Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide
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Budge's Egypt - E.A. Wallis Budge
DOVER BOOKS ON EGYPT
AMULETS AND SUPERSTITIONS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (23573-4) $15.95
DWELLERS ON THE NILE, E. A. Wallis Budge. (23501-7) $9.95
THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD, E. A. Wallis Budge. (21866-X) $12.95
THE EGYPTIAN HEAVEN AND HELL, E. A. Wallis Budge. (29368-8) $18.95
EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHIC DICTIONARY, E. A. Wallis Budge. (23615-3, 23616-1) Two-volume set $39.90
AN EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHIC READING BOOK FOR BEGINNERS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (27486-1) $13.95
EGYPTIAN IDEAS OF THE AFTERLIFE, E. A. Wallis Budge. (28464-6) $7.95
EGYPTIAN LANGUAGE: EASY LESSONS IN EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (Not available in United Kingdom) (21394-3) $7.95
EGYPTIAN MAGIC, E. A. Wallis Budge. (22681-6) $7.95
FROM FETISH TO GOD IN ANCIENT EGYPT, E. A. Wallis Budge. (25803-3) $13.95
THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (22055-9, 22056-7) Two-volume set $27.90
A HIEROGLYPHIC VOCABULARY TO THE BOOK OF THE DEAD, E. A. Wallis Budge. (26724-5) $12.95
AN INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT EGYPTIAN LITERATURE, E. A. Wallis Budge. (29502-8) $8.95
LEGENDS OF THE EGYPTIAN GODS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (28022-5) $9.95
THE LITURGY OF FUNERARY OFFERINGS, E. A. Wallis Budge. (28335-6) $7.95
THE MUMMY, E. A. Wallis Budge. (25928-5) $12.95
OSIRIS AND THE EGYPTIAN RESURRECTION, E. A. Wallis Budge. (22780-4, 22781-2) Two-volume set $23.90
THE ROSETTA STONE, E. A. Wallis Budge. (26163-8) $9.95
TUTANKHAMEN: AMENISM, ATENISM AND EGYPTIAN MONOTHEISM/WITH HIEROGLYPHIC TEXTS OF HYMMS TO AMEN AND ATEN, E. A. Wallis Budge. (26950-7) $7.95
THE DISCOVERY OF THE TOMB OF TUTANKHAMEN, Howard Carter and A. C. Mace. (23500-9) $8.95
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN CONSTRUCTION AND ARCHITECTURE, Somers Clarke and R. Engelbach. (26485-8) $13.95
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN POETRY AND PROSE, Adolf Erman. (28767-X) $9.95
LIFE IN ANCIENT EGYPT, Adolf Erman. (22632-8) $12.95
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN RELIGION: AN INTERPRETATION, Henri Frankfort. (41138-9) $7.95
THE LEYDEN PAPYRUS: AN EGYPTIAN MAGICAL BOOK, F. Griffith and Herbert Thompson (eds.). (22994-7) $9.95
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN DANCES, Irena Lexová. (40906-6) $7.95
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MATERIALS AND INDUSTRIES, A. Lucas and J. Harris. (Available in U.S. only) (40446-3) $16.95
LEGENDS OF ANCIENT EGYPT, M. A. Murray. (41137-0) $4.95
Published in Canada by General Publishing Company, Ltd., 30 Lesmill Road, Don Mills, Toronto, Ontario.
Bibliographical Note
This Dover edition, first published in 2001, is an unabridged republication of the work originally published by Thos. Cook & Son, London, in 1890 under the title The Nile: Notes for Travellers in Egypt. The original foldout map appears here as a double-page spread (pp. xvi–xvii).
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Budge, E. A. Wallis (Ernest Alfred Wallis), Sir, 1857–1934.
[Nile]
Budge’s Egypt: a classic 19th-century travel guide / E.A. Wallis Budge.—Dover ed.
p. cm.
Originally published: The Nile. London: T. Cook & Son, 1890.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
9780486149530
1. Egypt—Guidebooks. 2. Nile River—Guidebooks. I. Title.
DT45 .B9 2001
916.204’55—dc21
2001028453
Manufactured in the United States of America Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd Street, Mineola, N.Y. 11501
INTRODUCTION.
Having for some years felt the insufficiency of the information given by Dragomans to travellers on the Nile, and finding with one or two striking exceptions how limited is their knowledge of facts relating to the history of the antiquities in Upper Egypt, Messrs. Thos. Cook and Son have arranged with Mr. E. A. Wallis Budge to compile the following pages, which they have much pleasure in presenting to every passenger under their Nile arrangements on their Tourist Steamers and Dhahabiyyehs. In this way passengers will no longer be liable to be misled (unintentionally) by Dragomans, but will be able at their leisure to prepare themselves for what they have to see, and thus by an agreeable study add to the interest with which their visits to the various places are made.
PREFACE.
alfah), printed in the following pages, are not in any way intended to form a Guide to Egypt
: they are drawn up for the use of those travellers who have a very few weeks to spend in Egypt, and who wish to carry in their memories some of the more important facts connected with the fast-perishing remains of one of the most interesting and ancient civilizations that has been developed on the face of the earth. The existing guide books are generally too voluminous and diffuse for such travellers; and are, moreover, in many respects inaccurate. Experience has shown that the greater number of travellers in that country are more interested in history and matters connected with Egyptian civilization from B.C. 4400 to B.C. 450, than with Egypt under the rule of the Assyrians and Persians, Greeks and Romans, Arabs and Turks. It is for this reason that no attempt has been made to describe, otherwise than in the briefest possible manner, its history under these foreign rulers, and only such facts connected with them as are absolutely necessary for a right understanding of its monuments have been inserted. In addition to such descriptions, a few chapters have been added on the history of the country during the rule of the Pharaohs, its people, the religion and method of writing. At the end of the book a fairly full list of the most important Egyptian kings is appended, and in order to make this list as useful as possible, a transliteration of each name is printed beneath it, together with the ordinary form of the name. The list of three hundred hieroglyphic characters and their phonetic values, printed on pp. 61–68, will, it is hoped, be useful to those who may like to spell out the royal names on tombs and temples and the commoner words which occur in the inscriptions. For those who wish to study independently the various branches of Egyptology, a list of the more readily obtained books is given in the Programme
issued yearly by Thos. Cook and Son.
In transcribing Arabic names of places the most authoritative forms have been followed, but such well-known names as Luxor,
in Arabic El-U ûr or El- u ûr, âhira, "
The dates assigned to the Egyptian kings are those of Dr. H. Brugsch, who bases his calculations on the assumption that the average duration of a generation was thirty-three years. Hence it will be readily understood that the date assigned to Rameses II. (B.C. 1333), for instance, is only approximately correct.
E. A. WALLS BUDGE.
September, 1890
Table of Contents
DOVER BOOKS ON EGYPT
Title Page
Copyright Page
INTRODUCTION.
PREFACE.
NOTES FOR TRAVELLERS IN EGYPT. - EGYPTIAN HISTORY.
HISTORICAL SUMMARY.
LIST OF EGYPTIAN KINGS.
INDEX.
A CATALOG OF SELECTED DOVER BOOKS IN ALL FIELDS OF INTEREST
MAP OP COOK’S STEAMER, DAHABEAH, AND MAIL SERVICE ON THE NILE.
NOTES FOR TRAVELLERS IN EGYPT.
EGYPTIAN HISTORY.
THE history of Egypt is the oldest history known to us. It is true that the earliest of the Babylonian kings whose names are known lived very little later than the earliest kings of Egypt, nevertheless our knowledge of the early Egyptian is greater than of the early Babylonian kings. A large portion of Egyptian history can be constructed from the native records of the Egyptians, and it is now possible to correct and modify many of the statements upon this subject made by Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus and other classical authors. The native and other documents from which Egyptian history is obtained are:—
I. Lists of Kings found in the Turin Papyrus, the Tablet of Abydos, the Tablet of Sakkârah, and the Tablet of Karnak. The Turin papyrus contained a complete list of kings beginning with the god-kings and continuing down to the end of the rule of the Hyksos, about B.C. 1700. The name of each king during this period, together with the length of his reign in years, months and days, was given, and it would have been, beyond all doubt, the most valuable of all documents for the chronology of the oldest period of Egyptian history, if scholars had been able to make use of it in the perfect condition in which it was discovered. When it arrived in Turin, however, it was found to be broken into more than one hundred and fifty fragments. So far back as 1824, Champollion recognized the true value of the fragments, and placed some of them in their chronological order. Its evidence is of the greatest importance for the history of the XIIIth and XIVth dynasties, because in this section the papyrus is tolerably perfect; for the earlier dynasties it is of very little use.
On the monuments each Egyptian king has usually two names, the prenomen and the nomen; each of these is contained in a cartouche.suten net, se R , , the first king of Egypt, is the firm
or established.
In the Turin papyrus only the prenomens of the kings are given, but its statements are confirmed and amplified by the other lists.
The Tablet of Abydosârah by Mariette, in the grave of a dignitary who lived during the reign of Rameses II. In spite of a break in it, and some orthographical errors, it is a valuable list; it gives the names of forty-seven kings, and it agrees very closely with the Abydos list. It is a curious fact that it begins with the name of Mer-ba-pen, the sixth king of the Ist dynasty. The Tablet of Karnak was discovered at Karnak by Burton, and was taken to Paris by Prisse. It was drawn up in the time of Thothmes III., and contains the names of sixty-one of his ancestors. They are not arranged in any chronological order, but the tablet is of the highest historical importance, for it records the names of some of the rulers from the XIIIth to the XVIIth dynasties, and gives the names of those of the XIth dynasty more completely than any other list.
II. Annals of Egyptian Kings inscribed upon the walls of temples, obelisks, and buildings. The narrative of such inscriptions is very simple, and practically such records merely represent itineraries in which the names of conquered and tributary lands and people are given; incidentally facts of interest are noted down. As the day and month and regnal years of the king by whom these expeditions were undertaken are generally given, these inscriptions throw much light on history. The lists of tribute are also useful, for they show what the products of the various countries were. The poetical versionnchi, the Ethiopian conqueror of Egypt, is decidedly remarkable for the minute details of his fights, the speeches made by himself and his conquered foes, and the mention of many facts⁷ which are not commonly noticed by Egyptian annalists. The vigour and poetical nature of the narrative are also very striking.
III. Historical Stelæ and Papyri, which briefly relate in chronological order the various expeditions undertaken by the king for whom they were made. Egyptian kings occasionally caused summaries of their principal conquests and of the chief events of their reign to be drawn up ; examples of these are (a) the stele of Thothmes III.,⁸ and (b) the last section of the great Harris Papyrus, in which Rameses III. reviews all the good works which he has brought to a successful issue to the glory of the gods of Egypt and for the benefit of her inhabitants. This wonderful papyrus measures 135 feet by 18 inches, and was found in a box in the temple at Medînet Habu, built by Rameses III.; it is now in the British Museum.
IV. Decrees, Scarabs, Statues of Kings and Private Persons are fruitful sources of information about historical, religious, and chronological subjects.
V. Biblical notices about Egypt and allusions to events of Egyptian history.
VI. The Cuneiform Inscriptions. or Amenophis IV. The Babylonian king who writes is called Kurigalzu. Thothmes III. had carried his victorious arms into Mesopotamia, and one of his successors, Amenophis III., delighted to go there and shoot the lions with which the country abounded. During one of these hunting expeditions he fell in love with the daughter of Tushratta, the king of Mitanni, and married her, and he brought her to Egypt, accompanied by 317 of her attendants. It will be some time before these inscriptions are fully made out, but the examination of them has already been carried sufficiently far to show that they will throw some valuable light upon the social condition of Egypt and of the countries which were subject to her at that time. Some of the tablets are written with cuneiform characters in a language which is at present unknown ; and some of them have dockets in hieratic which state from what country they were brought. The discovery of these tablets shows that there must have been people at the court of Amenophis III. who understood the cuneiform characters, and that the officers in command over towns in Phœnicia subject to the rule of Egypt could, when occasion required, write their despatches in cuneiform. The greater part of these tablets are now in the Museums of London and Berlin, some are at the Gîzeh Museum, and some are in private hands.
The Assyrian kings Sennacherib, Esarhaddon, and Assurbanipal marched against Egypt ; Tirhakah defeated Sennacherib at Eltekeh, but was defeated by Esarhaddon, the son of Sennacherib, who drove him back into Ethiopia. Esarhaddon’s son, Assurbanipal, also attacked Tirhakah and defeated him. Thebes was captured, and Egypt was divided into twenty-two provinces, over some of which Assyrian viceroys were placed. A fragment of a Babylonian tablet states that Nebuchadnezzar II. marched into Egypt.
VII. The Greek and Roman writers upon Egypt are many; and of these the best known are Herodotus, Manetho, and Diodorus Siculus. Herodotus devotes the whole of the second and the beginning of the third book of his work to a history of Egypt and the Egyptians, and his is the oldest Greek treatise on the subject known to us. In spite of the attacks made upon his work during the last few years, the evidence of the hieroglyphic inscriptions which are being deciphered year after year shows that on the whole his work is trustworthy. A work more valuable than that of Herodotus is the Egyptian history of Manetho (still living in B.C. 271) of Sebennytus, who is said by Plutarch to have been a contemporary of Ptolemy I. ; his work, however, was written during the reign of Ptolemy II. Philadelphus (B.C. 286–247). According to words put into his mouth, he was chief priest and scribe in one of the temples of Egypt, and he appears to have been perfectly acquainted with the ancient Egyptian language and literature. He had also had the benefit of a Greek education, and was therefore peculiarly fitted to draw up in Greek for Ptolemy Philadelphus a history of Egypt and her religion. The remains of the great Egyptian history of Manetho are preserved in the polemical treatise of Josephus against Apion, in which a series of passages of Egyptian history from the XVth to the XIXth dynasties is given, and in the list of the dynasties, together with the number of years of the reign of each king, given by Africanus and Eusebius on his authority. At the beginning of his work Manetho gives a list of gods and demi-gods who ruled over Egypt before Menes, the first human king of Egypt ; the thirty dynasties known to us he divides into three sections :—I–XI, XII–XIX, and XX–XXX. Diodorus Siculus, who visited Egypt B.C. 57, wrote a history of the country, its people and its religion, based chiefly upon the works of Herodotus and Hekatæus. He was not so able a writer nor so accurate an observer as Herodotus, and his work contains many blunders. Other important ancient writers on Egypt are Strabo,⁹ Chaeremon,† Josephus,‡ Plutarch§ and Horapollo.||
eru, or followers of Horus
; of their deeds and history nothing is known. Some have believed that during their rule Egypt was divided into two parts, each ruled by its own king ; and others have thought that the whole of Upper and Lower Egypt was divided into a large series of small, independent principalities, which were united under one head in the person of Menes. There is, however, no support to be obtained from the inscriptions for either of these theories. The kings of Egypt following after the mythical period are divided into thirty dynasties. For the sake of convenience, Egyptian history is divided into three periods :—I, the Ancient Empire, which includes the first eleven dynasties ; II, the Middle Empire, which includes the next nine dynasties (XIIth–XXth) ; and, III, the New Empire, which includes the remaining ten dynasties, one of which was of Persian kings. The rule of the Saïte kings was followed by that of the Persians, Ptolemies and Romans. ammedans, which began A.D. 641, ended A.D. 1517, when the country was conquered by the Turks ; since this time Egypt has been nominally a pashalik of Turkey.
The date assigned to the first dynasty is variously given by different scholars : by Champollion-Figeac it is B.C. 5867, by Böckh 5702, by Bunsen 3623, by Lepsius 3892, by Lieblein 3893, by Mariette 5004, and by Brugsch 4400. As far as can be seen, there is much to be said in favour of that given by Brugsch, and his dates are adopted throughout in this book.
HISTORICAL SUMMARY.
ANCIENT EMPIRE.
Dynasty I, from This, or Thinis.
B.C.
, the first human king of Egypt, founded Memphis, having turned aside the course of the Nile, and established a temple service there.
, wrote a book on anatomy, and continued buildings at Memphis.
esep-ti. Some papyri state that the 64th Chapter of the Book of the Dead was written in his time.
Dynasty II, from Memphis.
4133. Bet′au, in whose reign an earthquake swallowed up many people at Bubastis.
4100. Kakau, in whose days the worship of Apis at Memphis, and that of Mnevis at Heliopolis, was continued.
4066. Ba-en-neter, in whose days, according to John of Antioch, the Nile flowed with honey for eleven days. During the reign of this king the succession of females to the throne of Egypt was declared valid.
4000. Sent. The sepulchral stele of one of this king’s priests is preserved at Oxford.
Dynasty III, from Memphis.
——. Nefer-ka-Seker, in whose reign an eclipse appears to be mentioned.
Dynasty IV, from Memphis.
B.C.
3766. Seneferu. Important contemporaneous monuments of this king exist. During his reign the copper mines of Wâdi Ma‘arah were worked.
3733. Chufu (Cheops), who fought with the people of Sinai ; he built the first pyramid of Gîzeh.
(Chephren), the builder of the second pyramid at Gîzeh.
(Mycerinus), the builder of the third pyramid at Gîzeh. The fragments of his coffin are in the British Museum. Some copies of the Book of the Dead say that the 64th chapter of that work was compiled during the reign of this king.
Dynasty V, from Elephantine.
etep were written during the reign of this king.
ârah was explored in 1881.
Dynasty VI, from Memphis.
ârah.
ârah.
.
.
(Nitocris), the beautiful woman with rosy cheeks.
Nefer-ka.
. . . .
.
.
Charthi.
.
-Nebi.
-. . . . .
u.
eru.
.
.
-Tererl.
-Heru.
Pepi Seneb.
nnu.
.
eru.
.¹⁰
Dynasty XI, from Diospolis, or Thebes.
I. Egyptian history is nearly a blank. The names of a large number of kings who ruled during this period are known, but they cannot, at present, be arranged in exact chronological order.
appears to have been the