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II. The SOLDIERS, a military race, divided into the Hermotybies and the Calasires

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Royal body-guard composed of 2000 men, changed annually
Daily rations of 5 lbs. of bread, 2 lbs. of beef, and a quart of wine
Garrisons on the frontiers

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Five inferior castes, including the masses, very imperfectly distin-
guished by ancient writers
Every man obliged to show once a year that he lived by honest

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means

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III. The HERDSMEN probably included husbandmen, nomades, and the marshmen of the Delta

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IV. The SWINEHERDS, a Pariah caste

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V. The TRADERS, probably included several subdivisions, which were all hereditary

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VI. The INTERPRETERS, first originated in the reign of Psammitichus

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VII. The STEERSMEN, or navigators of the Nile

Great extent of the river navigation

Physical characteristics of the Aegyptians

Described by Herodotus as being swarthy and curly-headed
Represented in the paintings as being of a red-brown colour

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Intermediate between the Syro-Arabian and the Aethiopian type

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Daughters, and not sons, obliged to support their parents

Priests shave their heads

Laity leave their hair to grow whilst mourning for near relations

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Rings and sail sheets fastened inside their boats

Writing and ciphering from left to right

Dress of the Aegyptians, a linen tunic, and white woollen mantle

Equipment of the marines in the navy of Xerxes

Social customs

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Wine from the grape, probably imported from Greece .

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Phoenician palm wine, and wine made from barley

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Radishes, onions, and garlic

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Marshmen of the Delta lived on the lotus, the stalk of the byblus, and dried fish

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Extracted an oil from the sillicyprion, called kiki

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Strange custom of carrying round the image of a corpse at drinking parties

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Extraordinary preservation of a very ancient dirge, called Maneros, which resembled the Greek Linus

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Question as to whether it may not have originated in the death

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Models kept by the embalmers of the three different modes .

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Recovered bodies of persons killed by crocodiles, or drowned in the

Nile, regarded as sacred, and embalmed in the best manner at the public expense

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Art of medicine subdivided into numerous branches

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Purging generally practised

Science of geometry originated in the yearly re-measuring of the

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land after the inundations

Character of the Aegyptian writing

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Two kinds of letters noticed by Herodotus, the sacred, or hieratic, and the common, or demotic

General sketch of the three modes of Aegyptian writing

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I. The Hieroglyphic, including pictures representing objects, pictures representing ideas, and pictures representing sounds

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II. The Hieratic, or sacred writing, a species of short-hand hieroglyphics

III. The Enchorial, or common writing

Aegyptian mode of building the merchant barge, called a baris
Hull formed of short planks, joined together like bricks
Generally towed up stream

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Down stream were tugged by a hurdle at the prow, and steadied by a stone at the stern

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Animals did not abound in Aegypt, but were all considered sacred,

whether wild or domesticated

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Curators appointed over each species

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Maintained by the vows of parents

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The murder of an animal, if wilful, punished by death; if accidental, by a fine; but the murderer of the Ibis, or hawk, always executed

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Cats sacred to Bubastis, or Pasht

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Number diminished by the males killing the kittens, and the cats

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Crocodiles, Herodotus's description of their nature and habits

Singular affection for the trochilus

Worshipped in the neighbourhood of Thebes and Lake Moeris

Caught by means of a hook baited with a chine of pork

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Hippopotamus

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