General Literature. 193 



Egypt, having already set the example, by taking upon himself 

 the expense of the drawings of a valuable hieroglyphical MS. 

 which he has lately received from the British Consul at Cairo. 



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9. Prize Questions. — The Royal Academy of Inscriptions and 

 Belles Lettres atjParis, have proposed the following prize subject 

 for the yearl82I : — "To compare the monuments which remain of 

 the ancient empire of Persia and Chaldea, either edifices, basso- 

 relievos, statues, or inscriptions, amulets, coins, engraved stones, 

 cylinders, ^c, with the religious doctrines and allegories con- 

 tained in the Zend Avesta, and with the indications and data 

 which have been preserved to us by Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and 

 Oriental writers, on the opinions and customs of the Persians 



Vol. VIII. O 



