:id="l362"/>and the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> who did eat with him were <lb xml:id="l363"/>at another table, <hi rend="italic">because the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">might <lb xml:id="l364"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">not</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p203" n="203"/> not eat bread with the</hi> Hebrews<hi rend="italic">; for that was <lb xml:id="l365"/>an abomination to the</hi> Egyptians, <hi rend="italic">Gen.</hi> xliii. <lb xml:id="l366"/>32. These <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> who did eat with <hi rend="italic">Joseph</hi> <lb xml:id="l367"/>were of the Court of <hi rend="italic">Pharaoh</hi>; and therefore <lb xml:id="l368"/><hi rend="italic">Pharaoh</hi> and his Court were at this time not <lb xml:id="l369"/>Shepherds but genuine <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>; and these <lb xml:id="l370"/><hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> abominated eating bread with the <lb xml:id="l371"/><hi rend="italic">Hebrews</hi>, at one and the same table: and of <lb xml:id="l372"/>these <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> and their fellow-subjects, it is <lb xml:id="l373"/>said a little after, that <hi rend="italic">every Shepherd is an abo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l374"/>mination to the</hi> Egyptians: <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> at this time <lb xml:id="l375"/>was therefore under the government of the <lb xml:id="l376"/>genuine <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, and not under that of the <lb xml:id="l377"/>Shepherds.</p>
<p xml:id="par8">After the descent of <hi rend="italic">Jacob</hi> and his sons into <lb xml:id="l378"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt, Joseph</hi> lived 70 years, and so long con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l379"/>tinued in favour with the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt:</hi> <lb xml:id="l380"/>and 64 years after his death <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> was born: <lb xml:id="l381"/>and between the death of <hi rend="italic">Joseph</hi> and the birth <lb xml:id="l382"/>of <hi rend="italic">Moses, there arose up a new King over</hi> Egypt, <lb xml:id="l383"/><hi rend="italic">which knew not</hi> Joseph, <hi rend="italic">Exod.</hi> i. 8. But this King <lb xml:id="l384"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> was not one of the Shepherds; for he <lb xml:id="l385"/>is called <hi rend="italic">Pharaoh, Exod.</hi> i. 11, 22: and <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> <lb xml:id="l386"/>told his successor, that if the people of <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> <lb xml:id="l387"/>should sacrifice in the land of <hi rend="italic">Egypt, they <lb xml:id="l388"/>should sacrifice the abomination of the</hi> Egyp<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l389"/>tians <hi rend="italic">before their eyes, and the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">would <lb xml:id="l390"/>stone them, Exod.</hi> viii. 26. that is, they should <lb xml:id="l391"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">sacrifice</fw><pb xml:id="p204" n="204"/> sacrifice sheep or oxen, contrary to the religion <lb xml:id="l392"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>. The Shepherds therefore did not <lb xml:id="l393"/>Reign over <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> while <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> was there, but <lb xml:id="l394"/>either were driven out of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> before <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> <lb xml:id="l395"/>went down thither, or did not enter into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l396"/>'till after <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> had brought <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> from thence: <lb xml:id="l397"/>and the latter must be true, if they were driven <lb xml:id="l398"/>out of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> a little before the building of the <lb xml:id="l399"/>temple of <hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>, as <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi> affirms.</p>
<p xml:id="par9"><hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="a">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l400"/>apud Pho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l401"/>tium in Bib<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l402"/>lioth.</note> saith in his 40th book, <hi rend="italic">that in</hi> <lb xml:id="l403"/>Egypt <hi rend="italic">there were formerly multitudes of stran<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l404"/>gers of several nations, who used foreign rites <lb xml:id="l405"/>and ceremonies in worshipping the Gods, for <lb xml:id="l406"/>which they were expelled</hi> Egypt<hi rend="italic">; and under</hi> <lb xml:id="l407"/>Danaus, Cadmus, <hi rend="italic">and other skilful commanders, <lb xml:id="l408"/>after great hardships, came into</hi> Greece<hi rend="italic">, and other <lb xml:id="l409"/>places; but the greatest part of them came into</hi> <lb xml:id="l410"/>Judæa, <hi rend="italic">not far from</hi> Egypt, <hi rend="italic">a country then un<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l411"/>inhabited and desert, being conducted thither <lb xml:id="l412"/>by one</hi> Moses, <hi rend="italic">a wise and valiant man, who <lb xml:id="l413"/>after he had possest himself of the country, a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l414"/>mong other things built</hi> Jerusalem, <hi rend="italic">and the <lb xml:id="l415"/>Temple. Diodorus</hi> here mistakes the original of <lb xml:id="l416"/>the <hi rend="italic">Israelites</hi>, as <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi> had done before, con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l417"/>founding their flight into the wilderness under <lb xml:id="l418"/>the conduct of <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi>, with the flight of the <lb xml:id="l419"/>Shepherds from <hi rend="italic">Misphragmuthosis</hi>, and his son <lb xml:id="l420"/><hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi>, into <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>; and not know<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l421"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">ing</fw><pb xml:id="p205" n="205"/>ing that <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi> was inhabited by <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi>, be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l422"/>fore the <hi rend="italic">Israelites</hi> under <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> came thither: <lb xml:id="l423"/>but however, he lets us know that the Shep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l424"/>herds were expelled <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi>, a little <lb xml:id="l425"/>before the building of <hi rend="italic">Jerusalem</hi> and the Tem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l426"/>ple, and that after several hardships several of <lb xml:id="l427"/>them came into <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and other places, under <lb xml:id="l428"/>the conduct of <hi rend="italic">Cadmus</hi>, and other Captains, but <lb xml:id="l429"/>the most of them settled in <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> next <lb xml:id="l430"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>. We may reckon therefore that the ex<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l431"/>pulsion of the Shepherds by the Kings of <hi rend="italic">The<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l432"/>bais</hi>, was the occasion that the <hi rend="italic">Philistims</hi> were <lb xml:id="l433"/>so numerous in the days of <hi rend="italic">Saul</hi>; and that so <lb xml:id="l434"/>many men came in those times with colonies <lb xml:id="l435"/>out of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>; as <hi rend="italic">Le<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l436"/>lex, Inachus, Pelasgus, Æzeus, Cecrops, Ægia<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l437"/>leus, Cadmus, Phænix, Membliarius, Alymnus, <lb xml:id="l438"/>Abas, Erechtheus, Peteos, Phorbas</hi>, in the days <lb xml:id="l439"/>of <hi rend="italic">Eli, Samuel, Saul</hi> and <hi rend="italic">David:</hi> some of them <lb xml:id="l440"/>fled in the days of <hi rend="italic">Eli</hi>, <lb xml:id="l441"/>from <hi rend="italic">Misphragmu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l442"/>thosis</hi>, who conquered part of the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; <lb xml:id="l443"/>others retired from his successor <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi> into <lb xml:id="l444"/><hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Arabia Petræa</hi>, and there mixed <lb xml:id="l445"/>with the old inhabitants; who not long after <lb xml:id="l446"/>being conquered by <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, fled from him and <lb xml:id="l447"/>the <hi rend="italic">Philistims</hi> by sea, under the conduct of <hi rend="italic">Cad<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l448"/>mus</hi> and other Captains, into <hi rend="italic">Asia Minor, <lb xml:id="l449"/>Greece</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, to seek new seats, and there <lb xml:id="l450"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">built</fw><pb xml:id="p206" n="206"/> built towns, erected Kingdoms, and set on foot <lb xml:id="l451"/>the worship of the dead: and some of those <lb xml:id="l452"/>who remained in <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi> might assist <hi rend="italic">David</hi> and <lb xml:id="l453"/><hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>, in building <hi rend="italic">Jerusalem</hi> and the Temple. <lb xml:id="l454"/>Among the foreign rites used by the strangers <lb xml:id="l455"/>in <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, in worshipping the Gods, was the <lb xml:id="l456"/>sacrificing of men; for <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi> abolished that <lb xml:id="l457"/>custom at <hi rend="italic">Heliopolis:</hi> and therefore those stran<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l458"/>gers were <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi>, such as fled from <hi rend="italic">Joshua</hi>; <lb xml:id="l459"/>for the <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> gave their seed, that is, their <lb xml:id="l460"/>children, to <hi rend="italic">Moloch, and burnt their sons and <lb xml:id="l461"/>their daughters in the fire to their Gods, Deut.</hi> <lb xml:id="l462"/>xii. 31. <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi> calls them <hi rend="italic">Phœnician</hi> stran<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l463"/>gers.</p>
<p xml:id="par10">After <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi> had expelled the Shepherds, and <lb xml:id="l464"/>extended his dominion over all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, his son <lb xml:id="l465"/>and successor <hi rend="italic">Ammenemes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, by much <lb xml:id="l466"/>greater conquests laid the foundation of the <lb xml:id="l467"/><hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> Empire: for by the assistance of his <lb xml:id="l468"/>young son <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, whom he brought up to <lb xml:id="l469"/>hunting and other laborious exercises, he con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l470"/>quered <hi rend="italic">Arabia, Troglodytica</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Libya:</hi> and <lb xml:id="l471"/>from him all <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi> was anciently called <hi rend="italic">Am<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l472"/>monia:</hi> and after his death, in the temples <lb xml:id="l473"/>erected to him at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and in <hi rend="italic">Ammonia</hi> and <lb xml:id="l474"/>at <hi rend="italic">Meroe</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, they set up Oracles to <lb xml:id="l475"/>him, and made the people worship him as the <lb xml:id="l476"/>God that acted in them: and these are the <lb xml:id="l477"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">oldest</fw><pb xml:id="p207" n="207"/> oldest Oracles mentioned in history; the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> <lb xml:id="l478"/>therein imitating the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians:</hi> for the <note n="b">Herod. l. 2.</note> Ora<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l479"/>cle at <hi rend="italic">Dodona</hi> was the oldest in <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l480"/>was set up by an <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> woman, after the <lb xml:id="l481"/>example of the Oracle of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</hi> at <lb xml:id="l482"/><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par11">In the days of <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> a body of the <hi rend="italic">Edo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l483"/>mites</hi> fled from <hi rend="italic">David</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, with their <lb xml:id="l484"/>young King <hi rend="italic">Hadad</hi>, as above; and carried thi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l485"/>ther their skill in navigation: and this seems to <lb xml:id="l486"/>have given occasion to the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> to build <lb xml:id="l487"/>a fleet on the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi> near <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi>, and might <lb xml:id="l488"/>ingratiate <hi rend="italic">Hadad</hi> with <hi rend="italic">Pharaoh</hi>: for the <hi rend="italic">Midia<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l489"/>nites</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ishmaelites</hi>, who bordered upon the <lb xml:id="l490"/><hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, near <hi rend="italic">Mount Horeb</hi> on the south-side of <lb xml:id="l491"/><hi rend="italic">Edom</hi>, were merchants from the days of <hi rend="italic">Jacob</hi> <lb xml:id="l492"/>the Patriarch, <hi rend="italic">Gen.</hi> xxxvii. 28, 36. and by their <lb xml:id="l493"/>merchandise the <hi rend="italic">Midianites</hi> abounded with gold <lb xml:id="l494"/>in the days of <hi rend="italic">Moses, Numb.</hi> xxxi. 50, 51, <lb xml:id="l495"/>52. and in the days of the Judges of <hi rend="italic">Israel, <lb xml:id="l496"/>because they were</hi> Ishmaelites, <hi rend="italic">Judg.</hi> viii 24. <lb xml:id="l497"/>The <hi rend="italic">Ishmaelites</hi> therefore in those days grew rich <lb xml:id="l498"/>by merchandise; they carried their merchandise <lb xml:id="l499"/>on camels through <hi rend="italic">Petra</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Rhinocolura</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l500"/>thence to <hi rend="italic">Egypt:</hi> and this trafic at length <lb xml:id="l501"/>came into the hands of <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, by his conquer<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l502"/>ing the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi>, and gaining the ports of the <lb xml:id="l503"/><hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi> called <hi rend="italic">Eloth</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ezion-Geber</hi>, as may <lb xml:id="l504"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">be</fw><pb xml:id="p208" n="208"/> be understood by the 3000 talents of gold <lb xml:id="l505"/>of <hi rend="italic">Ophir</hi>, which <hi rend="italic">David</hi> gave to the Temple, <lb xml:id="l506"/>1 <hi rend="italic">Chron.</hi> xxix. 4. The <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> having the art <lb xml:id="l507"/>of making linen-cloth, they began about this <lb xml:id="l508"/>time to build long Ships with sails, in their <lb xml:id="l509"/>port on those Seas near <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi>, and having <lb xml:id="l510"/>learnt the skill of the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi>, they began now <lb xml:id="l511"/>to observe the positions of the Stars, and the <lb xml:id="l512"/>length of the Solar Year, for enabling them to <lb xml:id="l513"/>know the position of the Stars at any time, <lb xml:id="l514"/>and to sail by them at all times, without sight <lb xml:id="l515"/>of the shoar: and this gave a beginning to <lb xml:id="l516"/>Astronomy and Navigation: for hitherto they <lb xml:id="l517"/>had gone only by the shoar with oars, in round <lb xml:id="l518"/>vessels of burden, first invented on that shal<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l519"/>low sea by the posterity of <hi rend="italic">Abraham</hi>; and in <lb xml:id="l520"/>passing from island to island guided themselves <lb xml:id="l521"/>by the sight of the islands in the day time, or <lb xml:id="l522"/>by the sight of some of the Stars in the night. <lb xml:id="l523"/>Their old year was the Lunisolar year, derived <lb xml:id="l524"/>from <hi rend="italic">Noah</hi> to all his posterity, 'till those days, <lb xml:id="l525"/>and consisted of twelve months, each of thirty <lb xml:id="l526"/>days, according to their calendar: and to the <lb xml:id="l527"/>end of this calendar-year they now added five <lb xml:id="l528"/>days, and thereby made up the Solar year of <lb xml:id="l529"/>twelve months and five days, or 365 days.</p>
<p xml:id="par12">The ancient <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> feigned <note n="c">Plutarch. <lb xml:id="l530"/>de Iside. <lb xml:id="l531"/>p. 355. <lb xml:id="l532"/>Diodor. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l533"/>p. 9.</note> that <hi rend="italic">Rhea</hi> <lb xml:id="l534"/>lay secretly with <hi rend="italic">Saturn</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Sol</hi> prayed that <lb xml:id="l535"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">she</fw><pb xml:id="p209" n="209"/> she might bring forth neither in any month, nor <lb xml:id="l536"/>in the year; and that <hi rend="italic">Mercury</hi> playing at dice <lb xml:id="l537"/>with <hi rend="italic">Luna</hi>, overcame, and took from the Lunar <lb xml:id="l538"/>year the 72d part of every day, and thereof <lb xml:id="l539"/>composed five days, and added them to the <lb xml:id="l540"/>year of 360 days, that she might bring forth <lb xml:id="l541"/>in them; and that the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> celebrated <lb xml:id="l542"/>those days as the birth-days of <hi rend="italic">Rhea</hi>'s five chil<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l543"/>dren, <hi rend="italic">Osiris, Orus</hi> senior, <hi rend="italic">Typhon, Isis</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l544"/><hi rend="italic">Nephthe</hi> the wife of <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>: and therefore, ac<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l545"/>cording to the opinion of the ancient <hi rend="italic">Egypti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l546"/>ans</hi>, the five days were added to the Lunisolar <lb xml:id="l547"/>calendar-year, in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Saturn</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Rhea</hi>, <lb xml:id="l548"/>the parents of <hi rend="italic">Osiris, Isis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>; that is, <lb xml:id="l549"/>in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Titæa</hi>, the parents <lb xml:id="l550"/>of the <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi>; or in the latter half of the Reign <lb xml:id="l551"/>of <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, when those <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi> were born, and by <lb xml:id="l552"/>consequence soon after the flight of the <hi rend="italic">Edo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l553"/>mites</hi> from <hi rend="italic">David</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: but the Solstices <lb xml:id="l554"/>not being yet settled, the beginning of this new <lb xml:id="l555"/>year might not be fixed to the Vernal Equinox <lb xml:id="l556"/>before the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> the successor of <lb xml:id="l557"/><hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> junior, the Son of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par13">When the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi> fled from <hi rend="italic">David</hi> with <lb xml:id="l558"/>their young King <hi rend="italic">Hadad</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, it is pro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l559"/>bable that they carried thither also the use of <lb xml:id="l560"/>letters: for letters were then in use among the <lb xml:id="l561"/>posterity of <hi rend="italic">Abraham</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Arabia Petræa</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l562"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">upon</fw><pb xml:id="p210" n="210"/> upon the borders of the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, the Law be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l563"/>ing written there by <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> in a book, and in <lb xml:id="l564"/>tables of stone, long before: for <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> marry<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l565"/>ing the daughter of the prince of <hi rend="italic">Midian</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l566"/>dwelling with him forty years, learnt them <lb xml:id="l567"/>among the <hi rend="italic">Midianites:</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Job</hi>, who lived <lb xml:id="l568"/><note n="d">Augustin. <lb xml:id="l569"/>de Civ. Dei. <lb xml:id="l570"/>l. 18. c. 47.</note> among their neighbours the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi>, menti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l571"/>ons the writing down of words, as there in <lb xml:id="l572"/>use in his days, <hi rend="italic">Job.</hi> xix. 23, 24. and there is <lb xml:id="l573"/>no instance of letters for writing down sounds, <lb xml:id="l574"/>being in use before the days of <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, in any <lb xml:id="l575"/>other nation besides the posterity of <hi rend="italic">Abraham</hi>. <lb xml:id="l576"/>The <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> ascribed this invention to <hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi>, <lb xml:id="l577"/>the secretary of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>; and therefore Letters be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l578"/>gan to be in use in <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> in the days of <lb xml:id="l579"/><hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi>, that is, a little after the flight of the <lb xml:id="l580"/><hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi> from <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, or about the time that <lb xml:id="l581"/><hi rend="italic">Cadmus</hi> brought them into <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par14"><hi rend="italic">Helladius</hi> <note n="e">Apud Pho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l582"/>tium, c. 279.</note> tells us, that a man called <hi rend="italic">Oes</hi>, <lb xml:id="l583"/>who appeared in the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi> with the tail of a <lb xml:id="l584"/>fish, so they painted a sea-man, taught Astro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l585"/>nomy and Letters: and <hi rend="italic">Hyginus</hi>, <note n="f">Fab. 274.</note> that <hi rend="italic">Euhadnes</hi>, <lb xml:id="l586"/>who came out of the Sea in <hi rend="italic">Chaldæa</hi>, taught <lb xml:id="l587"/>the <hi rend="italic">Chaldæans</hi> Astrology the first of any man; <lb xml:id="l588"/>he means Astronomy: and <hi rend="italic">Alexander Polyhistor</hi> <lb xml:id="l589"/><note n="g">Apud Eu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l590"/>seb. Chron.</note> tells us from <hi rend="italic">Berosus</hi>, that <hi rend="italic">Oannes</hi> taught the <lb xml:id="l591"/><hi rend="italic">Chaldæans</hi> Letters, Mathematicks, Arts, Agri<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l592"/>culture, Cohabitation in Cities, and the Construc<lb xml:id="l593"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">tion</fw><pb xml:id="p211" n="211"/>tion of Temples; and that several such men <lb xml:id="l594"/>came thither successively. <hi rend="italic">Oes, Euhadnes</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l595"/><hi rend="italic">Oannes</hi>, seem to be the same name a little va<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l596"/>ried by corruption; and this name seems to <lb xml:id="l597"/>have been given in common to several sea-men, <lb xml:id="l598"/>who came thither from time to time, and by <lb xml:id="l599"/>consequence were merchants, and frequented <lb xml:id="l600"/>those seas with their merchandise, or else fled <lb xml:id="l601"/>from their enemies: so that Letters, Astrono<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l602"/>my, Architecture and Agriculture, came into <lb xml:id="l603"/><hi rend="italic">Chaldæa</hi> by sea, and were carried thither by <lb xml:id="l604"/>sea-men, who frequented the <hi rend="italic">Persian Gulph</hi>, <lb xml:id="l605"/>and came thither from time to time, after all <lb xml:id="l606"/>those things were practised in other countries <lb xml:id="l607"/>whence they came, and by consequence in the <lb xml:id="l608"/>days of <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesac, David</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>, <lb xml:id="l609"/>and their successors, or not long before. The <lb xml:id="l610"/><hi rend="italic">Chaldæans</hi> indeed made <hi rend="italic">Oannes</hi> older than the <lb xml:id="l611"/>flood of <hi rend="italic">Xisuthrus</hi>, but the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> made <lb xml:id="l612"/><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> as old, and I make them contemporary.</p>
<p xml:id="par15">The <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi> had its name not from its co<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l613"/>lour, but from <hi rend="italic">Edom</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Erythra</hi>, the names of <lb xml:id="l614"/><hi rend="italic">Esau</hi>, which signify that colour: and some <note n="h">Plin. l. 6. <lb xml:id="l615"/>c. 23, 28. &amp; <lb xml:id="l616"/>l. 7. c. 56.</note> tell us, that King <hi rend="italic">Erythra</hi>, meaning <hi rend="italic">Esau</hi>, in<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l617"/>vented the vessels, <hi rend="italic">rates</hi>, in which they navi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l618"/>gated that Sea, and was buried in an island <lb xml:id="l619"/>thereof near the <hi rend="italic">Persian Gulph</hi>: whence it fol<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l620"/>lows, that the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi> navigated that Sea from <lb xml:id="l621"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">the</fw><pb xml:id="p212" n="212"/> the days of <hi rend="italic">Esau</hi>; and there is no need that <lb xml:id="l622"/>the oldest <hi rend="italic">Oannes</hi> should be older. There were <lb xml:id="l623"/>boats upon rivers before, such as were the boats <lb xml:id="l624"/>which carried the Patriarchs over <hi rend="italic">Euphrates</hi> and <lb xml:id="l625"/><hi rend="italic">Jordan</hi>, and the first nations over many other <lb xml:id="l626"/>rivers, for peopling the earth, seeking new <lb xml:id="l627"/>seats, and invading one another's territories: <lb xml:id="l628"/>and after the example of such vessels, <hi rend="italic">Ishhmael</hi> <lb xml:id="l629"/>and <hi rend="italic">Midian</hi> the sons of <hi rend="italic">Abraham</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Esau</hi> his <lb xml:id="l630"/>grandson, might build larger vessels to go to the <lb xml:id="l631"/>islands upon the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, in searching for new <lb xml:id="l632"/>seats, and by degrees learn to navigate that sea, <lb xml:id="l633"/>as far as to the <hi rend="italic">Persian Gulph</hi>: for ships were <lb xml:id="l634"/>as old, even upon the <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi>, as the days <lb xml:id="l635"/>of <hi rend="italic">Jacob, Gen.</hi> xlix. 13. <hi rend="italic">Judg.</hi> v. 17. but it is <lb xml:id="l636"/>probable that the merchants of that sea were <lb xml:id="l637"/>not forward to discover their Arts and Sciences, <lb xml:id="l638"/>upon which their trade depended: it seems <lb xml:id="l639"/>therefore that Letters and Astronomy, and the <lb xml:id="l640"/>trade of Carpenters, were invented by the mer<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l641"/>chants of the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, for writing down their <lb xml:id="l642"/>merchandise, and keeping their accounts, and <lb xml:id="l643"/>guiding their ships in the night by the Stars, <lb xml:id="l644"/>and building ships; and that they were propa<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l645"/>gated from <hi rend="italic">Arabia Petræa</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Egypt, Chaldæa, <lb xml:id="l646"/>Syria, Asia minor</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi>, much about <lb xml:id="l647"/>one and the same time; the time in which <lb xml:id="l648"/><hi rend="italic">David</hi> conquered and dispersed those merchants: <lb xml:id="l649"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">for</fw><pb xml:id="p213" n="213"/> for we hear nothing of Letters before the days <lb xml:id="l650"/>of <hi rend="italic">David</hi>, except among the posterity of <hi rend="italic">Abra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l651"/>ham</hi>; nothing of Astronomy, before the <hi rend="italic">Egyp<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l652"/>tians</hi> under <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi> applied them<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l653"/>selves to that study, except the Constellations <lb xml:id="l654"/>mentioned by <hi rend="italic">Job</hi>, who lived in <hi rend="italic">Arabia Petræa</hi> <lb xml:id="l655"/>among the merchants; nothing of the trade of <lb xml:id="l656"/>Carpenters, or good Architecture, before <hi rend="italic">So<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l657"/>lomon</hi> sent to <hi rend="italic">Hiram</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Tyre</hi>, to supply him <lb xml:id="l658"/>with such Artificers, saying that <hi rend="italic">there were none <lb xml:id="l659"/>in</hi> Israel <hi rend="italic">who could skill to hew timber like the</hi> <lb xml:id="l660"/>Zidonians.</p>
<p xml:id="par16"><hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="i">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l661"/>l. 1. p. 17.</note> tells us, <hi rend="italic">that the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">sent <lb xml:id="l662"/>many colonies out of</hi> Egypt <hi rend="italic">into other coun<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l663"/>tries; and that</hi> Belus<hi rend="italic">, the son of</hi> Neptune <hi rend="italic">and</hi> <lb xml:id="l664"/>Libya, <hi rend="italic">carried colonies thence into</hi> Babylonia, <lb xml:id="l665"/><hi rend="italic">and seating himself on</hi> Euphrates, <hi rend="italic">instituted <lb xml:id="l666"/>priests free from taxes and publick expences, <lb xml:id="l667"/>after the manner of</hi> Egypt, <hi rend="italic">who were called</hi> <lb xml:id="l668"/>Chaldæans, <hi rend="italic">and who after the manner of</hi> Egypt, <lb xml:id="l669"/><hi rend="italic">might observe the Stars:</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pausanias</hi> <note n="k">Pausan. <lb xml:id="l670"/>l. 4. c. 23.</note> tells us, <lb xml:id="l671"/><hi rend="italic">that the</hi> Belus <hi rend="italic">of the</hi> Babylonians <hi rend="italic">had his name <lb xml:id="l672"/>from</hi> Belus <hi rend="italic">an</hi> Egyptian, <hi rend="italic">the son of</hi> Libya: and <lb xml:id="l673"/><hi rend="italic">Apollodorus</hi>; <note n="l">Apollo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l674"/>dor. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l675"/>c. 1.</note> <hi rend="italic">that</hi> Belus <hi rend="italic">the son of</hi> Neptune <hi rend="italic">and</hi> <lb xml:id="l676"/>Libya, <hi rend="italic">and King of</hi> Egypt, <hi rend="italic">was the father of</hi> <lb xml:id="l677"/>Ægyptus <hi rend="italic">and</hi> Danaus, that is, <hi rend="italic">Ammon:</hi> he tells <lb xml:id="l678"/>us also, <hi rend="italic">that</hi> Busiris <hi rend="italic">the son of</hi> Neptune <hi rend="italic">and</hi> Lisi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l679"/>anassa [Libyanassa] <hi rend="italic">the daughter of</hi> Epaphus, <lb xml:id="l680"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">was</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p214" n="214"/> <hi rend="italic">was King of</hi> Egypt; and <hi rend="italic">Eusebius</hi> calls this <lb xml:id="l681"/>King, Busiris <hi rend="italic">the son of</hi> Neptune, <hi rend="italic">and of</hi> Libya <lb xml:id="l682"/><hi rend="italic">the daughter of</hi> Epaphus. By these things the <lb xml:id="l683"/>later <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> seem to have made two <hi rend="italic">Belus's</hi>, <lb xml:id="l684"/>the one the father of <hi rend="italic">Osiris, Isis,</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, <lb xml:id="l685"/>the other the son of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, and father of <lb xml:id="l686"/><hi rend="italic">Ægyptus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Danaus:</hi> and hence came the opi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l687"/>nion of the people of <hi rend="italic">Naxus</hi>, that there were <lb xml:id="l688"/>two <hi rend="italic">Minos's</hi> and two <hi rend="italic">Ariadnes</hi>, the one two <lb xml:id="l689"/>Generations older than the other; which we <lb xml:id="l690"/>have confuted. The father of <hi rend="italic">Ægyptus</hi> and <lb xml:id="l691"/><hi rend="italic">Danaus</hi> was the father of <hi rend="italic">Osiris, Isis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Ty<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l692"/>phon</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi> was not the grandfather of <lb xml:id="l693"/><hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, but <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> himself.</p>
<p xml:id="par17"><hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> being brought up to hard labour <lb xml:id="l694"/>by his father <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, warred first under his <lb xml:id="l695"/>father, being the Hero or <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> of the <hi rend="italic">Egyp<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l696"/>tians</hi> during his father's Reign, and afterward <lb xml:id="l697"/>their King: under his father, whilst he was very <lb xml:id="l698"/>young, he invaded and conquered <hi rend="italic">Troglodytica</hi>, <lb xml:id="l699"/>and thereby secured the harbour of the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, <lb xml:id="l700"/>near <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; and then he invaded <hi rend="italic">E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l701"/>thiopia</hi>, and carried on his conquest southward, <lb xml:id="l702"/>as far as to the region bearing cinnamon: and <lb xml:id="l703"/>his father by the assistance of the <hi rend="italic">Edomites</hi> hav<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l704"/>ing built a fleet on the <hi rend="italic">Red Sea</hi>, he put to sea, <lb xml:id="l705"/>and coasted <hi rend="italic">Arabia Fælix</hi>, going to the <hi rend="italic">Persian <lb xml:id="l706"/>Gulph</hi> and beyond, and in those countries set <lb xml:id="l707"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">up</fw><pb xml:id="p215" n="215"/> up Columns with inscriptions denoting his con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l708"/>quests; and particularly he set up a Pillar at <lb xml:id="l709"/><hi rend="italic">Dira</hi>, a promontory in the straits of the <hi rend="italic">Red <lb xml:id="l710"/>Sea</hi>, next <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, and two Pillars in <hi rend="italic">India</hi>, on <lb xml:id="l711"/>the mountains near the mouth of the river <lb xml:id="l712"/><hi rend="italic">Ganges</hi>; so <note n="m">Dionys. in <lb xml:id="l713"/>Perie. v. 623.</note> <hi rend="italic">Dionysius</hi>:</p>
<lg>
<l><foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἐνθά τε καὶ στηλαι, Θηβαιγενέος Διονύσου</foreign></l>
<l><foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἑστασιν πυμάτοιο παρὰ ‛ροον Ὠκεανοιο,</foreign></l>
<l><foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἰνδων ὑστατίοισιν ἐν ὀύρεσιν. ἔνθά τε Γάγγης</foreign></l>
<l><foreign xml:lang="gre">Λευκὸν ὕδορ Νυσσαιον ἐπὶ πλαταμωνα κυλίνδει.</foreign></l>
</lg>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="italic">Ubi etiamnum columnæ Thebis geniti Bacchi</hi></l>
<l><hi rend="italic">Stant extremi juxta fluxum Oceani</hi></l>
<l><hi rend="italic">Indorum ultimis in montibus: ubi &amp; Ganges</hi></l>
<l><hi rend="italic">Claram aquam Nyssæam ad planitiem devolvit.</hi></l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par18">After these things he invaded <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l714"/>fought the <hi rend="italic">Africans</hi> with clubs, and thence is <lb xml:id="l715"/>painted with a club in his hand: so <note n="n">Fab. 275.</note> <hi rend="italic">Hyginus</hi>; <lb xml:id="l716"/><hi rend="italic">Afri &amp; Ægyptii primum fustibus dimicaverunt, <lb xml:id="l717"/>postea Belus Neptuni filius gladio belligeratus est, <lb xml:id="l718"/>unde bellum dictum est</hi>: and after the conquest <lb xml:id="l719"/>of <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, by which <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> was furnished with <lb xml:id="l720"/>horses, and furnished <hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi> and his friends; <lb xml:id="l721"/>he prepared a fleet on the <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l722"/>went on westward upon the coast of <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>, to <lb xml:id="l723"/>search those countries, as far as to the Ocean <lb xml:id="l724"/>and island <hi rend="italic">Erythra</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Gades</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Spain</hi>; as <hi rend="italic">Macro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l725"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">bius</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p216" n="216"/>bius</hi> <note n="o">Saturnal. <lb xml:id="l726"/>l. 5. c. 21.</note> informs us from <hi rend="italic">Panyasis</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pherecydes:</hi> and there he conquered <hi rend="italic">Geryon</hi>, and at the <lb xml:id="l727"/>mouth of the <hi rend="italic">Straits</hi> set up the famous Pillars.</p>
<lg>
<l><note n="p">Lucan. <lb xml:id="l728"/>l. 10.</note> <hi rend="italic">Venit ad occasum mundique extrema Sesostris.</hi></l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par19">Then he returned through <hi rend="italic">Spain</hi> and the south<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l729"/>ern coasts of <hi rend="italic">France</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Italy</hi>, with the cattel <lb xml:id="l730"/>of <hi rend="italic">Geryon</hi>, his fleet attending him by sea, and <lb xml:id="l731"/>left in <hi rend="italic">Sicily</hi> the <hi rend="italic">Sicani</hi>, a people which he had <lb xml:id="l732"/>brought from <hi rend="italic">Spain:</hi> and after his father's death <lb xml:id="l733"/>he built Temples to him in his conquests; <lb xml:id="l734"/>whence it came to pass, that <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</hi> was <lb xml:id="l735"/>worshipped in <hi rend="italic">Ammonia</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Arabia</hi>, <lb xml:id="l736"/>and as far as <hi rend="italic">India</hi>, according to the <note n="q">Lucan. l. 9.</note> Poet:</p>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="italic">Quamvis Æthiopum populis, Arabumque beatis</hi></l>
<l><hi rend="italic">Gentibus, atque Indis unus sit Jupiter Ammon</hi>.</l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par20">The <hi rend="italic">Arabians</hi> worshipped only two Gods, <hi rend="italic">Cœ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l737"/>lus</hi>, otherwise called <hi rend="italic">Ouranus</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ura<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l738"/>nius</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>; and these were <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Am<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l739"/>mon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>, as above: and so also the peo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l740"/>ple of <hi rend="italic">Meroe</hi> above <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <note n="r">Herod. l. 1.</note> worshipped no <lb xml:id="l741"/>other Gods but <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>, and had <lb xml:id="l742"/>an Oracle of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi>; and these two Gods were <lb xml:id="l743"/><hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, according to the <lb xml:id="l744"/>language of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par21">At length <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, in the fifth year of <hi rend="italic">Reho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l745"/>boam</hi>, came out of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> with a great army <lb xml:id="l746"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">of</fw><pb xml:id="p217" n="217"/> of <hi rend="italic">Libyans, Troglodytes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, and spoil<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l747"/>ed the Temple, and reduced <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi> into servi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l748"/>tude, and went on conquering, first eastward <lb xml:id="l749"/>toward <hi rend="italic">India</hi>, which he invaded, and then <lb xml:id="l750"/>westward as far as <hi rend="italic">Thrace:</hi> for <hi rend="italic">God had given <lb xml:id="l751"/>him the kingdoms of the countries</hi>, 2 <hi rend="italic">Chron.</hi> xii. <lb xml:id="l752"/>2, 3, 8. In <note n="s">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l753"/>l. 1. p. 35. <lb xml:id="l754"/>Herod. l. 2 <lb xml:id="l755"/>c. 102, 103, <lb xml:id="l756"/>106.</note> this Expedition he spent nine <lb xml:id="l757"/>years, setting up pillars with inscriptions in all <lb xml:id="l758"/>his conquests, some of which remained in <hi rend="italic">Sy<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l759"/>ria</hi> 'till the days of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>. He was accom<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l760"/>panied with his son <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Apollo</hi>, and with <lb xml:id="l761"/>some singing women, called <hi rend="italic">the Muses</hi>, one <lb xml:id="l762"/>of which, called <hi rend="italic">Calliope</hi>, was the mother of <hi rend="italic">Or<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l763"/>pheus</hi> an <hi rend="italic">Argonaut:</hi> and the two tops of the <lb xml:id="l764"/>mountain <hi rend="italic">Parnassus</hi>, which were very high, were <lb xml:id="l765"/>dedicated <note n="t">Pausan. <lb xml:id="l766"/>l. 10. <lb xml:id="l767"/>Suidas in <lb xml:id="l768"/><foreign xml:lang="gre">Παρνάσιοι</foreign>.</note> the one to this <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>, and the <lb xml:id="l769"/>other to his son <hi rend="italic">Apollo</hi>: whence <hi rend="italic">Lucan</hi>; <note n="u">Lucan l. 5.</note></p>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="italic">Parnassus gemino petit æthera colle,</hi></l>
<l><hi rend="italic">Mons Phæbo, Bromioque sacer.</hi></l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par22">In the fourteenth year of <hi rend="italic">Rehoboam</hi> he returned <lb xml:id="l770"/>back into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, leaving <hi rend="italic">Æetes</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Colchis</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l771"/>his nephew <hi rend="italic">Prometheus</hi> at mount <hi rend="italic">Caucasus</hi>, with <lb xml:id="l772"/>part of his army, to defend his conquests from <lb xml:id="l773"/>the <hi rend="italic">Scythians. Apollonius</hi> <note n="x">Argonaut. <lb xml:id="l774"/>l. 4. v. 272.</note> <hi rend="italic">Rhodius</hi> and his <lb xml:id="l775"/>scholiast tell us, that <hi rend="italic">Sesonchosis</hi> King of all <lb xml:id="l776"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, that is <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>, invading all <hi rend="italic">Asia</hi>, and a <lb xml:id="l777"/>great part of <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi>, peopled many cities <lb xml:id="l778"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">which</fw><pb xml:id="p218" n="218"/> which he took; and that <hi rend="italic">Æa</hi>, the Metropolis <lb xml:id="l779"/>of <hi rend="italic">Colchis, remained stable ever since his days <lb xml:id="l780"/>with the posterity of those</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">which he <lb xml:id="l781"/>placed there, and that they preserved pillars or <lb xml:id="l782"/>tables in which all the journies and the bounds <lb xml:id="l783"/>of sea and land were described, for the use of <lb xml:id="l784"/>them that were to go any whither</hi>: these tables <lb xml:id="l785"/>therefore gave a beginning to Geography.</p>
<p xml:id="par23"><hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> upon his returning home <note n="y">Herod. <lb xml:id="l786"/>l. 2. c. 109.</note> divided <lb xml:id="l787"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by measure amongst the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>; and <lb xml:id="l788"/>this gave a beginning to Surveying and Geo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l789"/>metry: and <note n="z">In vita Py<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l790"/>thag. c. 29.</note> <hi rend="italic">Jamblicus</hi> derives this division of <lb xml:id="l791"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and beginning of Geometry, from the <lb xml:id="l792"/>Age of the Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt. Sesostris</hi> also <note n="a">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l793"/>l. 1. p. 36</note> di<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l794"/>vided <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into 36 <hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi> or Counties, and <lb xml:id="l795"/>dug a canal from the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi> to the head city of <lb xml:id="l796"/>every <hi rend="italic">Nome</hi>, and with the earth dug out of <lb xml:id="l797"/>it, he caused the ground of the city to be rais<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l798"/>ed higher, and built a Temple in every city for <lb xml:id="l799"/>the worship of the <hi rend="italic">Nome</hi>, and in the Temples <lb xml:id="l800"/>set up Oracles, some of which remained 'till <lb xml:id="l801"/>the days of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>: and by this means the <lb xml:id="l802"/><hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> of every <hi rend="italic">Nome</hi> were induced to wor<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l803"/>ship the great men of the Kingdom, to whom <lb xml:id="l804"/>the <hi rend="italic">Nome</hi>, the City, and the Temple or Se<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l805"/>pulchre of the God, was dedicated: for every <lb xml:id="l806"/>Temple had its proper God, and modes of <lb xml:id="l807"/>worship, and annual festivals, at which the <lb xml:id="l808"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Council</fw><pb xml:id="p219" n="219"/> Council and People of the <hi rend="italic">Nome</hi> met at certain <lb xml:id="l809"/>times to sacrifice, and regulate the affairs of the <lb xml:id="l810"/><hi rend="italic">Nome</hi>, and administer justice, and buy and sell; <lb xml:id="l811"/>but <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi> and his Queen, by the names of <hi rend="italic">Osi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l812"/>ris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>, were worshipped in all <hi rend="italic">Egypt:</hi> and <lb xml:id="l813"/>because <hi rend="italic">Sesac</hi>, to render the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi> more useful, <lb xml:id="l814"/>dug channels from it to all the capital cities of <lb xml:id="l815"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; that river was consecrated to him, and <lb xml:id="l816"/>he was called by its names, <hi rend="italic">Ægyptus, Siris, <lb xml:id="l817"/>Nilus. Dionysius</hi> <note n="b">Dionys. de <lb xml:id="l818"/>situ Orbis.</note> tells us, that the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi> was <lb xml:id="l819"/>called <hi rend="italic">Siris</hi> by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Nilus</hi> by the <lb xml:id="l820"/>people of <hi rend="italic">Siene</hi>. From the word <hi rend="italic">Nahal</hi>, which <lb xml:id="l821"/>signifies a torrent, that river was called <hi rend="italic">Nilus</hi>; <lb xml:id="l822"/>and <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="c">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l823"/>l. 1. p. 39.</note> tells us, that <hi rend="italic">Nilus</hi> was that King <lb xml:id="l824"/>who cut <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into canals, to make the river <lb xml:id="l825"/>useful: in Scripture the river is called <hi rend="italic">Schichor</hi>, <lb xml:id="l826"/>or <hi rend="italic">Sihor</hi>, and thence the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> formed the <lb xml:id="l827"/>words <hi rend="italic">Siris, Sirius, Ser-Apis, O-Siris</hi>; but <hi rend="italic">Plu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l828"/>tarch</hi> <note n="d">Plutarch. <lb xml:id="l829"/>de Iside &amp; <lb xml:id="l830"/>Osiride.</note> tells us, that the syllable <hi rend="italic">O</hi>, put before <lb xml:id="l831"/>the word <hi rend="italic">Siris</hi> by the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, made it scarce in<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l832"/>telligible to the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par24">I have now told you the original of the <lb xml:id="l833"/><hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi> of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and of the Religions and <lb xml:id="l834"/>Temples of the <hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi>, and of the Cities built <lb xml:id="l835"/>there by the Gods, and called by their names: <lb xml:id="l836"/>whence <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="e">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l837"/>l. 1. p. 8.</note> tells us, that <hi rend="italic">of all the Pro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l838"/>vinces of the World, there were in</hi> Egypt <hi rend="italic">only <lb xml:id="l839"/>many cities built by the ancient Gods, as by</hi> Jupi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l840"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">ter,</fw><pb xml:id="p220" n="220"/>ter, Sol, Hermes, Apollo, Pan, Eilithyia, <hi rend="italic">and <lb xml:id="l841"/>many others:</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Lucian</hi> <note n="f">Lucian. de <lb xml:id="l842"/>Dea Syria</note> an <hi rend="italic">Assyrian</hi>, who had <lb xml:id="l843"/>travelled into <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, tells us, that <lb xml:id="l844"/><hi rend="italic">the Temples of</hi> Egypt <hi rend="italic">were very old, those in</hi> <lb xml:id="l845"/>Phœnicia <hi rend="italic">built by</hi> Cinyras <hi rend="italic">as old, and those in</hi> <lb xml:id="l846"/>Assyria <hi rend="italic">almost as old as the former, but not alto<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l847"/>gether so old:</hi> which shews that the Monarchy <lb xml:id="l848"/>of <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi> rose up after the Monarchy of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l849"/>as is represented in Scripture; and that the <lb xml:id="l850"/>Temples of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> then standing, were those <lb xml:id="l851"/>built by <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, about the same time that the <lb xml:id="l852"/>Temples of <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi> were built by <lb xml:id="l853"/><hi rend="italic">Cinyras, Benhadad</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Hiram</hi>. This was not the <lb xml:id="l854"/>first original of Idolatry, but only the erecting <lb xml:id="l855"/>of much more sumptuous Temples than for<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l856"/>merly to the founders of new Kingdoms: for <lb xml:id="l857"/>Temples at first were very small;</p>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="italic">Jupiter angusta vix totus stabat in æde.</hi></l>
<l rend="right"><hi rend="italic">Ovid. Fast.</hi> l. 1.</l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par25">Altars were at first erected without Temples, and <lb xml:id="l858"/>this custom continued in <hi rend="italic">Persia</hi> 'till after the <lb xml:id="l859"/>days of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus:</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi> they had Altars <lb xml:id="l860"/>with little houses for eating the sacrifices much <lb xml:id="l861"/>earlier, and these they called High Places: such <lb xml:id="l862"/>was the High Place where <hi rend="italic">Samuel</hi> entertained <lb xml:id="l863"/><hi rend="italic">Saul</hi>; such was the House of <hi rend="italic">Dagon</hi> at <hi rend="italic">Ashdod</hi>, <lb xml:id="l864"/>into which the <hi rend="italic">Philistims</hi> brought the Ark; and <lb xml:id="l865"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">the</fw><pb xml:id="p221" n="221"/> the House of <hi rend="italic">Baal</hi>, in which <hi rend="italic">Jehu</hi> slew the Pro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l866"/>phets of <hi rend="italic">Baal</hi>; and such were the High Places <lb xml:id="l867"/>of the <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi> which <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi> commanded <hi rend="italic">Is<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l868"/>rael</hi> to destroy: he <note n="g">Exod. <lb xml:id="l869"/>xxxiv. 13. <lb xml:id="l870"/>Num. xxxiii. <lb xml:id="l871"/>52. Deut. vii. <lb xml:id="l872"/>5. &amp; xii. 3.</note> commanded <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> to de<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l873"/>stroy the Altars, Images, High Places, and <lb xml:id="l874"/>Groves of the <hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi>, but made no men<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l875"/>tion of their Temples, as he would have done <lb xml:id="l876"/>had there been any in those days. I meet with <lb xml:id="l877"/>no mention of sumptuous Temples before the <lb xml:id="l878"/>days of <hi rend="italic">Solomon:</hi> new Kingdoms begun then to <lb xml:id="l879"/>build Sepulchres to their Founders in the form <lb xml:id="l880"/>of sumptuous Temples; and such Temples <hi rend="italic">Hi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l881"/>ram</hi> built in <hi rend="italic">Tyre, Sesac</hi> in all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Ben<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l882"/>hadad</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Damascus</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par26">For when <hi rend="italic">David</hi> <note n="h">2 Sam. viii. <lb xml:id="l883"/>10. &amp; <lb xml:id="l884"/>1 King. xi. <lb xml:id="l885"/>23.</note> smote <hi rend="italic">Hadad-Ezer</hi> King <lb xml:id="l886"/>of <hi rend="italic">Zobah</hi>, and slew the <hi rend="italic">Syrians</hi> of <hi rend="italic">Damascus</hi> <lb xml:id="l887"/>who came to assist him, <hi rend="italic">Rezon the son of</hi> Elia<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l888"/>dah <hi rend="italic">fled from his lord</hi> Hadad-Ezer, <hi rend="italic">and gathered <lb xml:id="l889"/>men unto him and became Captain over a band, and <lb xml:id="l890"/>Reigned in</hi> Damascus, <hi rend="italic">over</hi> Syria: he is called <lb xml:id="l891"/><hi rend="italic">Hezion</hi>, 1 <hi rend="italic">King.</hi> xv. 18. and his successors men<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l892"/>tioned in history were <hi rend="italic">Tabrimon, Hadad</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Ben<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l893"/>hadad, Benhadad</hi> II. <hi rend="italic">Hazael, Benhadad</hi> III. * * and <hi rend="italic">Rezin</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Tabeah. Syria</hi> became sub<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l894"/>ject to <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> in the days of <hi rend="italic">Tabrimon</hi>, and re<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l895"/>covered her liberty under <hi rend="italic">Benhadad</hi> I; and in <lb xml:id="l896"/>the days of <hi rend="italic">Benhadad</hi> III, until the reign of <lb xml:id="l897"/>the last <hi rend="italic">Rezin</hi>, they became subject to <hi rend="italic">Israel:</hi> <lb xml:id="l898"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">and</fw><pb xml:id="p222" n="222"/> and in the ninth year of <hi rend="italic">Hoshea</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Judah, <lb xml:id="l899"/>Tiglath-pileser</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi> captivated the <hi rend="italic">Sy<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l900"/>rians</hi>, and put an end to their Kingdom: now <lb xml:id="l901"/><hi rend="italic">Josephus</hi> <note n="i">Antiq l. 9. <lb xml:id="l902"/>c. 2.</note> tells us, that <hi rend="italic">the</hi> Syrians <hi rend="italic">'till his days <lb xml:id="l903"/>worshipped both</hi> Adar, that is <hi rend="italic">Hadad</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Benhadad, <lb xml:id="l904"/>and his successor</hi> Hazael <hi rend="italic">as Gods, for their bene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l905"/>factions, and for building Temples by which they <lb xml:id="l906"/>adorned the city of</hi> Damascus: <hi rend="italic">for</hi>, saith he, <hi rend="italic">they <lb xml:id="l907"/>daily celebrate solemnities in honour of these Kings, <lb xml:id="l908"/>and boast their antiquity, not knowing that they <lb xml:id="l909"/>are novel, and lived not above eleven hundred <lb xml:id="l910"/>years ago</hi>. It seems these Kings built sumptu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l911"/>ous Sepulchres for themselves, and were wor<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l912"/>shipped therein. <hi rend="italic">Justin</hi> <note n="k">Justin. <lb xml:id="l913"/>l. 36.</note> calls the first of these <lb xml:id="l914"/>two Kings <hi rend="italic">Damascus</hi>, saying that <hi rend="italic">the city had <lb xml:id="l915"/>its name from him, and that the</hi> Syrians <hi rend="italic">in <lb xml:id="l916"/>honour of him worshipped his wife</hi> Arathes <hi rend="italic">as <lb xml:id="l917"/>a Goddess, using her Sepulchre for a Temple.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par27">Another instance we have in the Kingdom of <lb xml:id="l918"/><hi rend="italic">Byblus</hi>. In the <note n="l">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l919"/>l. 5. p. 238.</note> Reign of <hi rend="italic">Minos</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Crete</hi>, <lb xml:id="l920"/>when <hi rend="italic">Rhadamanthus</hi> the brother of <hi rend="italic">Minos</hi> carried <lb xml:id="l921"/>colonies from <hi rend="italic">Crete</hi> to the <hi rend="italic">Greek</hi> islands, and <lb xml:id="l922"/>gave the islands to his captains, he gave <hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi> <lb xml:id="l923"/>to <hi rend="italic">Thoas</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Theias</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Thoantes</hi>, the father of <lb xml:id="l924"/><hi rend="italic">Hypsipyle</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Cretan</hi> worker in metals, and by <lb xml:id="l925"/>consequence a disciple of the <hi rend="italic">Idæi Dactyli</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l926"/>perhaps a <hi rend="italic">Phœnician</hi>: for the <hi rend="italic">Idæi Dactyli</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l927"/><hi rend="italic">Telchines</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Corybantes</hi> brought their Arts and <lb xml:id="l928"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Sciences</fw><pb xml:id="p223" n="223"/> Sciences from <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia:</hi> and <note n="m">Suidas in <lb xml:id="l929"/><foreign xml:lang="gre">Σαρδανα<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l930"/>πάλος</foreign>.</note> <hi rend="italic">Suidas</hi> saith, that <lb xml:id="l931"/>he was descended from <hi rend="italic">Pharnaces</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Cy<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l932"/>prus</hi>; <hi rend="italic">Apollodorus</hi>, <note n="n">Apollod. <lb xml:id="l933"/>l. 3.</note> that he was the son of <hi rend="italic">Sando<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l934"/>chus</hi> a <hi rend="italic">Syrian</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Apollonius Rhodius</hi>, <note n="o">Argo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l935"/>naut. l. 4. <lb xml:id="l936"/>v. 424. &amp; <lb xml:id="l937"/>l. 1. v. 621.</note> that <lb xml:id="l938"/>Hypsipyle <hi rend="italic">gave</hi> Jason <hi rend="italic">the purple cloak which <lb xml:id="l939"/>the</hi> Graces <hi rend="italic">made for</hi> Bacchus, <hi rend="italic">who gave it to <lb xml:id="l940"/>his son</hi> Thoas, the father of <hi rend="italic">Hypsipyle</hi>, and King <lb xml:id="l941"/>of <hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Thoas</hi> married <note n="p">Homer <lb xml:id="l942"/>Odyss. <seg rend="greek" rendition="greek">Θ</seg>. <lb xml:id="l943"/>v. 268. <lb xml:id="l944"/>292. &amp; <lb xml:id="l945"/>Hymn. 1. &amp; <lb xml:id="l946"/>2. in Vene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l947"/>rem. &amp; He<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l948"/>siod. Theo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l949"/>gon. v. 192.</note> <hi rend="italic">Calycopis</hi>, the mo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l950"/>ther of <hi rend="italic">Æneas</hi>, and daughter of <hi rend="italic">Otreus</hi> King <lb xml:id="l951"/>of <hi rend="italic">Phrygia</hi>, and for his skill on the harp was <lb xml:id="l952"/>called <hi rend="italic">Cinyras</hi>, and was said to be exceedingly <lb xml:id="l953"/>beloved by <hi rend="italic">Apollo</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi>: the great <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <lb xml:id="l954"/>loved his wife, and being caught in bed with <lb xml:id="l955"/>her in <hi rend="italic">Phrygia</hi> appeased him with wine, and <lb xml:id="l956"/>composed the matter by making him King of <lb xml:id="l957"/><hi rend="italic">Byblus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi>; and then came over the <lb xml:id="l958"/><hi rend="italic">Hellespont</hi> with his army, and conquered <hi rend="italic">Thrace:</hi> <lb xml:id="l959"/>and to these things the poets allude, in feigning <lb xml:id="l960"/>that <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> fell from heaven into <hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l961"/>that <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <note n="q">Pausan. <lb xml:id="l962"/>l. 1. c. 20.</note> appeased him with wine, and <lb xml:id="l963"/>reduced him back into heaven: he fell from <lb xml:id="l964"/>the heaven of the <hi rend="italic">Cretan</hi> Gods, when he went <lb xml:id="l965"/>from <hi rend="italic">Crete</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi> to work in metals, and <lb xml:id="l966"/>was reduced back into heaven when <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <lb xml:id="l967"/>made him King of <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Byblus:</hi> he <lb xml:id="l968"/>Reigned there 'till a very great age, living to <lb xml:id="l969"/>the times of the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war, and becoming ex<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l970"/>ceeding rich: and after the death of his wife <lb xml:id="l971"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Calyco-</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p224" n="224"/> <hi rend="italic">Calycopis</hi>, <note n="r">Clem. Al. <lb xml:id="l972"/>Admon. ad <lb xml:id="l973"/>Gent. p. 10. <lb xml:id="l974"/>Apollodor. <lb xml:id="l975"/>l. 3. c. 13. <lb xml:id="l976"/>Pindar. Pyth. <lb xml:id="l977"/>Ode 2. He<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l978"/>sych. in <foreign xml:lang="gre">Κιν<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l979"/>υράδαι</foreign>. Steph. in <lb xml:id="l980"/><foreign xml:lang="gre">Αμαθους</foreign>. <lb xml:id="l981"/>Strabo. l. 16. <lb xml:id="l982"/>p. 755.</note> he built Temples to her at <hi rend="italic">Paphos</hi> <lb xml:id="l983"/>and <hi rend="italic">Amathus</hi>, in <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi>; and at <hi rend="italic">Byblus</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Syria</hi>; <lb xml:id="l984"/>and instituted Priests to her with Sacred Rites <lb xml:id="l985"/>and lustful <hi rend="italic">Orgia</hi>; whence she became the <hi rend="italic">Dea <lb xml:id="l986"/>Cypria</hi>, and the <hi rend="italic">Dea Syria</hi>: and from Temples <lb xml:id="l987"/>erected to her in these and other places, she <lb xml:id="l988"/>was also called <hi rend="italic">Paphia, Amathusia, Byblia, Cythe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l989"/>rea</hi> <hi rend="italic">Salaminia, Cnidia, Erycina, Idalia. Fama <lb xml:id="l990"/>tradit a Cinyra sacratum vetustissimum Paphiæ <lb xml:id="l991"/>Veneris templum, Deamque ipsam conceptam mari <lb xml:id="l992"/>huc appulsam: Tacit. Hist.</hi> l. 2. c. 3. From <lb xml:id="l993"/>her sailing from <hi rend="italic">Phrygia</hi> to the island <hi rend="italic">Cythera</hi>, <lb xml:id="l994"/>and from thence to be Queen of <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi>, she <lb xml:id="l995"/>was said by the <hi rend="italic">Cyprians</hi>, to be born of the froth <lb xml:id="l996"/>of the sea, and was painted sailing upon a <lb xml:id="l997"/>shell. <hi rend="italic">Cinyras</hi> Deified also his son <hi rend="italic">Gingris</hi>, by the <lb xml:id="l998"/>name of <hi rend="italic">Adonis</hi>; and for assisting the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> <lb xml:id="l999"/>with armour, it is probable that he himself was <lb xml:id="l1000"/>Deified by his friends the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, by the <lb xml:id="l1001"/>name of <hi rend="italic">Baal-Canaan</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Vulcan:</hi> for <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> was <lb xml:id="l1002"/>celebrated principally by the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, and was <lb xml:id="l1003"/>a King according to <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi>, and Reigned in <lb xml:id="l1004"/><hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Cinyras</hi> was an inventor of arts, <lb xml:id="l1005"/><note n="s">Clem. Al. <lb xml:id="l1006"/>Admon. ad <lb xml:id="l1007"/>Gent. p. 21. <lb xml:id="l1008"/>Plin. l. 7. <lb xml:id="l1009"/>c. 56.</note> and found out copper in <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi>, and the <lb xml:id="l1010"/>smiths hammer, and anvil, and tongs, and la<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1011"/>ver; and imployed workmen in making ar<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1012"/>mour, and other things of brass and iron, and <lb xml:id="l1013"/>was the only King celebrated in history for <lb xml:id="l1014"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">working</fw><pb xml:id="p225" n="225"/> working in metals, and was King of <hi rend="italic">Lemnos</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1015"/>and the husband of <hi rend="italic">Venus</hi>; all which are the <lb xml:id="l1016"/>characters of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>: and the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> about the <lb xml:id="l1017"/>time of the death of <hi rend="italic">Cinyras, viz.</hi> in the Reign <lb xml:id="l1018"/>of their King <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>, built a very sumptuous <lb xml:id="l1019"/>Temple at <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>, and near it a <lb xml:id="l1020"/>smaller Temple to <hi rend="italic">Venus Hospita</hi>; not an <hi rend="italic">E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1021"/>gyptian</hi> woman but a foreigner, not <hi rend="italic">Helena</hi> but <lb xml:id="l1022"/><hi rend="italic">Vulcan's Venus</hi>: for <note n="t">Herod. l. 2.</note> <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> tells us, that the <lb xml:id="l1023"/>region round about this Temple was inhabited <lb xml:id="l1024"/>by <hi rend="italic">Tyrian Phœnicians</hi>, and that <note n="u">Herod. l. 3. <lb xml:id="l1025"/>c. 37.</note> <hi rend="italic">Cambyses</hi> going <lb xml:id="l1026"/>into this Temple at <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>, very much de<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1027"/>rided the statue of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> for its littleness; <hi rend="italic">For</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1028"/>saith he, <hi rend="italic">this statue is most like those Gods which <lb xml:id="l1029"/>the</hi> Phœnicians <hi rend="italic">call</hi> Patæci, <hi rend="italic">and carry about in the <lb xml:id="l1030"/>fore-part of their Ships in the form of Pygmies</hi>: and <lb xml:id="l1031"/><note n="x">Bochart. <lb xml:id="l1032"/>Canaan. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l1033"/>c. 4.</note> <hi rend="italic">Bochart</hi> saith of this <hi rend="italic">Venus Hospita, Phœniciam <lb xml:id="l1034"/>Venerem in Ægypto pro peregrina habitam.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par28">As the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians, Phœnicians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Syrians</hi> <lb xml:id="l1035"/>in those days Deified their Kings and Princes, <lb xml:id="l1036"/>so upon their coming into <hi rend="italic">Asia minor</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1037"/>they taught those nations to do the like, as hath <lb xml:id="l1038"/>been shewed above. In those days the writing <lb xml:id="l1039"/>of the <hi rend="italic">Thebans</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> was in hierogly<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1040"/>phicks; and this way of writing seems to have <lb xml:id="l1041"/>spread into the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> before the days of <lb xml:id="l1042"/><hi rend="italic">Moses:</hi> for thence came the worship of their <lb xml:id="l1043"/>Gods in the various shapes of Birds, Beasts, and <lb xml:id="l1044"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Fishes,</fw><pb xml:id="p226" n="226"/> Fishes, forbidden in the second commandment. <lb xml:id="l1045"/>Now this emblematical way of writing gave <lb xml:id="l1046"/>occasion to the <hi rend="italic">Thebans</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, who in <lb xml:id="l1047"/>the days of <hi rend="italic">Samuel, David, Solomon</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Reho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1048"/>boam</hi> conquered <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and the nations round <lb xml:id="l1049"/>about, and erected a great Empire, to represent <lb xml:id="l1050"/>and signify their conquering Kings and Princes, <lb xml:id="l1051"/>not by writing down their names, but by mak<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1052"/>ing various hieroglyphical figures; as by paint<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1053"/>ing <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi> with Ram's horns, to signify the <lb xml:id="l1054"/>King who conquered <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, a country abounding <lb xml:id="l1055"/>with sheep; his father <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi> with a Scithe, to <lb xml:id="l1056"/>signify that King who conquered the lower <lb xml:id="l1057"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, a country abounding with corn; his son <lb xml:id="l1058"/><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> by an Ox, because he taught the con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1059"/>quered nations to plow with oxen; <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1060"/>with Bulls horns for the same reason, and with <lb xml:id="l1061"/>Grapes because he taught the nations to plant <lb xml:id="l1062"/>vines, and upon a Tiger because he subdued <lb xml:id="l1063"/><hi rend="italic">India; Orus</hi> the son of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> with a Harp, to sig<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1064"/>nify the Prince who was eminently skilled on <lb xml:id="l1065"/>that instrument; <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> upon an Eagle to sig<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1066"/>nify the sublimity of his dominion, and with a <lb xml:id="l1067"/>Thunderbolt to represent him a warrior; <hi rend="italic">Venus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1068"/>in a Chariot drawn with two Doves, to repre<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1069"/>sent her amorous and lustful; <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> with a <lb xml:id="l1070"/>Trident, to signify the commander of a fleet <lb xml:id="l1071"/>composed of three squadrons; <hi rend="italic">Ægeon</hi>, a Giant, <lb xml:id="l1072"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">with</fw><pb xml:id="p227" n="227"/> with 50 heads, and an hundred hands, to sig<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1073"/>nify <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> with his men in a ship of fifty <lb xml:id="l1074"/>oars; <hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi> with a Dog's head and wings at his <lb xml:id="l1075"/>cap and feet, and a <hi rend="italic">Caduceus</hi> writhen about <lb xml:id="l1076"/>with two Serpents, to signify a man of craft, <lb xml:id="l1077"/>and an embassador who reconciled two contend<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1078"/>ing nations; <hi rend="italic">Pan</hi> with a Pipe and the legs of a <lb xml:id="l1079"/>Goat, to signify a man delighted in piping and <lb xml:id="l1080"/>dancing; and <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> with Pillars and a Club, <lb xml:id="l1081"/>because <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> set up pillars in all his conquests, <lb xml:id="l1082"/>and fought against the <hi rend="italic">Libyans</hi> with clubs: this <lb xml:id="l1083"/>is that <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> who, according to <note n="y">Apud A<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1084"/>thenæum <lb xml:id="l1085"/>l. 9. p. 392.</note> <hi rend="italic">Eudoxus</hi>, was <lb xml:id="l1086"/>slain by <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>; and according to <hi rend="italic">Ptolomæus <lb xml:id="l1087"/><note n="z">Ptol. l. 2.</note> Hephæstion</hi> was called <hi rend="italic">Nilus</hi>, and who con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1088"/>quered <hi rend="italic">Geryon</hi> with his three sons in <hi rend="italic">Spain</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1089"/>set up the famous pillars at the mouth of the <lb xml:id="l1090"/><hi rend="italic">Straits:</hi> for <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="a">Diod. l. 3. <lb xml:id="l1091"/>p. 145.</note> mentioning three <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi>'s, <lb xml:id="l1092"/>the <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi>, the <hi rend="italic">Tyrian</hi>, and the son of <hi rend="italic">Alc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1093"/>mena</hi>, saith that <hi rend="italic">the oldest flourished among the</hi> <lb xml:id="l1094"/>Egyptians, <hi rend="italic">and having conquered a great part <lb xml:id="l1095"/>of the world, set up the pillars in</hi> Afric: and <lb xml:id="l1096"/><hi rend="italic">Vasæus</hi>, <note n="b">Vas. <lb xml:id="l1097"/>Chron. Hisp. <lb xml:id="l1098"/>c. 10.</note> that <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, called also <hi rend="italic">Dionysius, came <lb xml:id="l1099"/>into</hi> Spain <hi rend="italic">and conquered</hi> Geryon, <hi rend="italic">and was the <lb xml:id="l1100"/>first who brought Idolatry into</hi> Spain. <hi rend="italic">Strabo</hi> <lb xml:id="l1101"/><note n="c">Strabo <lb xml:id="l1102"/>l. 16. p. 776.</note> tells us, that the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> called <hi rend="italic">Megabars</hi> <lb xml:id="l1103"/>fought with clubs: and some of the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> <lb xml:id="l1104"/><note n="d">Homer.</note> did so 'till the times of the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war. Now <lb xml:id="l1105"/>from this hieroglyphical way of writing it came <lb xml:id="l1106"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">to</fw><pb xml:id="p228" n="228"/> to pass, that upon the division of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into <lb xml:id="l1107"/><hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, the great men of the King<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1108"/>dom to whom the <hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi> were dedicated, were <lb xml:id="l1109"/>represented in their Sepulchers or Temples of <lb xml:id="l1110"/>the <hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi>, by various hieroglyphicks; as by <lb xml:id="l1111"/>an <hi rend="italic">Ox</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Cat</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Dog</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Cebus</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Goat</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Lyon</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1112"/>a <hi rend="italic">Scarabæus</hi>, an <hi rend="italic">Ichneumon</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Crocodile</hi>, an <lb xml:id="l1113"/><hi rend="italic">Hippopotamus</hi>, an <hi rend="italic">Oxyrinchus</hi>, an <hi rend="italic">Ibis</hi>, a <hi rend="italic">Crow</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1114"/>a <hi rend="italic">Hawk,</hi> a <hi rend="italic">Leek</hi>, and were worshipped by the <lb xml:id="l1115"/><hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi> in the shape of these creatures.</p>
<p xml:id="par29">The <note n="e">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1116"/>l. 3. p.132, <lb xml:id="l1117"/>133</note> <hi rend="italic">Atlantides</hi>, a people upon mount <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> <lb xml:id="l1118"/>conquered by the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> in the Reign of <lb xml:id="l1119"/><hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, related that <hi rend="italic">Uranus</hi> was their first King, <lb xml:id="l1120"/>and reduced them from a savage course of life, <lb xml:id="l1121"/>and caused them to dwell in towns and cities, <lb xml:id="l1122"/>and lay up and use the fruits of the earth, and <lb xml:id="l1123"/>that he reigned over a great part of the world, <lb xml:id="l1124"/>and by his wife <hi rend="italic">Titæa</hi> had eighteen children, <lb xml:id="l1125"/>among which were <hi rend="italic">Hyperion</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Basilea</hi> the <lb xml:id="l1126"/>parents of <hi rend="italic">Helius</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Selene</hi>; that the brothers of <lb xml:id="l1127"/><hi rend="italic">Hyperion</hi> slew him, and drowned his son <hi rend="italic">Helius</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1128"/>the <hi rend="italic">Phaeton</hi> of the ancients, in the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi>, and di<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1129"/>vided his Kingdom amongst themselves; and <lb xml:id="l1130"/>the country bordering upon the Ocean fell to <lb xml:id="l1131"/>the lot of <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>, from whom the people were <lb xml:id="l1132"/>called <hi rend="italic">Atlantides</hi>. By <hi rend="italic">Uranus</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Jupiter Uranius</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1133"/><hi rend="italic">Hyperion, Basilea, Helius</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Selene</hi>, I understand <lb xml:id="l1134"/><hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon, Osiris, Isis, Orus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bubaste</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1135"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">and</fw><pb xml:id="p229" n="229"/> and by the sharing of the Kingdom of <hi rend="italic">Hyperion</hi> <lb xml:id="l1136"/>amongst his brothers the <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi>, I understand <lb xml:id="l1137"/>the division of the earth among the Gods men<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1138"/>tioned in the Poem of <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par30">For <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi> having travelled into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1139"/>conversed with the Priests of <hi rend="italic">Sais</hi> about their <lb xml:id="l1140"/>antiquities, wrote a Poem of what he had <lb xml:id="l1141"/>learnt, but did not finish it; <note n="f">Plato in <lb xml:id="l1142"/>Timæo. &amp; <lb xml:id="l1143"/>Critia.</note> and this Poem <lb xml:id="l1144"/>fell into the hands of <hi rend="italic">Plato</hi>, who relates out of <lb xml:id="l1145"/>it, that at the mouth of the <hi rend="italic">Straits</hi> near <hi rend="italic">Her<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1146"/>cules</hi>'s Pillars there was an Island called <hi rend="italic">Atlan<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1147"/>tis</hi>, the people of which, nine thousand years be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1148"/>fore the days of <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi>, reigned over <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi> as far <lb xml:id="l1149"/>as <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and over <hi rend="italic">Europe</hi> as far as the <hi rend="italic">Tyrrhene</hi> <lb xml:id="l1150"/>sea; and all this force collected into one body <lb xml:id="l1151"/>invaded <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and whatever was <lb xml:id="l1152"/>contained within the Pillars of <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi>, but <lb xml:id="l1153"/>was resisted and stopt by the <hi rend="italic">Athenians</hi> and o<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1154"/>ther <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, and thereby the rest of the nations <lb xml:id="l1155"/>not yet conquered were preserved: he saith also <lb xml:id="l1156"/>that in those days the Gods, having finished <lb xml:id="l1157"/>their conquests, divided the whole earth amongst <lb xml:id="l1158"/>themselves, partly into larger, partly into smal<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1159"/>ler portions, and instituted Temples and Sacred <lb xml:id="l1160"/>Rites to themselves; and that the Island <hi rend="italic">Atlan<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1161"/>tis</hi> fell to the lot of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, who made his <lb xml:id="l1162"/>eldest son <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> King of the whole Island, a <lb xml:id="l1163"/>part of which was called <hi rend="italic">Gadir</hi>; and that <hi rend="italic">in the <lb xml:id="l1164"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">history</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p230" n="230"/> history of the said wars mention was made of</hi> <lb xml:id="l1165"/>Cecrops, Erechtheus, Erichthonius, <hi rend="italic">and others <lb xml:id="l1166"/>before</hi> Theseus, <hi rend="italic">and also of the women who war<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1167"/>red with the men, and of the habit and statue <lb xml:id="l1168"/>of</hi> Minerva, <hi rend="italic">the study of war in those days <lb xml:id="l1169"/>being common to men and women</hi>. By all <lb xml:id="l1170"/>these circumstances it is manifest that these Gods <lb xml:id="l1171"/>were the <hi rend="italic">Dii magni majorum gentium</hi>, and lived <lb xml:id="l1172"/>between the age of <hi rend="italic">Cecrops</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Theseus</hi>; and that <lb xml:id="l1173"/>the wars which <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> with his brother <hi rend="italic">Nep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1174"/>tune</hi> made upon the nations by land and sea, and <lb xml:id="l1175"/>the resistance he met with in <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and the <lb xml:id="l1176"/>following invasion of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, are <lb xml:id="l1177"/>here described; and how the captains of <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> <lb xml:id="l1178"/>shared his conquests amongst themselves, as the <lb xml:id="l1179"/>captains of <hi rend="italic">Alexander</hi> the great did his conquests <lb xml:id="l1180"/>long after, and instituting Temples and Priests <lb xml:id="l1181"/>and sacred Rites to themselves, caused the nati<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1182"/>ons to worship them after death as Gods: and <lb xml:id="l1183"/>that the Island <hi rend="italic">Gadir</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Gades</hi>, with all <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1184"/>fell to the lot of him who after death was <lb xml:id="l1185"/>Deified by the name of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>. The time <lb xml:id="l1186"/>therefore when these things were done is by <lb xml:id="l1187"/><hi rend="italic">Solon</hi> limited to the age of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, the father <lb xml:id="l1188"/>of <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>; for <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> tells us, that <hi rend="italic">Ulysses</hi> pre<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1189"/>sently after the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war found <hi rend="italic">Calypso</hi> the <lb xml:id="l1190"/>daughter of <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> in the <hi rend="italic">Ogygian</hi> Island, per<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1191"/>haps <hi rend="italic">Gadir</hi>; and therefore it was but two Gene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1192"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">rations</fw><pb xml:id="p231" n="231"/>rations before the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war. This is that <hi rend="italic">Nep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1193"/>tune</hi>, who with <hi rend="italic">Apollo</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> fortified <hi rend="italic">Troy</hi> <lb xml:id="l1194"/>with a wall, in the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Laomedon</hi> the fa<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1195"/>ther of <hi rend="italic">Priamus</hi>, and left many natural children <lb xml:id="l1196"/>in <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, some of which were <hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1197"/>others were contemporary to the <hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1198"/>and therefore he flourished but one Generation <lb xml:id="l1199"/>before the <hi rend="italic">Argonautic</hi> expedition, and by conse<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1200"/>quence about 400 years before <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi> went into <lb xml:id="l1201"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt:</hi> but the Priests of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> in those 400 <lb xml:id="l1202"/>years had magnified the stories and antiquity of <lb xml:id="l1203"/>their Gods so exceedingly, as to make them nine <lb xml:id="l1204"/>thousand years older than <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi>, and the Island <lb xml:id="l1205"/><hi rend="italic">Atlantis</hi> bigger than all <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Asia</hi> together, <lb xml:id="l1206"/>and full of people; and because in the days of <lb xml:id="l1207"/><hi rend="italic">Solon</hi> this great Island did not appear, they <lb xml:id="l1208"/>pretended that it was sunk into the sea with all <lb xml:id="l1209"/>its people: thus great was the vanity of the <lb xml:id="l1210"/>Priests of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> in magnifying their antiqui<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1211"/>ties.</p>
<p xml:id="par31">The <hi rend="italic">Cretans</hi> <note n="g">Apud Dio<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1212"/>dor. l. 5. <lb xml:id="l1213"/>p. 233.</note> affirmed that <hi rend="italic">Neptune was the <lb xml:id="l1214"/>first man who set out a fleet, having obtained this <lb xml:id="l1215"/>Præfecture of</hi> his father <hi rend="italic">Saturn; whence posterity <lb xml:id="l1216"/>reckoned things done in the sea to be under his go<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1217"/>vernment, and mariners honoured him with sacri<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1218"/>fices:</hi> the invention of tall Ships with sails <note n="h">Pamphus <lb xml:id="l1219"/>apud Pau<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1220"/>san. l. 7. c. 21.</note> is <lb xml:id="l1221"/>also ascribed to him. He was first worshipped in <lb xml:id="l1222"/><hi rend="italic">Africa</hi>, as <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> <note n="i">Herod. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l1223"/>c. 50.</note> affirms, and therefore <lb xml:id="l1224"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Reigned</fw><pb xml:id="p232" n="232"/> Reigned over that province: for his eldest son <lb xml:id="l1225"/><hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>, who succeeded him, was not only Lord of <lb xml:id="l1226"/>the Island <hi rend="italic">Atlantis</hi>, but also Reigned over a great <lb xml:id="l1227"/>part of <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>, giving his name to the people <lb xml:id="l1228"/>called <hi rend="italic">Atlantii</hi>, and to the mountain <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1229"/>the <hi rend="italic">Atlantic Ocean</hi>. The <note n="j">Plutarch <lb xml:id="l1230"/>in Iside.</note> outmost parts of the <lb xml:id="l1231"/>earth and promontories, and whatever bordered <lb xml:id="l1232"/>upon the sea and was washed by it, the <hi rend="italic">Egypti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1233"/>ans</hi> called <hi rend="italic">Neptys</hi>; and on the coasts of <hi rend="italic">Marmo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1234"/>rica</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cyrene, Bochart</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Arius Montanus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1235"/>place the <hi rend="italic">Naphthuhim</hi>, a people sprung from <hi rend="italic">Miz<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1236"/>raim, Gen.</hi> x. 13; and thence <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> and his <lb xml:id="l1237"/>wife <hi rend="italic">Neptys</hi> might have their names, the words <lb xml:id="l1238"/><hi rend="italic">Neptune, Neptys</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Naphthuhim</hi>, signifying the <lb xml:id="l1239"/>King, Queen, and people of the sea-coasts. The <lb xml:id="l1240"/><hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> tell us that <hi rend="italic">Japetus</hi> was the father of <lb xml:id="l1241"/><hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Bochart</hi> derives <hi rend="italic">Japetus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> <lb xml:id="l1242"/>from the same original: he and his son <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> <lb xml:id="l1243"/>are celebrated in the ancient fables for making <lb xml:id="l1244"/>war upon the Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; as when <hi rend="italic">Lucian</hi> <lb xml:id="l1245"/><note n="k">Lucian de <lb xml:id="l1246"/>Saltatione.</note> saith that <hi rend="italic">Corinth</hi> being full of fables, tells the <lb xml:id="l1247"/>fight of <hi rend="italic">Sol</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, that is, of <hi rend="italic">Apollo</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1248"/><hi rend="italic">Python</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>; and where <hi rend="italic">Agathar<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1249"/>cides</hi> <note n="l">Agatharc. <lb xml:id="l1250"/>apud Pho<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1251"/>tium.</note> relates how the Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> fled from <lb xml:id="l1252"/>the Giants, 'till the <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi> came in and saved <lb xml:id="l1253"/>them by putting <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> to flight; and where <lb xml:id="l1254"/><hi rend="italic">Hyginus</hi> <note n="m">Hygin. <lb xml:id="l1255"/>Fab. 150.</note> tells the war between the Gods of <lb xml:id="l1256"/><hi rend="italic">Ægypt</hi>, and the <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi> commanded by <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>.</p>
<fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">The</fw><pb xml:id="p233" n="233"/>
<p xml:id="par32">The <hi rend="italic">Titans</hi> are the posterity of <hi rend="italic">Titæa</hi>, some of <lb xml:id="l1257"/>whom under <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> assisted the Gods, others <lb xml:id="l1258"/>under <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> warred against them: <lb xml:id="l1259"/><hi rend="italic">for which reason</hi>, saith <hi rend="italic">Plutarch</hi>, <note n="n">Plutarch. <lb xml:id="l1260"/>in Iside.</note> <hi rend="italic">the Priests of</hi> <lb xml:id="l1261"/>Egypt <hi rend="italic">abominated the sea, and had</hi> Neptune <hi rend="italic">in <lb xml:id="l1262"/>no honour</hi>. By <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi>, I understand here the <lb xml:id="l1263"/>general of the forces of <hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi> <lb xml:id="l1264"/>whom the Gods or great men of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> called <lb xml:id="l1265"/>to their assistance, against the Giants or great <lb xml:id="l1266"/>men of <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, who had slain <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> and invaded <lb xml:id="l1267"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: for <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="o">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1268"/>l. 1. p. 10.</note> saith that <hi rend="italic">when</hi> Osiris <lb xml:id="l1269"/><hi rend="italic">made his expedition over the world, he left his <lb xml:id="l1270"/>kinsman</hi> Hercules <hi rend="italic">general of his forces over all <lb xml:id="l1271"/>his dominions, and</hi> Antæus <hi rend="italic">governor of</hi> Libya <lb xml:id="l1272"/><hi rend="italic">and</hi> Ethiopia. <hi rend="italic">Antæus</hi> Reigned over all <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> to <lb xml:id="l1273"/>the <hi rend="italic">Atlantic Ocean</hi>, and built <hi rend="italic">Tingis</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Tangieres:</hi> <lb xml:id="l1274"/><hi rend="italic">Pindar</hi> <note n="p">Pindar. <lb xml:id="l1275"/>Pyth. Ode 9.</note> tells us that he Reigned at <hi rend="italic">Irasa</hi> a town <lb xml:id="l1276"/>of <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, where <hi rend="italic">Cyrene</hi> was afterwards built: <lb xml:id="l1277"/>he invaded <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi>; for he was beaten <lb xml:id="l1278"/>by <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> and the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> near <hi rend="italic">Antæa</hi> or <lb xml:id="l1279"/><hi rend="italic">Antæopolis</hi>, a town of <hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1280"/><note n="q">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1281"/>l. 1. p. 12.</note> tells us that <hi rend="italic">this town had its name from</hi> An<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1282"/>tæus, <hi rend="italic">whom</hi> Hercules <hi rend="italic">slew in the days of</hi> Osiris. <lb xml:id="l1283"/><hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> overthrew him several times, and every <lb xml:id="l1284"/>time he grew stronger by recruits from <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1285"/>his mother earth; but <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> intercepted his <lb xml:id="l1286"/>recruits, and at length slew him. In these wars <lb xml:id="l1287"/><hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> took the <hi rend="italic">Libyan</hi> world from <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1288"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">made</fw><pb xml:id="p234" n="234"/> made <hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> pay tribute out of his golden or<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1289"/>chard, the Kingdom of <hi rend="italic">Afric. Antæus</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1290"/><hi rend="italic">Atlas</hi> were both of them sons of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>, both <lb xml:id="l1291"/>of them Reigned over all <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>, be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1292"/>tween <hi rend="italic">Mount Atlas</hi> and the <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi> to <lb xml:id="l1293"/>the very Ocean; both of them invaded <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1294"/>and contended with <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> in the wars of the <lb xml:id="l1295"/>Gods, and therefore they are but two names of <lb xml:id="l1296"/>one and the same man; and even the name <hi rend="italic">At<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1297"/>las</hi> in the oblique cases seems to have been com<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1298"/>pounded of the name <hi rend="italic">Antæeus</hi>, and some other <lb xml:id="l1299"/>word, perhaps the word <hi rend="italic">Atal</hi>, cursed, put before <lb xml:id="l1300"/>it: the invasion of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Antæus, Ovid</hi> hath <lb xml:id="l1301"/>relation unto, where he makes <hi rend="italic">Hercules</hi> say,</p>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="italic">Sævoque alimenta parentis <lb xml:id="l1302"/>Antæo eripui.</hi></l>
</lg>
<p xml:id="par33">This war was at length composed by the inter<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1303"/>vention of <hi rend="italic">Mercury</hi>, who in memory thereof <lb xml:id="l1304"/>was said to reconcile two contending serpents, <lb xml:id="l1305"/>by casting his Ambassador's rod between them: <lb xml:id="l1306"/>and thus much concerning the ancient state of <lb xml:id="l1307"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt, Libya</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, described by <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par34">The mythology of the <hi rend="italic">Cretans</hi> differed in some <lb xml:id="l1308"/>things from that of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Libya:</hi> for in <lb xml:id="l1309"/>the <hi rend="italic">Cretan</hi> mythology, <hi rend="italic">Cœlus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Terra</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Ura<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1310"/>nus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Titæa</hi> were the parents of <hi rend="italic">Saturn</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1311"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Rhea,</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p235" n="235"/> <hi rend="italic">Rhea,</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Saturn</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Rhea</hi> were the parents of <lb xml:id="l1312"/><hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Juno</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Hyperion, Japetus</hi> and the <lb xml:id="l1313"/><hi rend="italic">Titans</hi> were one Generation older than <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1314"/>and <hi rend="italic">Saturn</hi> was expelled his Kingdom and ca<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1315"/>strated by his son <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi>: which fable hath no <lb xml:id="l1316"/>place in the mythology of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par35">During the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Sesac, Jeroboam</hi> being <lb xml:id="l1317"/>in subjection to <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, set up the Gods of <lb xml:id="l1318"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Dan</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bethel</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Israel was without <lb xml:id="l1319"/>the true God, and without a teaching Priest and <lb xml:id="l1320"/>without law: and in those times there was no peace <lb xml:id="l1321"/>to him that went out, nor to him that came in, <lb xml:id="l1322"/>but great vexations were upon all the inhabitants <lb xml:id="l1323"/>of the countries; and nation was destroyed of <lb xml:id="l1324"/>nation, and city of city: for God did vex them <lb xml:id="l1325"/>with all adversity</hi>. 2 <hi rend="italic">Chron</hi>. xv. 3, 5, 6. But in <lb xml:id="l1326"/>the fifth year of <hi rend="italic">Asa</hi> the land of <hi rend="italic">Judah</hi> became <lb xml:id="l1327"/>quiet from war, and from thence had quiet <lb xml:id="l1328"/>ten years; and <hi rend="italic">Asa</hi> took away the altars of <lb xml:id="l1329"/>strange Gods, and brake down the Images, and <lb xml:id="l1330"/>built the fenced cities of <hi rend="italic">Judah</hi> with walls and <lb xml:id="l1331"/>towers and gates and bars, having rest on every <lb xml:id="l1332"/>side, and got up an army of 580000 men, <lb xml:id="l1333"/>with which in the fifteenth year of his Reign <lb xml:id="l1334"/>he met <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopian</hi>, who came out a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1335"/>gainst him with an army of a thousand thousand <lb xml:id="l1336"/><hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Libyans</hi>: the way of the <hi rend="italic">Libyans</hi> <lb xml:id="l1337"/>was through <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and therefore <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> was <lb xml:id="l1338"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">now</fw><pb xml:id="p236" n="236"/> now Lord of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: they fought at <hi rend="italic">Mareshah</hi> <lb xml:id="l1339"/>near <hi rend="italic">Gerar</hi>, between <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Ze<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1340"/>rah</hi> was beaten, so that he could not recover <lb xml:id="l1341"/>himself: and from all this I seem to gather that <lb xml:id="l1342"/><hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> was slain in the fifth year of <hi rend="italic">Asa</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1343"/>thereupon <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> fell into civil wars, being in<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1344"/>vaded by the <hi rend="italic">Libyans</hi>, and defended by the <hi rend="italic">E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1345"/>thiopians</hi> for a time; and after ten years more <lb xml:id="l1346"/>being invaded by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, who slew <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1347"/>the son and successor of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>, drowning him <lb xml:id="l1348"/>in the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi>, and seized his Kingdom. By these <lb xml:id="l1349"/>civil wars of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, the land of <hi rend="italic">Judah</hi> had rest <lb xml:id="l1350"/>ten years. <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> reigned long, <hi rend="italic">Ma<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1351"/>netho</hi> saith 48 years; and by this reckoning he <lb xml:id="l1352"/>began to Reign about the 17th year of <hi rend="italic">Solo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1353"/>mon</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> his son was drowned in the 15th <lb xml:id="l1354"/>year of <hi rend="italic">Asa</hi>: for <hi rend="italic">Pliny</hi> <note n="r">Plin. l. 6. <lb xml:id="l1355"/>c. 29.</note> tells us, <hi rend="italic">Ægyptiorum <lb xml:id="l1356"/>bellis attrita est Æthiopia, vicissim imperitando ser<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1357"/>viendoque, clara &amp; potens etiam usque ad Trojana <lb xml:id="l1358"/>bella Memnone regnante. Ethiopia</hi>, served <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1359"/>'till the death of <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>, and no longer; for <lb xml:id="l1360"/><hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> <note n="s">Herod. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l1361"/>c. 110.</note> tells us that <hi rend="italic">he alone enjoyed the <lb xml:id="l1362"/>Empire of</hi> Ethiopia: then the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> became <lb xml:id="l1363"/>free, and after ten years became Lords of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1364"/>and <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi>, under <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par36">When <hi rend="italic">Asa</hi> by his victory over <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> became <lb xml:id="l1365"/>safe from <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, he assembled all the people, <lb xml:id="l1366"/>and they offered sacrifices out of the spoils, and <lb xml:id="l1367"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">entered</fw><pb xml:id="p237" n="237"/> entered into a covenant upon oath to seek the <lb xml:id="l1368"/>Lord; and in lieu of the vessels taken away by <lb xml:id="l1369"/><hi rend="italic">Sesac, he brought into the house of God the things <lb xml:id="l1370"/>that his father had dedicated, and that he <lb xml:id="l1371"/>himself had dedicated, Silver and Gold, and Vessels</hi>. <lb xml:id="l1372"/>2 <hi rend="italic">Chron.</hi> xv.</p>
<p xml:id="par37">When <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> was beaten, so that he could not <lb xml:id="l1373"/>recover himself, the people <note n="t">Manetho <lb xml:id="l1374"/>apud Jose<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1375"/>phum cont. <lb xml:id="l1376"/>Apion. <lb xml:id="l1377"/>p. 1052, <lb xml:id="l1378"/>1053.</note> of the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1379"/>revolted from the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, and called in to <lb xml:id="l1380"/>their assistance two hundred thousand <hi rend="italic">Jews</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1381"/><hi rend="italic">Canaanites</hi>; and under the conduct of one <hi rend="italic">Osar<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1382"/>siphus</hi>, a Priest of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, called <hi rend="italic">Usorthon, Osor<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1383"/>chon, Osorchor</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Hercules Ægyptius</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Mane<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1384"/>tho</hi>, caused the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> now under <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi> to <lb xml:id="l1385"/>retire to <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>: and there <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi> turned the <lb xml:id="l1386"/>river <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi> into a new channel, built a bridge <lb xml:id="l1387"/>over it and fortified that pass, and then went <lb xml:id="l1388"/>back into <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>: but after thirteen years, he <lb xml:id="l1389"/>and his young son <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> came down with <lb xml:id="l1390"/>an army from <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, conquered the lower <lb xml:id="l1391"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and drove out the <hi rend="italic">Jews</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Phœnicians</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1392"/>and this action the <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> writers and their <lb xml:id="l1393"/>followers call the second expulsion of the Shep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1394"/>herds, taking <hi rend="italic">Osarsiphus</hi> for <hi rend="italic">Moses</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par38"><hi rend="italic">Tithonus</hi> a beautiful youth, the elder brother <lb xml:id="l1395"/>of <hi rend="italic">Priamus</hi>, went into <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, being carried <lb xml:id="l1396"/>thither among many captives by <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>: and <lb xml:id="l1397"/>the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, before the days of <hi rend="italic">Hesiod</hi>, feigned <lb xml:id="l1398"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">that</fw><pb xml:id="p238" n="238"/> that <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi> was his son: <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi> therefore, in <lb xml:id="l1399"/>the opinion of those ancient <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, was one <lb xml:id="l1400"/>Generation younger than <hi rend="italic">Tithonus</hi>, and was <lb xml:id="l1401"/>born after the return of <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>: <lb xml:id="l1402"/>suppose about 16 or 20 years after the death of <lb xml:id="l1403"/><hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>. He is said to have lived very long, and <lb xml:id="l1404"/>so might die about 95 years after <hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>, as <lb xml:id="l1405"/>we reckoned above: his mother, called <hi rend="italic">Cissia</hi> by <lb xml:id="l1406"/><hi rend="italic">Æschylus</hi>, in a statue erected to her in <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1407"/><note n="u">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1408"/>l. 1. p. 31.</note> was represented as the daughter, the wife, and <lb xml:id="l1409"/>the mother of a King, and therefore he was <lb xml:id="l1410"/>the son of a King; which makes it probable <lb xml:id="l1411"/>that <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi>, whom he succeeded in the Kingdom <lb xml:id="l1412"/>of <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, was his father.</p>
<p xml:id="par39">Historians <note n="x">Herod. l. 2.</note> agree that <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> Reigned in <hi rend="italic">E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1413"/>gypt</hi> next after the Gods, and turned the river <lb xml:id="l1414"/>into a new channel, and built a bridge over it, <lb xml:id="l1415"/>and built <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> and the magnificent Temple <lb xml:id="l1416"/>of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>: he built <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> over-against the <lb xml:id="l1417"/>place where <hi rend="italic">Grand Cairo</hi> now stands, called by <lb xml:id="l1418"/>the <hi rend="italic">Arabian</hi> historians <hi rend="italic">Mesir</hi>: he built only the <lb xml:id="l1419"/>body of the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>, and his succes<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1420"/>sors <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Rhampsinitus, Mæris, Asychis</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1421"/>and <hi rend="italic">Psammiticus</hi> built the western, northern <lb xml:id="l1422"/>eastern, and southern portico's thereof: <hi rend="italic">Psammi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1423"/>ticus</hi>, who built the last portico of this Temple, <lb xml:id="l1424"/>Reigned three hundred years after the victory of <lb xml:id="l1425"/><hi rend="italic">Asa</hi> over <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi>, and it is not likely that this <lb xml:id="l1426"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Temple</fw><pb xml:id="p239" n="239"/> Temple could be above three hundred years in <lb xml:id="l1427"/>building, or that any <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> could be King of <lb xml:id="l1428"/>all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> before the expulsion of the Shepherds. <lb xml:id="l1429"/>The last of the Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> was <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi>, with <lb xml:id="l1430"/>his mother <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi>, and sister <hi rend="italic">Bubaste</hi>, and secretary <lb xml:id="l1431"/><hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi>, and unkle <hi rend="italic">Typhon</hi>; and the King who <lb xml:id="l1432"/>reigned next after all their deaths, and turned <lb xml:id="l1433"/>the river and built a bridge over it, and built <lb xml:id="l1434"/><hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> and the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>, was <hi rend="italic">Mem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1435"/>non</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>, called by the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians Ame<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1436"/>noph</hi>; and therefore he is <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi>: for the names <lb xml:id="l1437"/><hi rend="italic">Amenoph</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Menoph</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> do not much <lb xml:id="l1438"/>differ; and from <hi rend="italic">Amenoph</hi> the city <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> <lb xml:id="l1439"/>built by <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> had its <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> names <hi rend="italic">Moph, <lb xml:id="l1440"/>Noph, Menoph</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Menuf</hi>, as it is still called by <lb xml:id="l1441"/>the <hi rend="italic">Arabian</hi> historians: the necessity of fortify<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1442"/>ing this place against <hi rend="italic">Osarsiphus</hi> gave occasion to <lb xml:id="l1443"/>the building of it.</p>
<p xml:id="par40">In the time of the revolt of the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1444"/>under <hi rend="italic">Osarsiphus</hi>, and the retirement of <hi rend="italic">Ameno<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1445"/>phis</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia, Egypt</hi> being then in the <lb xml:id="l1446"/>greatest distraction, the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi> built the ship <lb xml:id="l1447"/><hi rend="italic">Argo</hi>, and sent in it the flower of <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi> to <lb xml:id="l1448"/><hi rend="italic">Æetes</hi> in <hi rend="italic">Colchis</hi>, and to many other Princes on <lb xml:id="l1449"/>the coasts of the <hi rend="italic">Euxine</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi> seas; <lb xml:id="l1450"/>and this ship was built after the pattern of an <lb xml:id="l1451"/><hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> ship with fifty oars, in which <hi rend="italic">Danaus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1452"/>with his fifty daughters a few years before fled <lb xml:id="l1453"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">from</fw><pb xml:id="p240" n="240"/> from <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi> and was the first long <lb xml:id="l1454"/>ship with sails built by the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>: and such an <lb xml:id="l1455"/>improvement of navigation, with a design to <lb xml:id="l1456"/>send the flower of <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi> to many Princes upon <lb xml:id="l1457"/>the sea-coasts of the <hi rend="italic">Euxine</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi> <lb xml:id="l1458"/>seas, was too great an undertaking to be set on <lb xml:id="l1459"/>foot, without the concurrence of the Princes and <lb xml:id="l1460"/>States of <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and perhaps the approbation of <lb xml:id="l1461"/>the <hi rend="italic">Amphictyonic</hi> Council; for it was done by <lb xml:id="l1462"/>the dictate of the Oracle. This Council met <lb xml:id="l1463"/>every half year upon state-affairs for the welfare <lb xml:id="l1464"/>of <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>, and therefore knew of this expedi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1465"/>tion, and might send the <hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi> upon an <lb xml:id="l1466"/>embassy to the said Princes; and for concealing <lb xml:id="l1467"/>their design might make the fable of the golden <lb xml:id="l1468"/>fleece, in relation to the ship of <hi rend="italic">Phrixus</hi> whose <lb xml:id="l1469"/>ensign was a golden ram: and probably their <lb xml:id="l1470"/>design was to notify the distraction of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1471"/>and the invasion thereof by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1472"/><hi rend="italic">Israelites</hi>, to the said Princes, and to persuade <lb xml:id="l1473"/>them to take that opportunity to revolt from <lb xml:id="l1474"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and set up for themselves, and make a <lb xml:id="l1475"/>league with the <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>: for the <hi rend="italic">Argonauts</hi> went <lb xml:id="l1476"/>through <note n="y">Strabo. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l1477"/>p. 48.</note> the Kingdom of <hi rend="italic">Colchis</hi> by land to the <lb xml:id="l1478"/><hi rend="italic">Armenians</hi>, and through <hi rend="italic">Armenia</hi> to the <hi rend="italic">Medes</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1479"/>which could not have been done if they had <lb xml:id="l1480"/>not made friendship with the nations through <lb xml:id="l1481"/>which they passed<hi rend="italic">:</hi> they visited also <hi rend="italic">Laomedon</hi> <lb xml:id="l1482"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">King</fw><pb xml:id="p241" n="241"/>King of the <hi rend="italic">Trojans, Phineus</hi> King of the <hi rend="italic">Thra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1483"/>cians, Cyzicus</hi> King of the <hi rend="italic">Doliones, Lycus</hi> King <lb xml:id="l1484"/>of the <hi rend="italic">Mariandyni</hi>, the coasts of <hi rend="italic">Mysia</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1485"/><hi rend="italic">Taurica Chersonesus</hi>, the nations upon the <lb xml:id="l1486"/><hi rend="italic">Tanais</hi>, the people about <hi rend="italic">Byzantium</hi>, and the <lb xml:id="l1487"/>coasts of <hi rend="italic">Epirus, Corsica, Melita, Italy, Sicily, <lb xml:id="l1488"/>Sardinia</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Gallia</hi> upon the <hi rend="italic">Mediterranean</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1489"/>and from thence they <note n="z">Pindar. <lb xml:id="l1490"/>Pyth. Ode 4.</note> crossed the sea to <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1491"/>and there conferred with <hi rend="italic">Euripylus</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Cy<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1492"/>rene</hi>: and <note n="a">Strabo. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l1493"/>p. 21, 45, 46.</note> <hi rend="italic">Strabo</hi> tells us that <hi rend="italic">in</hi> Armenia <hi rend="italic">and</hi> <lb xml:id="l1494"/>Media, <hi rend="italic">and the neighbouring places, there were <lb xml:id="l1495"/>frequent monuments of the expedition of </hi>Ja<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1496"/>son; <hi rend="italic">as also about </hi>Sinope, <hi rend="italic">and its sea-coasts; the</hi> <lb xml:id="l1497"/>Propontis <hi rend="italic">and the</hi> Hellespont, <hi rend="italic">and in the</hi> Medi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1498"/>terranean: and a message by the flower of <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi> <lb xml:id="l1499"/>to so many nations could be on no other ac<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1500"/>count than state-policy; these nations had been <lb xml:id="l1501"/>invaded by the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, but after this expedi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1502"/>tion we hear no more of their continuing in <lb xml:id="l1503"/>subjection to <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par41">The <note n="b">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1504"/>l. 1. p. 29.</note> <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> originally lived on the fruits <lb xml:id="l1505"/>of the earth, and fared hardly, and abstained from <lb xml:id="l1506"/>animals, and therefore abominated Shepherds: <lb xml:id="l1507"/><hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> taught them to adorn their beds and <lb xml:id="l1508"/>tables with rich furniture and carpets, and <lb xml:id="l1509"/>brought in amongst them a sumptuous, delicious <lb xml:id="l1510"/>and voluptuous way of life: and about a hun<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1511"/>dred years after his death, <hi rend="italic">Gnephacthus</hi> one of his <lb xml:id="l1512"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">successors</fw><pb xml:id="p242" n="242"/>successors cursed him for it, and to reduce the <lb xml:id="l1513"/>luxury of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, caused the curse to be entered <lb xml:id="l1514"/>in the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>; and by this <lb xml:id="l1515"/>curse the honour of <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> was diminished a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1516"/>mong the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par42">The Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> who expelled the Shep<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1517"/>herds and succeeded them, Reigned I think <lb xml:id="l1518"/>first at <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi>, and then at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and then at <lb xml:id="l1519"/><hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>. At <hi rend="italic">Coptos</hi> I place <hi rend="italic">Misphragmuthosis</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1520"/><hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Thomosis</hi> who expelled the Shepherds, <lb xml:id="l1521"/>and abolished their custom of sacrificing men, <lb xml:id="l1522"/>and extended the <hi rend="italic">Coptic</hi> language, and the name <lb xml:id="l1523"/>of <foreign xml:lang="gre">Αια Κόπτου</foreign>, <hi rend="italic">Ægyptus</hi>, to the conquest. Then <lb xml:id="l1524"/><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> became the Royal City of <hi rend="italic">Ammon</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1525"/>from him was called <hi rend="italic">No-Ammon</hi>, and his con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1526"/>quest on the west of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> was called <hi rend="italic">Ammonia</hi>. <lb xml:id="l1527"/>After him, in the same city of <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, Reigned <hi rend="italic">O<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1528"/>siris, Orus, Menes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Ramesses:</hi> <lb xml:id="l1529"/>but <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> and her miracles were not yet ce<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1530"/>lebrated in <hi rend="italic">Greece</hi>; for <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> celebrates <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> as <lb xml:id="l1531"/>in its glory in his days, and makes no mention <lb xml:id="l1532"/>of <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>. After <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> had built <hi rend="italic">Memphis, <lb xml:id="l1533"/>Mœris</hi> the successor of <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> adorned it, and <lb xml:id="l1534"/>made it the seat of the Kingdom, and this was <lb xml:id="l1535"/>almost two Generations after the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war. <lb xml:id="l1536"/><hi rend="italic">Cinyras</hi>, the <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> who married <hi rend="italic">Venus</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1537"/>under the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> Reigned over <hi rend="italic">Cyprus</hi> <lb xml:id="l1538"/>and part of <hi rend="italic">Phœnicia</hi>, and made armour for those <lb xml:id="l1539"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">Kings,</fw><pb xml:id="p243" n="243"/>Kings, lived 'till the times of the <hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> <lb xml:id="l1540"/>war: and upon his death <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi> <lb xml:id="l1541"/>might Deify him, and found the famous Tem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1542"/>ple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> in that city for his worship, but <lb xml:id="l1543"/>not live to finish it. In a plain <note n="c">Manetho</note> not far <lb xml:id="l1544"/>from <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> are many small Pyramids, said to <lb xml:id="l1545"/>be built by <hi rend="italic">Venephes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Enephes</hi>; and I suspect <lb xml:id="l1546"/>that <hi rend="italic">Venephes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Enephes</hi> have been corruptly <lb xml:id="l1547"/>written for <hi rend="italic">Menephes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>, the letters <lb xml:id="l1548"/><hi rend="italic">AM</hi> being almost worn out in some old ma<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1549"/>nuscript: for after the example of these Pyra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1550"/>mids, the following Kings, <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> and his suc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1551"/>cessors, built others much larger. The plain in <lb xml:id="l1552"/>which they were built was the burying-place of <lb xml:id="l1553"/>that city, as appears by the Mummies there <lb xml:id="l1554"/>found; and therefore the Pyramids were the <lb xml:id="l1555"/>sepulchral monuments of the Kings and Princes <lb xml:id="l1556"/>of that city: and by these and such like works <lb xml:id="l1557"/>the city grew famous soon after the days of <lb xml:id="l1558"/><hi rend="italic">Homer</hi>; who therefore flourished in the Reign of <lb xml:id="l1559"/><hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par43"><hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> <note n="d">Herod. l. 2</note> is the oldest historian now extant <lb xml:id="l1560"/>who wrote of the antiquities of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and had <lb xml:id="l1561"/>what he wrote from the Priests of that country: <lb xml:id="l1562"/>and <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi>, who wrote almost 400 years after <lb xml:id="l1563"/>him, and had his relations also from the Priests <lb xml:id="l1564"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, placed many nameless Kings be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1565"/>tween those whom <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> placed in continual <lb xml:id="l1566"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">succession.</fw><pb xml:id="p244" n="244"/>succession. The Priests of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> had therefore, <lb xml:id="l1567"/>between the days of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi>, out <lb xml:id="l1568"/>of vanity, very much increased the number of <lb xml:id="l1569"/>their Kings: and what they did after the days <lb xml:id="l1570"/>of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>, they began to do before his days; <lb xml:id="l1571"/>for he tells us that they recited to him out of their <lb xml:id="l1572"/>books, the names of 330 Kings who Reigned <lb xml:id="l1573"/>after <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi>, but did nothing memorable, except <lb xml:id="l1574"/><hi rend="italic">Nitocris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> the last of them: all these <lb xml:id="l1575"/>Reigned at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, 'till <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> translated the seat <lb xml:id="l1576"/>of the Empire from <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>. After <lb xml:id="l1577"/><hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> he reckons <hi rend="italic">Sesostris, Pheron, Proteus, <lb xml:id="l1578"/>Rhampsinitus, Cheops, Cephren, Mycerinus, Asychis, <lb xml:id="l1579"/>Anysis, Sabacon, Anysis</hi> again, <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, twelve <lb xml:id="l1580"/>contemporary Kings, <hi rend="italic">Psammitichus, Nechus, <lb xml:id="l1581"/>Psammis, Apries, Amasis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Psammenitus</hi>. The <lb xml:id="l1582"/><hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> had before the days of <hi rend="italic">Solon</hi> made <lb xml:id="l1583"/>their monarchy 9000 years old, and now they <lb xml:id="l1584"/>reckon'd to <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> a succession of 330 Kings <lb xml:id="l1585"/>Reigning so many Generations, that is about <lb xml:id="l1586"/>11000 years, before <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>: but the Kings who <lb xml:id="l1587"/>Reigned long before <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> might Reign over <lb xml:id="l1588"/>several little Kingdoms in several parts of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1589"/>before the rise of their Monarchy; and by con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1590"/>sequence before the days of <hi rend="italic">Eli</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Samuel</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1591"/>so are not under our consideration: and these <lb xml:id="l1592"/>names may have been multiplied by corruption; <lb xml:id="l1593"/>and some of them, as <hi rend="italic">Athothes</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Thoth</hi>, the <lb xml:id="l1594"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">secretary</fw><pb xml:id="p245" n="245"/>secretary of <hi rend="italic">Osiris</hi>; <hi rend="italic">Tosorthrus</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Æsculapius</hi> a <lb xml:id="l1595"/>Physician who invented building with square <lb xml:id="l1596"/>stones; and <hi rend="italic">Thuor</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Polybus</hi> the husband of <lb xml:id="l1597"/><hi rend="italic">Alcandra</hi>, were only Princes of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>. If with <lb xml:id="l1598"/><hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> we omit the names of those Kings <lb xml:id="l1599"/>who did nothing memorable, and consider only <lb xml:id="l1600"/>those whose actions are recorded, and who left <lb xml:id="l1601"/>splendid monuments of their having Reigned <lb xml:id="l1602"/>over <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, such as were Temples, Statues, <lb xml:id="l1603"/>Pyramids, Obelisks, and Palaces dedicated or as<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1604"/>cribed to them, these Kings reduced into good <lb xml:id="l1605"/>order will give us all or almost all the Kings <lb xml:id="l1606"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, from the days of the expulsion of the <lb xml:id="l1607"/>Shepherds and founding of the Monarchy, <lb xml:id="l1608"/>downwards to the conquest of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Cam<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1609"/>byses:</hi> for <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi> Reigned in the Age of the <lb xml:id="l1610"/>Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, being Deified by the names of <lb xml:id="l1611"/><hi rend="italic">Osiris, Hercules</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Bacchus</hi>, as above; and <lb xml:id="l1612"/>therefore <hi rend="italic">Menes, Nitocris</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> are to be <lb xml:id="l1613"/>placed after him; <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> and his son <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> <lb xml:id="l1614"/>Reigned next after the Gods, and therefore <hi rend="italic">Ni<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1615"/>tocris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> Reigned after <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi>: <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> <lb xml:id="l1616"/>is set down immediately before <hi rend="italic">Cheops</hi>, three <lb xml:id="l1617"/>times in the Dynastys of the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1618"/>composed by <hi rend="italic">Eratosthenes</hi>, and once in the Dy<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1619"/>nasties of <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi>; and in the same Dynasties <lb xml:id="l1620"/><hi rend="italic">Nitocris</hi> is set after the builders of the three <lb xml:id="l1621"/>great Pyramids, and according to <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> her <lb xml:id="l1622"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">brother</fw><pb xml:id="p246" n="246"/>brother Reigned before her, and was slain, and <lb xml:id="l1623"/>she revenged his death; and according to <hi rend="italic">Syn<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1624"/>cellus</hi> she built the third great Pyramid; and the <lb xml:id="l1625"/>builders of the Pyramids Reigned at <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1626"/>and by consequence after <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>. Now from <lb xml:id="l1627"/>these things I gather that the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1628"/>mentioned by <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> ought to be placed in <lb xml:id="l1629"/>this order; <hi rend="italic">Sesostris, Pheron, Proteus, Menes, <lb xml:id="l1630"/>Rhampsinitus, Mœris, Cheops, Cephren, Mycerinus, <lb xml:id="l1631"/>Nitocris, Asychis, Anysis, Sabacon, Anysis</hi> a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1632"/>gain, <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, twelve contemporary Kings, <hi rend="italic">Psam<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1633"/>mitichus, Nechus, Psammis, Apries, Amasis, Psammenitus</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par44"><hi rend="italic">Pheron</hi> is by <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> said to be the son and <lb xml:id="l1634"/>successor of <hi rend="italic">Sesostris</hi>. He was Deified by the name <lb xml:id="l1635"/>of <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par45"><hi rend="italic">Proteus</hi> Reigned in the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> when <lb xml:id="l1636"/><hi rend="italic">Paris</hi> sailed thither; that is at the end of the <lb xml:id="l1637"/><hi rend="italic">Trojan</hi> war, according to <note n="e">Herod. l. 2.</note> <hi rend="italic">Herodotus:</hi> and at <lb xml:id="l1638"/>that time <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> was King of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1639"/>thiopia</hi>: but in his absence <hi rend="italic">Proteus</hi> might be <lb xml:id="l1640"/>governor of some part of the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> un<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1641"/>der him; for <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> places <hi rend="italic">Proteus</hi> upon the sea-<lb xml:id="l1642"/>coasts, and makes him a sea God, and calls <lb xml:id="l1643"/>him the servant of <hi rend="italic">Neptune</hi>; and <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> saith <lb xml:id="l1644"/>that he rose up from among the common peo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1645"/>ple, and that <hi rend="italic">Proteus</hi> was his name translated <lb xml:id="l1646"/>into <hi rend="italic">Greek</hi>, and this name in <hi rend="italic">Greek</hi> signifies only <lb xml:id="l1647"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">a</fw><pb xml:id="p247" n="247"/>a Prince or President. He succeeded <hi rend="italic">Pheron</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1648"/>was succeeded by <hi rend="italic">Rhampsinitus</hi> according to <hi rend="italic">He<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1649"/>rodotus</hi>; and so was contemporary to <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par46"><hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> Reigned next after <hi rend="italic">Orus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Isis</hi> <lb xml:id="l1650"/>the last of the Gods; he Reigned at first over <lb xml:id="l1651"/>all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and then over <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> and the up<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1652"/>per parts of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>; and by conquering <hi rend="italic">Osarsi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1653"/>phus</hi>, who had revolted from him, became King <lb xml:id="l1654"/>of all <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> again, about 51 years after the <lb xml:id="l1655"/>death of <hi rend="italic">Solomon</hi>. He built <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> and ordered <lb xml:id="l1656"/>the worship of the Gods of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and built a <lb xml:id="l1657"/>Palace at <hi rend="italic">Abydus</hi>, and the <hi rend="italic">Memnonia</hi> at <hi rend="italic">This</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1658"/><hi rend="italic">Susa</hi>, and the magnificent Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> in <lb xml:id="l1659"/><hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>; the building with square stones being <lb xml:id="l1660"/>found out before by <hi rend="italic">Tosorthrus</hi>, the <hi rend="italic">Æsculapius</hi> of <lb xml:id="l1661"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt:</hi> he is by corruption of his name called <lb xml:id="l1662"/><hi rend="italic">Menes, Mines, Minæus, Mineus, Minies, Mnevis, <lb xml:id="l1663"/>Enephes, Venephes, Phamenophis, Osymanthyas, Osi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1664"/>mandes, Ismandes, Imandes, Memnon, Arminon.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par47"><hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> was succeeded by his son, called by <lb xml:id="l1665"/><hi rend="italic">Herodotus, Rhampsinitus</hi>, and by others <hi rend="italic">Ramses, <lb xml:id="l1666"/>Ramises, Rameses, Ramesses</hi>, <note n="f">Ammian. <lb xml:id="l1667"/>l. 17. c. 4.</note> <hi rend="italic">Ramestes, Rhampses, <lb xml:id="l1668"/>Remphis</hi>. Upon an Obelisk erected by this King <lb xml:id="l1669"/>in <hi rend="italic">Heliopolis</hi>, and sent to <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> by the Emperor <lb xml:id="l1670"/><hi rend="italic">Constantius</hi>, was an inscription, interpreted by <lb xml:id="l1671"/><hi rend="italic">Hermapion</hi> an <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> Priest, expressing that <lb xml:id="l1672"/>the King was long lived, and Reigned over a <lb xml:id="l1673"/>great part of the earth: and <hi rend="italic">Strabo</hi>, <note n="g">Strabo. <lb xml:id="l1674"/>l. 17. p. 817.</note> an eye-wit<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1675"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">ness,</fw><pb xml:id="p248" n="248"/>ness, tells us, that in the monuments of the <lb xml:id="l1676"/>Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, above the <hi rend="italic">Memnonium</hi> were in<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1677"/>scriptions upon Obelisks, expressing the riches of <lb xml:id="l1678"/>the Kings, and their Reigning as far as <hi rend="italic">Scythia, <lb xml:id="l1679"/>Bactria, India</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ionia</hi>: and <hi rend="italic">Tacitus</hi> <note n="h">Annal. l. 2. <lb xml:id="l1680"/>c. 60.</note> tells us <lb xml:id="l1681"/>from an inscription seen at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Cæsar Ger<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1682"/>manicus</hi>, and interpreted to him by the <hi rend="italic">Egypti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1683"/>an</hi> Priests, that this King <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> had an army <lb xml:id="l1684"/>of 700000 men, and Reigned over <hi rend="italic">Libya, E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1685"/>thiopia, Media, Persia, Bactria, Scythia, Arme<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1686"/>nia, Cappadocia, Bithynia</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Lycia</hi>; whence <lb xml:id="l1687"/>the Monarchy of <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi> was not yet risen. <lb xml:id="l1688"/>This King was very covetous, and a great col<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1689"/>lector of taxes, and one of the richest of all <lb xml:id="l1690"/>the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and built the western por<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1691"/>tico of the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par48"><hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> inheriting the riches of <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1692"/>built the northern portico of that Temple more <lb xml:id="l1693"/>sumptuously, and made the Lake of <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1694"/>with two great Pyramids of brick in the midst <lb xml:id="l1695"/>of it: and for preserving the division of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> <lb xml:id="l1696"/>into equal shares amongst the soldiers, this King <lb xml:id="l1697"/>wrote a book of surveying, which gave a be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1698"/>ginning to Geometry. He is called also <hi rend="italic">Maris, <lb xml:id="l1699"/>Myris, Meres, Marres, Smarres</hi>; and more cor<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1700"/>ruptly, by changing <foreign xml:lang="gre">Μ</foreign> into <foreign xml:lang="gre">Α, Τ, Β, Σ, ΥΧ, Λ</foreign>, <lb xml:id="l1701"/>&amp;c. <hi rend="italic">Ayres, Tyris, Byires, Soris, Uchoreus, La<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1702"/>chares, Labaris</hi>, &amp;c.</p>
<fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p249" n="249"/>
<p xml:id="par49"><hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="i">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1703"/>l. 1. p. 32.</note> places <hi rend="italic">Uchoreus</hi> between <hi rend="italic">Osymanduas</hi> <lb xml:id="l1704"/>and <hi rend="italic">Myris</hi>, that is between <hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mœ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1705"/>ris</hi>, and saith that he built <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>, and fortified <lb xml:id="l1706"/>it to admiration with a mighty rampart of <lb xml:id="l1707"/>earth, and a broad and deep trench, which was <lb xml:id="l1708"/>filled with the water of the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi>, and made <lb xml:id="l1709"/>there a vast and deep Lake for receiving the <lb xml:id="l1710"/>water of the <hi rend="italic">Nile</hi> in the time of its overflowing, <lb xml:id="l1711"/>and built palaces in the city; and that this <lb xml:id="l1712"/>place was so commodiously seated that most of <lb xml:id="l1713"/>the Kings who Reigned after him preferred it <lb xml:id="l1714"/>before <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and removed the Court from <lb xml:id="l1715"/>thence to this place, so that the magnificence of <lb xml:id="l1716"/><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> from that time began to decrease, and <lb xml:id="l1717"/>that of <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi> to increase, 'till <hi rend="italic">Alexander</hi> King <lb xml:id="l1718"/>of <hi rend="italic">Macedon</hi> built <hi rend="italic">Alexandria</hi>. These great works <lb xml:id="l1719"/>of <hi rend="italic">Uchoreus</hi> and those of <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> favour of one <lb xml:id="l1720"/>and the same genius, and were certainly done <lb xml:id="l1721"/>by one and the same King, distinguished into <lb xml:id="l1722"/>two by a corruption of the name as above; for <lb xml:id="l1723"/>this Lake of <hi rend="italic">Uchoreus</hi> was certainly the same with <lb xml:id="l1724"/>that of <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par50">After the example of the two brick Pyramids <lb xml:id="l1725"/>made by <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>, the three next Kings, <hi rend="italic">Cheops, <lb xml:id="l1726"/>Cephren</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Mycerinus</hi> built the three great Py<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1727"/>ramids at <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>; and therefore Reigned in <lb xml:id="l1728"/>that city. <hi rend="italic">Cheops</hi> shut up the Temples of the <lb xml:id="l1729"/><hi rend="italic">Nomes</hi>, and prohibited the worship of the Gods <lb xml:id="l1730"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">of</fw><pb xml:id="p250" n="250"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, designing no doubt to have been <lb xml:id="l1731"/>worshipped himself after death<hi rend="italic">:</hi> he is called also <lb xml:id="l1732"/><hi rend="italic">Chembis, Chemmis, Chemnis, Phiops, Apathus, A<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1733"/>pappus, Suphis, Saophis, Syphoas, Syphaosis, Soi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1734"/>phis, Syphuris, Anoiphis, Anoisis</hi>: he built the <lb xml:id="l1735"/>biggest of the three great Pyramids which stand <lb xml:id="l1736"/>together; and his brother <hi rend="italic">Cephren</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Cerpheres</hi> <lb xml:id="l1737"/>built the second, and his son <hi rend="italic">Mycerinus</hi> founded <lb xml:id="l1738"/>the third: this last King was celebrated for cle<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1739"/>mency and justice; he shut up the dead body <lb xml:id="l1740"/>of his daughter in a hollow ox, and caused her <lb xml:id="l1741"/>to be worshipped daily with odours: he is cal<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1742"/>led also <hi rend="italic">Cheres, Cherinus, Bicheres, Moscheres, <lb xml:id="l1743"/>Mencheres</hi>. He died before the third Pyramid <lb xml:id="l1744"/>was finished, and his sister and successor <hi rend="italic">Nitocris</hi> <lb xml:id="l1745"/>finished it.</p>
<p xml:id="par51">Then Reigned <hi rend="italic">Asychis</hi>, who built the eastern <lb xml:id="l1746"/>portico of the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi> very splendid<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1747"/>ly, and among the small Pyramids a large Py<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1748"/>ramid of brick, made of mud dug out of the <lb xml:id="l1749"/>Lake of <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>: and these are the Kings who <lb xml:id="l1750"/>Reigned at <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>, and spent their time in <lb xml:id="l1751"/>adorning that city, until the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> and the <lb xml:id="l1752"/><hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> and others revolted, and <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> lost <lb xml:id="l1753"/>all her dominion abroad, and became again <lb xml:id="l1754"/>divided into several small Kingdoms.</p>
<p xml:id="par52">One of those Kingdoms was I think at <hi rend="italic">Mem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1755"/>phis</hi>, under <hi rend="italic">Gnephactus</hi>, and his son and successor <lb xml:id="l1756"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Bocchoris</hi>.</fw><pb xml:id="p251" n="251"/><hi rend="italic">Bocchoris. Africanus</hi> calls <hi rend="italic">Bocchoris</hi> a <hi rend="italic">Saite</hi>; but <lb xml:id="l1757"/><hi rend="italic">Sais</hi> at this time had other Kings: <hi rend="italic">Gnephactus</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1758"/>otherwise called <hi rend="italic">Neochabis</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Technatis</hi>, cursed <lb xml:id="l1759"/><hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> for his luxury, and caused the curse to <lb xml:id="l1760"/>be entered in the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Jupiter</hi> at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1761"/>and therefore Reigned over <hi rend="italic">Thebais</hi>: and <hi rend="italic">Boc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1762"/>choris</hi> sent in a wild bull upon the God <hi rend="italic">Mnevis</hi> <lb xml:id="l1763"/>which was worshipped at <hi rend="italic">Heliopolis</hi>. Another of <lb xml:id="l1764"/>those Kingdoms was at <hi rend="italic">Anysis</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Hanes, Isa.</hi> <lb xml:id="l1765"/>xxx. 4. under its King <hi rend="italic">Anysis</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Amosis</hi>; a <lb xml:id="l1766"/>third was at <hi rend="italic">Sais</hi>, under <hi rend="italic">Stephanathis, Nechepsos</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1767"/>and <hi rend="italic">Nechus</hi>; and a fourth was at <hi rend="italic">Tanis</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Zoan</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1768"/>under <hi rend="italic">Petubastes, Osorchon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Psammis:</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1769"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> being weakened by this division, was in<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1770"/>vaded and conquered by the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> under <lb xml:id="l1771"/><hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi>, who slew <hi rend="italic">Bocchoris</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Nechus</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1772"/>made <hi rend="italic">Anysis</hi> fly. The Olympiads began in the <lb xml:id="l1773"/>Reign of <hi rend="italic">Petubastes</hi>, and the <hi rend="italic">Æra</hi> of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi> <lb xml:id="l1774"/>in the 22d year of the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Bocchoris</hi>, ac<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1775"/>cording to <hi rend="italic">Africanus</hi>; and therefore the division <lb xml:id="l1776"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into many Kingdoms began before the <lb xml:id="l1777"/>Olympiads, but not above the length of two <lb xml:id="l1778"/>Kings Reigns before them.</p>
<p xml:id="par53">After the study of Astronomy was set on foot <lb xml:id="l1779"/>for the use of navigation, and the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> by <lb xml:id="l1780"/>the Heliacal Risings and Settings of the Stars <lb xml:id="l1781"/>had determined the length of the Solar year of <lb xml:id="l1782"/>365 days, and by other observations had fixed <lb xml:id="l1783"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">the</fw><pb xml:id="p252" n="252"/>the Solstices, and formed the fixt Stars into <lb xml:id="l1784"/>Asterisms, all which was done in the Reign of <lb xml:id="l1785"/><hi rend="italic">Ammon, Sesac, Orus</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Memnon</hi>; it may be <lb xml:id="l1786"/>presumed that they continued to observe the <lb xml:id="l1787"/>motions of the Planets; for they called them <lb xml:id="l1788"/>after the names of their Gods; and <hi rend="italic">Nechepsos</hi> or <lb xml:id="l1789"/><hi rend="italic">Nicepsos</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Sais</hi>, by the assistance of <hi rend="italic">Pe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1790"/>tosiris</hi> a Priest of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, invented Astrology, <lb xml:id="l1791"/>grounding it upon the aspects of the Planets, <lb xml:id="l1792"/>and the qualities of the men and women to <lb xml:id="l1793"/>whom they were dedicated: and in the begin<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1794"/>ning of the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Baby<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1795"/>lon</hi>, about which time the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> under <hi rend="italic">Sa<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1796"/>bacon</hi> invaded <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, those <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> who fled <lb xml:id="l1797"/>from him to <hi rend="italic">Babylon</hi>, carried thither the <hi rend="italic">Egypti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1798"/>an</hi> year of 365 days, and the study of Astro<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1799"/>nomy and Astrology, and founded the <hi rend="italic">Æra</hi> of <lb xml:id="l1800"/><hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi>; dating it from the first year of that <lb xml:id="l1801"/>King's Reign, which was the 22d year of <hi rend="italic">Boc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1802"/>choris</hi> as above, and beginning the year on the <lb xml:id="l1803"/>same day with the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> for the sake of their <lb xml:id="l1804"/>calculations. So <hi rend="italic">Diodorus</hi> <note n="k">Diodor. <lb xml:id="l1805"/>l. 1. p. 51.</note>: <hi rend="italic">they say that the</hi> <lb xml:id="l1806"/>Chaldæans <hi rend="italic">in</hi> Babylon, <hi rend="italic">being Colonies of the</hi> E<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1807"/>gyptians, <hi rend="italic">became famous for Astrology, having <lb xml:id="l1808"/>learnt it from the Priests of</hi> Egypt: and <lb xml:id="l1809"/><hi rend="italic">Hestiæus</hi>, who wrote an history of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1810"/>speaking of a disaster of the invaded <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, <lb xml:id="l1811"/>saith <note n="l">Joseph. <lb xml:id="l1812"/>Ant. l. 1. <lb xml:id="l1813"/>c. 4.</note> that <hi rend="italic">the Priests who survived this disaster, <lb xml:id="l1814"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">taking</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p253" n="253"/>taking with them the</hi> Sacra <hi rend="italic">of</hi> Jupiter Enyalius, <hi rend="italic">came <lb xml:id="l1815"/>to</hi> Sennaar <hi rend="italic">in</hi> Babylonia. From the 15th year of <lb xml:id="l1816"/><hi rend="italic">Asa</hi>, in which <hi rend="italic">Zerah</hi> was beaten, and <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> or <lb xml:id="l1817"/><hi rend="italic">Amenophis</hi> began his Reign, to the beginning of <lb xml:id="l1818"/>the <hi rend="italic">Æra</hi> of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi>, were 200 years; and <lb xml:id="l1819"/>this interval of time allows room for about <lb xml:id="l1820"/>nine or ten Reigns of Kings, at about twenty <lb xml:id="l1821"/>years to a Reign one with another; and so ma<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1822"/>ny Reigns there were, according to the account <lb xml:id="l1823"/>set down above out of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>; and therefore <lb xml:id="l1824"/>that account, as it is the oldest, and was re<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1825"/>ceived by <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> from the Priests of <hi rend="italic">Thebes, <lb xml:id="l1826"/>Memphis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Heliopolis</hi>, three principal cities of <lb xml:id="l1827"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, agrees also with the course of nature, <lb xml:id="l1828"/>and leaves no room for the Reigns of the many <lb xml:id="l1829"/>nameless Kings which we have omitted. These <lb xml:id="l1830"/>omitted Kings Reigned before <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>, and by <lb xml:id="l1831"/>consequence at <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>; for <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> translated the <lb xml:id="l1832"/>seat of the Empire from <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi> to <hi rend="italic">Memphis</hi>: <lb xml:id="l1833"/>they Reigned after <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi>; for <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> was <lb xml:id="l1834"/>the son and successor of <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi>, who Reigned <lb xml:id="l1835"/>next after the Gods. Now <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> built the body <lb xml:id="l1836"/>of the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan, Ramesses</hi> the first por<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1837"/>tico, and <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> the second portico thereof; but <lb xml:id="l1838"/>the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, for making their Gods and King<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1839"/>dom look ancient, have inserted between the <lb xml:id="l1840"/>builders of the first and second portico of this <lb xml:id="l1841"/>Temple, three hundred and thirty Kings of <lb xml:id="l1842"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>,</fw><pb xml:id="p254" n="254"/><hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, and supposed that these Kings Reigned <lb xml:id="l1843"/>eleven thousand years; as if any Temple could <lb xml:id="l1844"/>stand so long. This being a manifest fiction, we <lb xml:id="l1845"/>have corrected it, by omitting those interposed <lb xml:id="l1846"/>Kings, who did nothing, and placing <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi> the <lb xml:id="l1847"/>builder of the second portico, next after <hi rend="italic">Ramesses</hi> <lb xml:id="l1848"/>the builder of the first.</p>
<p xml:id="par54">In the Dynasties of <hi rend="italic">Manetho</hi>; <hi rend="italic">Sevechus</hi> is <lb xml:id="l1849"/>made the successor of <hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi>, being his son; <lb xml:id="l1850"/>and perhaps he is the <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi> of <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>, who <lb xml:id="l1851"/>became Priest of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>, and neglected military <lb xml:id="l1852"/>discipline: for <hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi> is that <hi rend="italic">So</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Sua</hi> with <lb xml:id="l1853"/>whom <hi rend="italic">Hoshea</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> conspired against <lb xml:id="l1854"/>the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi>, in the fourth year of <hi rend="italic">Hezekiah, <lb xml:id="l1855"/>Anno Nabonass.</hi> 24. <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> tells us twice or <lb xml:id="l1856"/>thrice, that <hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi> after a long Reign of fifty <lb xml:id="l1857"/>years relinquished <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> voluntarily, and that <lb xml:id="l1858"/><hi rend="italic">Anysis</hi> who fled from him, returned and Reigned <lb xml:id="l1859"/>again in the lower <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> after him, or rather <lb xml:id="l1860"/>with him: and that <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi> Reigned after <hi rend="italic">Saba<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1861"/>con</hi>, and went to <hi rend="italic">Pelusium</hi> against the army of <lb xml:id="l1862"/><hi rend="italic">Sennacherib</hi>, and was relieved with a great mult<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1863"/>itude of mice, which eat the bow-strings of the <lb xml:id="l1864"/><hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi>; in memory of which the statue of <lb xml:id="l1865"/><hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, seen by <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>, <note n="m">Heordot. <lb xml:id="l1866"/>l. 2. c. 141.</note> was made with a <lb xml:id="l1867"/>Mouse in its hand. A Mouse was the <hi rend="italic">Egyptian</hi> <lb xml:id="l1868"/>symbol of destruction, and the Mouse in the <lb xml:id="l1869"/>hand of <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi> signifies only that he overcame <lb xml:id="l1870"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">the</fw><pb xml:id="p255" n="255"/>the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> with a great destruction. The Scrip<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1871"/>tures inform us, that when <hi rend="italic">Sennacherib</hi> invaded <lb xml:id="l1872"/><hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi> and besieged <hi rend="italic">Lachish</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Libnah</hi>, which <lb xml:id="l1873"/>was in the 14th year of <hi rend="italic">Hezekiah, Anno Nabo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1874"/>nass.</hi> 34. the King of <hi rend="italic">Judah</hi> trusted upon <hi rend="italic">Pha<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1875"/>raoh</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, that is upon <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1876"/>that <hi rend="italic">Tirhakah</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi> came out also to <lb xml:id="l1877"/>fight against <hi rend="italic">Sennacherib</hi>, 2 <hi rend="italic">King</hi>. xviii. 21. &amp; <lb xml:id="l1878"/>xix. 9. which makes it probable, that when <lb xml:id="l1879"/><hi rend="italic">Sennacherib</hi> heard of the Kings of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <lb xml:id="l1880"/><hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi> coming against him, he went from <hi rend="italic">Lib<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1881"/>nah</hi> towards <hi rend="italic">Pelusium</hi> to oppose them, and was <lb xml:id="l1882"/>there surprized and set upon in the night by <lb xml:id="l1883"/>them both, and routed with as great a slaughter <lb xml:id="l1884"/>as if the bow-strings of the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> had been <lb xml:id="l1885"/>eaten by mice. Some think that the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> <lb xml:id="l1886"/>were smitten by lightning, or by a fiery wind <lb xml:id="l1887"/>which sometimes comes from the southern <lb xml:id="l1888"/>parts of <hi rend="italic">Chaldæa</hi>. After this victory <hi rend="italic">Tirhakah</hi> <lb xml:id="l1889"/>succeeding <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, carried his arms westward <lb xml:id="l1890"/>through <hi rend="italic">Libya</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Afric</hi> to the mouth of the <lb xml:id="l1891"/><hi rend="italic">Straits:</hi> but <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> tells us, that the Priests <lb xml:id="l1892"/>of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> reckoned <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi> the last King of <lb xml:id="l1893"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, who Reigned before the division of <lb xml:id="l1894"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into twelve contemporary Kingdoms, <lb xml:id="l1895"/>and by consequence before the invasion of <lb xml:id="l1896"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi>.</p>
<fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">For</fw><pb xml:id="p256" n="256"/>
<p xml:id="par55">For <hi rend="italic">Asserhadon</hi> King of <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi>, in the 68th <lb xml:id="l1897"/>year of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi>, after he had Reigned about <lb xml:id="l1898"/>thirty years over <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi>, invaded the Kingdom <lb xml:id="l1899"/>of <hi rend="italic">Babylon</hi>, and then carried into captivity <lb xml:id="l1900"/>many people from <hi rend="italic">Babylon</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Cuthah</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1901"/><hi rend="italic">Ava</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Hamath</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Sepharvaim</hi>, placing <lb xml:id="l1902"/>them in the Regions of <hi rend="italic">Samaria</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Damascus</hi>: <lb xml:id="l1903"/>and from thence they carried into <hi rend="italic">Babylonia</hi> <lb xml:id="l1904"/>and <hi rend="italic">Assyria</hi> the remainder of the people of <lb xml:id="l1905"/><hi rend="italic">Israel</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Syria</hi>, which had been left there by <lb xml:id="l1906"/><hi rend="italic">Tiglath-pileser</hi>. This captivity was 65 years af<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1907"/>ter the first year of <hi rend="italic">Ahaz, Isa</hi>. vii. 1, 8. &amp; <lb xml:id="l1908"/>2. <hi rend="italic">King</hi>. xv. 37. &amp; xvi. 5. and by consequence <lb xml:id="l1909"/>in the twentieth year of <hi rend="italic">Manasseh, Anno Nabo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1910"/>nass.</hi> 69. and then <hi rend="italic">Tartan</hi> was sent by <hi rend="italic">Asser<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1911"/>hadon</hi> with an army against <hi rend="italic">Ashdod</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Azoth</hi>, a <lb xml:id="l1912"/>town at that time subject to <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi>, 2 <hi rend="italic">Chron</hi>. <lb xml:id="l1913"/>xxvi. 6. and took it, <hi rend="italic">Isa.</hi> xx. 1<hi rend="italic">:</hi> and this post <lb xml:id="l1914"/>being secured, the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> beat the <hi rend="italic">Jews</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1915"/>captivated <hi rend="italic">Manasseh</hi>, and subdued <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi>: and <lb xml:id="l1916"/>in these wars, <hi rend="italic">Isaiah</hi> was saw'd asunder by the <lb xml:id="l1917"/>command of <hi rend="italic">Manasseh</hi>, for prophesying against <lb xml:id="l1918"/>him. Then the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi> invaded and subdued <lb xml:id="l1919"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, and carried the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> <lb xml:id="l1920"/>and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> into captivity, and thereby put <lb xml:id="l1921"/>an end to the Reign of the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> over <lb xml:id="l1922"/><hi rend="italic">Egypt, Isa</hi>. vii. 18. &amp; viii. 7. &amp; x. 11, 12, &amp; <lb xml:id="l1923"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">xix.</fw><pb xml:id="p257" n="257"/>xix. 23. &amp; xx. 4. In this war the city <lb xml:id="l1924"/><hi rend="italic">No-Ammon</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Thebes</hi>, which had hitherto con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1925"/>tinued in a flourishing condition, was miserably <lb xml:id="l1926"/>wasted and led into captivity, as is described <lb xml:id="l1927"/>by <hi rend="italic">Nahum</hi>, chap. iii. ver. 8, 9, 10; for <hi rend="italic">Nahum</hi> <lb xml:id="l1928"/>wrote after the last invasion of <hi rend="italic">Judæa</hi> by the <lb xml:id="l1929"/><hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi>, chap. i. ver. 15; and therefore de<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1930"/>scribes this captivity as fresh in memory: and <lb xml:id="l1931"/>this and other following invasions of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> un<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1932"/>der <hi rend="italic">Nebuchadnezzar</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cambyses</hi>, put an end <lb xml:id="l1933"/>to the glory of that city. <hi rend="italic">Asserhadon</hi> Reigned <lb xml:id="l1934"/>over the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> three years, <lb xml:id="l1935"/><hi rend="italic">Isa</hi>. xx. 3, 4. that is until his death, which <lb xml:id="l1936"/>was in the year of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi> 81, and there<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1937"/>fore invaded <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, and put an end to the <lb xml:id="l1938"/>Reign of the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi> over the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, in <lb xml:id="l1939"/>the year of <hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</hi> 78; so that the <hi rend="italic">Ethio<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1940"/>pians</hi> under <hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi>, and his successors <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi> <lb xml:id="l1941"/>and <hi rend="italic">Tirhakah</hi>, Reigned over <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> about 80 <lb xml:id="l1942"/>years: <hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi> allots 50 years to <hi rend="italic">Sabacon</hi>, and <lb xml:id="l1943"/><hi rend="italic">Africanus</hi> fourteen years to <hi rend="italic">Sethon</hi>, and eighteen <lb xml:id="l1944"/>to <hi rend="italic">Tirhakah</hi>.</p>
<p xml:id="par56">The division of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> into more Kingdoms <lb xml:id="l1945"/>than one, both before and after the Reign of <lb xml:id="l1946"/>the <hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</hi>, and the conquest of the <hi rend="italic">Egyp<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1947"/>tians</hi> by <hi rend="italic">Asserhadon</hi>, the prophet <hi rend="italic">Isaiah</hi> <note n="n">Isa. xix. 2, <lb xml:id="l1948"/>4, 11, 13, 23.</note> seems <lb xml:id="l1949"/>to allude unto in these words: <hi rend="italic">I will set</hi>, saith <lb xml:id="l1950"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">he,</fw><pb xml:id="p258" n="258"/>he, <hi rend="italic">the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">against the</hi> Egyptians, <hi rend="italic">and <lb xml:id="l1951"/>they shall fight every one against his brother, and <lb xml:id="l1952"/>every one against his neighbour, city against city, <lb xml:id="l1953"/>and Kingdom against Kingdom, and the Spirit of</hi> <lb xml:id="l1954"/>Egypt <hi rend="italic">shall fail.-- And the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">will I give <lb xml:id="l1955"/>over into the hand of a cruel Lord</hi> [viz. <hi rend="italic">Asserha<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1956"/>don</hi>] <hi rend="italic">and a fierce King shall Reign over them.-- <lb xml:id="l1957"/>Surely the Princes of</hi> Zoan [Tanis] <hi rend="italic">are fools, the <lb xml:id="l1958"/>counsel of the wise Councellors of</hi> Pharaoh <hi rend="italic">is be<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1959"/>come brutish</hi>: <hi rend="italic">how long say ye unto</hi> Pharaoh, <hi rend="italic">I am <lb xml:id="l1960"/>the son of the ancient Kings.-- The Princes of</hi> <lb xml:id="l1961"/>Zoan <hi rend="italic">are be come fools: the Princes of</hi> Noph <lb xml:id="l1962"/>[Memphis] <hi rend="italic">are deceived,-- even they that were <lb xml:id="l1963"/>the stay of the tribes thereof.-- In that day there <lb xml:id="l1964"/>shall be a high-way out of</hi> Egypt <hi rend="italic">into</hi> Assyria, <lb xml:id="l1965"/><hi rend="italic">and the</hi> Egyptians <hi rend="italic">shall serve the</hi> Assyrians.</p>
<p xml:id="par57">After the death of <hi rend="italic">Asserhadon, Egypt</hi> remain<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1966"/>ed subject to twelve contemporary Kings, who <lb xml:id="l1967"/>revolted from the <hi rend="italic">Assyrians</hi>, and Reigned to<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1968"/>gether fifteen years; including I think the <lb xml:id="l1969"/>three years of <hi rend="italic">Asserhadon</hi>, because the <hi rend="italic">Egypti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1970"/>ans</hi> do not reckon him among their Kings. <lb xml:id="l1971"/>They <note n="o">Herod. <lb xml:id="l1972"/>l. 2. c. 148, <lb xml:id="l1973"/>&amp;c.</note> built the Labyrinth adjoining to the Lake <lb xml:id="l1974"/>of <hi rend="italic">Mœris</hi>, which was a very magnificent struc<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1975"/>ture, with twelve Halls in it, for their Palaces: <lb xml:id="l1976"/>and then <hi rend="italic">Psammitichus</hi>, who was one of the <lb xml:id="l1977"/>twelve, conquered all the rest. He built the <lb xml:id="l1978"/><fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">last</fw><pb xml:id="p259" n="259"/>last Portico of the Temple of <hi rend="italic">Vulcan</hi>, founded <lb xml:id="l1979"/>by <hi rend="italic">Menes</hi> about 260 years before, and Reign<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1980"/>ed 54 years, including the fifteen years of his <lb xml:id="l1981"/>Reign with the twelve Kings. Then Reigned <lb xml:id="l1982"/><hi rend="italic">Nechaoh</hi> or <hi rend="italic">Nechus</hi>, 17 years; <hi rend="italic">Psammis</hi> six <lb xml:id="l1983"/>years; <hi rend="italic">Vaphres, Apries, Eraphius</hi>, or <hi rend="italic">Hophra</hi>, 25 <lb xml:id="l1984"/>years; <hi rend="italic">Amasis</hi> 44 years; and <hi rend="italic">Psammenitus</hi> six <lb xml:id="l1985"/>months, according to <hi rend="italic">Herodotus. Egypt</hi> was <lb xml:id="l1986"/>subdued by <hi rend="italic">Nebuchadnezzar</hi> in the last year <lb xml:id="l1987"/>but one of <hi rend="italic">Hophra, Anno Nabonass.</hi> 178, and <lb xml:id="l1988"/>remained in subjection to <hi rend="italic">Babylon</hi> forty years, <lb xml:id="l1989"/><hi rend="italic">Jer</hi>. xliv. 30. &amp; <hi rend="italic">Ezek</hi>. xxix. 12, 13, 14, 17, <lb xml:id="l1990"/>19. that is, almost all the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Amasis</hi>, a <lb xml:id="l1991"/>plebeian set over <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> by the conqueror: <lb xml:id="l1992"/>the forty years ended with the death of <hi rend="italic">Cyrus</hi>; <lb xml:id="l1993"/>for he Reigned over <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Ethiopia</hi>, accord<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1994"/>ing to <hi rend="italic">Xenophon</hi>. At that time therefore those <lb xml:id="l1995"/>nations recovered their liberty; but after four <lb xml:id="l1996"/>or five years more they were invaded and con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l1997"/>quered by <hi rend="italic">Cambyses, Anno Nabonass</hi>. 223 or <lb xml:id="l1998"/>224, and have almost ever since remained in <lb xml:id="l1999"/>servitude, as was predicted by the Prophets.</p>
<p xml:id="par58">The Reigns of <hi rend="italic">Psammitichus, Nechus, Psammis, <lb xml:id="l2000"/>Apries, Amasis</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Psammenitus</hi>, set down by <lb xml:id="l2001"/><hi rend="italic">Herodotus</hi>, amount unto 146<formula><math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"><mfrac><mn>1</mn><mn>2</mn></mfrac></math></formula> years: and so <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2002"/>many years there were from the 78th year of <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2003"/><tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Nabonassar</tei:hi>, in which the dominion of the <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Ethi<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2004"/><tei:fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><tei:hi rend="italic">opians</tei:hi></tei:fw><tei:pb xml:id="p260" n="260"/>opians</tei:hi> over <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> came to an end, unto the <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2005"/>224th year of <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Nabonassar</tei:hi>, in which <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Cambyses</tei:hi> <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2006"/>invaded <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, and put an end to that King<tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2007"/>dom: which is an argument that <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> was <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2008"/>circumspect and faithful in his narrations, and <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2009"/>has given us a good account of the antiquities <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2010"/>of <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, so far as the Priests of <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> at <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2011"/><tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Thebes, Memphis</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Heliopolis</tei:hi>, and the <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Carians</tei:hi> <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2012"/>and <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Ionians</tei:hi> inhabiting <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, were then able <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2013"/>to inform him<tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">:</tei:hi> for he consulted them all; and <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2014"/>the <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Cares</tei:hi> and <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Ionians</tei:hi> had been in <tei:hi xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> from <tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="l2015"/>the time of the Reign of the twelve contem<tei:lb xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2016"/>porary Kings.</p>
<tei:p xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="par59"><tei:hi rend="italic">Pliny</tei:hi> <tei:note n="p">Plin. l. 36. <tei:lb xml:id="l2017"/>c. 8. 9.</tei:note> tells us, that the <tei:hi rend="italic">Egyptian</tei:hi> Obelisks were <tei:lb xml:id="l2018"/>of a sort of stone dug near <tei:hi rend="italic">Syene</tei:hi> in <tei:hi rend="italic">Thebais</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2019"/>and that the first Obelisk was made by <tei:hi rend="italic">Mitres</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2020"/>who Reigned in <tei:hi rend="italic">Heliopolis</tei:hi>; that is, by <tei:hi rend="italic">Mephres</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2021"/>the predecessor of <tei:hi rend="italic">Misphragmuthosis</tei:hi>; and that <tei:lb xml:id="l2022"/>afterwards other Kings made others: <tei:hi rend="italic">Sochis</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2023"/>that is <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesochis</tei:hi>, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesac</tei:hi>, four, each of 48 <tei:lb xml:id="l2024"/>cubits in length; <tei:hi rend="italic">Ramises</tei:hi>, that is <tei:hi rend="italic">Ramesses</tei:hi>, two; <tei:lb xml:id="l2025"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Smarres</tei:hi>, that is <tei:hi rend="italic">Mœris</tei:hi>, one of 48 cubits in <tei:lb xml:id="l2026"/>length; <tei:hi rend="italic">Eraphius</tei:hi>, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Hophra</tei:hi>, one of 48; and <tei:lb xml:id="l2027"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Nectabis</tei:hi>, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Nectenabis</tei:hi>, one of 80. <tei:hi rend="italic">Mephres</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2028"/>therefore extended his dominion over all the <tei:lb xml:id="l2029"/>upper <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, from <tei:hi rend="italic">Syene</tei:hi> to <tei:hi rend="italic">Heliopolis</tei:hi>, and af<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2030"/>ter him, <tei:hi rend="italic">Misphragmuthosis</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Amosis</tei:hi>, Reigned <tei:lb xml:id="l2031"/><tei:fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><tei:hi rend="italic">Ammon</tei:hi></tei:fw><tei:pb xml:id="p261" n="261"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Ammon</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesac</tei:hi>, who erected the first great <tei:lb xml:id="l2032"/>Empire in the world: and these four, <tei:hi rend="italic">Amosis, <tei:lb xml:id="l2033"/>Ammon, Sesac</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Orus</tei:hi>, Reigned in the four <tei:lb xml:id="l2034"/>ages of the great Gods of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>; and <tei:hi rend="italic">Ame<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2035"/>nophis</tei:hi> was the <tei:hi rend="italic">Menes</tei:hi> who Reigned next after <tei:lb xml:id="l2036"/>them: he was succeeded by <tei:hi rend="italic">Ramesses</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Mœ<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2037"/>ris</tei:hi>, and some time after by <tei:hi rend="italic">Hophra</tei:hi>.</tei:p>
<tei:p xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="par60"><tei:hi rend="italic">Diodorus</tei:hi> <tei:note n="q">Diodor. <tei:lb xml:id="l2038"/>l. 1 p. 29, <tei:lb xml:id="l2039"/>&amp;c.</tei:note> recites the same Kings of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> with <tei:lb xml:id="l2040"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi>, but in a more confused order, and <tei:lb xml:id="l2041"/>repeats some of them twice, or oftener, under <tei:lb xml:id="l2042"/>various names, and omits others: his Kings <tei:lb xml:id="l2043"/>are these; <tei:hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Juno, Osiris</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2044"/>and <tei:hi rend="italic">Isis, Horus, Menes, Busiris</tei:hi> I, <tei:hi rend="italic">Busiris</tei:hi> II, <tei:lb xml:id="l2045"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Osymanduas, Uchoreus, Myris, Sesoosis</tei:hi> I, <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesoo<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2046"/>sis</tei:hi> II, <tei:hi rend="italic">Amasis, Actisanes, Mendes</tei:hi> or <tei:hi rend="italic">Marrus, <tei:lb xml:id="l2047"/>Proteus, Remphis, Chembis, Cephren, Mycerinus</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2048"/>or <tei:hi rend="italic">Cherinus, Gnephacthus, Bocchoris, Sabacon</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2049"/>twelve contemporary Kings, <tei:hi rend="italic">Psammitichus</tei:hi>, * * <tei:lb xml:id="l2050"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Apries, Amasis</tei:hi>. Here I take <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesoosis</tei:hi> I, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Se<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2051"/>soosis</tei:hi> II, <tei:hi rend="italic">Busiris</tei:hi> I, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Busiris</tei:hi> II, to be the <tei:lb xml:id="l2052"/>same Kings with <tei:hi rend="italic">Osiris</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Orus:</tei:hi> also <tei:hi rend="italic">Osyman<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2053"/>duas</tei:hi> to be the same with <tei:hi rend="italic">Amenophis</tei:hi> or <tei:hi rend="italic">Menes:</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2054"/>also <tei:hi rend="italic">Amasis</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Actisanes</tei:hi>, an <tei:hi rend="italic">Ethiopian</tei:hi> who <tei:lb xml:id="l2055"/>conquered him, to be the same with <tei:hi rend="italic">Anysis</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2056"/>and <tei:hi rend="italic">Sabacon</tei:hi> in <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi>: and <tei:hi rend="italic">Uchoreus, Men<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2057"/>des, Marrus</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Myris</tei:hi>, to be only several <tei:lb xml:id="l2058"/>names of one and the same King. Whence the <tei:lb xml:id="l2059"/><tei:fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">cata-</tei:fw><tei:pb xml:id="p262" n="262"/>catalogue of <tei:hi rend="italic">Diodorus</tei:hi> will be reduced to this: <tei:lb xml:id="l2060"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Jupiter Ammon</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Juno</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Osiris, Busiris</tei:hi> or <tei:lb xml:id="l2061"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Sesoosis</tei:hi>, and <tei:hi rend="italic">Isis</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Horus</tei:hi>, <tei:hi rend="italic">Busiris</tei:hi> II, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Sesoo<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2062"/>sis</tei:hi> II; <tei:hi rend="italic">Menes</tei:hi>, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Osymanduas</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Proteus</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Remphis</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2063"/>or <tei:hi rend="italic">Ramesses</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Uchoreus, Mendes, Marrus</tei:hi>, or <tei:lb xml:id="l2064"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Myris</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Chembis</tei:hi> or <tei:hi rend="italic">Cheops</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Cephren</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Myceri<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2065"/>nus</tei:hi>; * * <tei:hi rend="italic">Gnephacthus</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Bocchoris</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Amasis</tei:hi>, or <tei:lb xml:id="l2066"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Anysis</tei:hi>; <tei:hi rend="italic">Actisanes</tei:hi>, or <tei:hi rend="italic">Sabacon</tei:hi>; * twelve con<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2067"/>temporary Kings; <tei:hi rend="italic">Psammitichus</tei:hi>; * * <tei:hi rend="italic">Apries</tei:hi>; <tei:lb xml:id="l2068"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Amasis</tei:hi>: to which, if in their proper places <tei:lb xml:id="l2069"/>you add <tei:hi rend="italic">Nitocris, Asychis, Sethon, Nechus</tei:hi>, and <tei:lb xml:id="l2070"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Psammis,</tei:hi> you will have the catalogue of <tei:hi rend="italic">Hero<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2071"/>dotus</tei:hi>.</tei:p>
<tei:p xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="par61">The Dynasties of <tei:hi rend="italic">Manetho</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Eratosthenes</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2072"/>seem to be filled with many such names of <tei:lb xml:id="l2073"/>Kings as <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> omitted: when it shall be <tei:lb xml:id="l2074"/>made appear that any of them Reigned in <tei:lb xml:id="l2075"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> after the expulsion of the Shepherds, and <tei:lb xml:id="l2076"/>were different from the Kings described above, <tei:lb xml:id="l2077"/>they may be inserted in their proper places.</tei:p>
<tei:p xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="par62"><tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> was conquered by the <tei:hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</tei:hi> under <tei:lb xml:id="l2078"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Sabacon</tei:hi>, about the beginning of the <tei:hi rend="italic">Æra</tei:hi> of <tei:lb xml:id="l2079"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Nabonassar</tei:hi>, or perhaps three or four years be<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2080"/>fore, that is, about three hundred years before <tei:lb xml:id="l2081"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> wrote his history; and about eighty <tei:lb xml:id="l2082"/>years after that conquest, it was conquered <tei:lb xml:id="l2083"/>again by the <tei:hi rend="italic">Assyrians</tei:hi> under <tei:hi rend="italic">Asserhadon:</tei:hi> and <tei:lb xml:id="l2084"/><tei:fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">the</tei:fw><tei:pb xml:id="p263" n="263"/>the history of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> set down by <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2085"/>from the time of this last conquest, is right <tei:lb xml:id="l2086"/>both as to the number, and order, and names <tei:lb xml:id="l2087"/>of the Kings, and as to the length of their <tei:lb xml:id="l2088"/>Reigns: and therein he is now followed by <tei:lb xml:id="l2089"/>historians, being the only author who hath <tei:lb xml:id="l2090"/>given us so good a history of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, for <tei:lb xml:id="l2091"/>that interval of time. If his history of <tei:lb xml:id="l2092"/>the earlier times be less accurate, it was because <tei:lb xml:id="l2093"/>the archives of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> had suffered much dur<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2094"/>ing the Reign of the <tei:hi rend="italic">Ethiopians</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Assyrians:</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2095"/>and it is not likely that the Priests of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2096"/>who lived two or three hundred years after <tei:lb xml:id="l2097"/>the days of <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi>, could mend the mat<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2098"/>ter: on the contrary, after <tei:hi rend="italic">Cambyses</tei:hi> had carried <tei:lb xml:id="l2099"/>away the records of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi>, the Priests were <tei:lb xml:id="l2100"/>daily feigning new Kings, to make their Gods <tei:lb xml:id="l2101"/>and nation look ancient; as is manifest by <tei:lb xml:id="l2102"/>comparing <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> with <tei:hi rend="italic">Diodorus Siculus</tei:hi>, and <tei:lb xml:id="l2103"/>both of them with what <tei:hi rend="italic">Plato</tei:hi> relates out of <tei:lb xml:id="l2104"/>the Poem of <tei:hi rend="italic">Solon:</tei:hi> which Poem makes the <tei:lb xml:id="l2105"/>wars of the great Gods of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> against the <tei:lb xml:id="l2106"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Greeks</tei:hi>, to have been in the days of <tei:hi rend="italic">Cecrops, <tei:lb xml:id="l2107"/>Erechtheus</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Erichthonius</tei:hi>, and a little before <tei:lb xml:id="l2108"/>those of <tei:hi rend="italic">Theseus</tei:hi>; these Gods at that time insti<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2109"/>tuting Temples and Sacred Rites to them<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2110"/>selves. I have therefore chosen to rely up<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2111"/><tei:fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">on</tei:fw><tei:pb xml:id="p264" n="264"/>on the stories related to <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> by the Priests <tei:lb xml:id="l2112"/>of <tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> in those days, and corrected by the <tei:lb xml:id="l2113"/>Poem of <tei:hi rend="italic">Solon</tei:hi>, so as to make these Gods of <tei:lb xml:id="l2114"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> no older than <tei:hi rend="italic">Cecrops</tei:hi> and <tei:hi rend="italic">Erechtheus</tei:hi>, <tei:lb xml:id="l2115"/>and their successor <tei:hi rend="italic">Menes</tei:hi> no older than <tei:hi rend="italic">Theseus</tei:hi> <tei:lb xml:id="l2116"/>and <tei:hi rend="italic">Memnon</tei:hi>, and the Temple of <tei:hi rend="italic">Vulcan</tei:hi> not <tei:lb xml:id="l2117"/>above 280 years in building: rather than to <tei:lb xml:id="l2118"/>correct <tei:hi rend="italic">Herodotus</tei:hi> by <tei:hi rend="italic">Manetho, Eratosthenes, Dio<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2119"/>dorus</tei:hi>, and others, who lived after the Priests of <tei:lb xml:id="l2120"/><tei:hi rend="italic">Egypt</tei:hi> had corrupted their Antiquities much <tei:lb xml:id="l2121"/>more than they had done in the days of <tei:hi rend="italic">Hero<tei:lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l2122"/>dotus</tei:hi>.</tei:p>
</div>
</body>
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</TEI>