416 plint's NATTJEAL HISTOET. [Book Y. 



CHAP. 11. — THE CITIES OF EGYPT. 



'Egypt, besides its boast of extreme antiquity, asserts that 

 it contained, in the reign of King Amasis\ 20,000 inhabited 

 cities : in our day they are still very numerous, though no 

 longer of any particular note. Still however we find the 

 following ones mentioned as of great renown — the city of 

 Apollo^ ; next, that of Leucothea^ ; then Great Diospolis*, 

 otherwise Thebes, known to fame for its hundred gates ; 

 Copt OS*, which from its proximity to the Nile, forms its 

 nearest emporium for the merchandise of India and Arabia ; 

 then the town of Venus', and then another town of Jupi- 



* The last king of the line of Psammetichus, B.C. 569. He succeeded 

 Apries, whom the Egyptians put to death. He died just before the in- 

 vasion by Carabyses, having displayed great abilities as a ruler. 



2 There was the Greater ApolUnopolis, the modem Edfoo, in the 

 Thebaid, on the western bank of the Nile, in lat. 25° north, about thirteen 

 miles below the lesser Cataract : its inhabitants were enemies of the cro- 

 codile and its worshippers. The remains of two temples there are con- 

 sidered second only to the temple of Denderah as specimens of the sacred 

 structures of Egypt. A Lesser Apollinopolis was in Upper Egypt, on 

 the western bank of the Nile, in lat. 27° north. Another Lesser Apol- 

 linopolis was a town of the Thebaid in the Coptite Nome, in lat. 26° 

 north, situate between Thebes and Coptos. It was situate at the pre- 

 sent Kuss. 



3 Its site is unknown. Hardouin suggests that it is the Eilethuia of 

 Ptolemy, the modem El-Kab. 



* " City of Jupiter," the Greek name for Thebes, the No or No Ammon 

 of Scripture. It stood in the centre of the Thebaid, on both banks of the 

 Nile, above Coptos, and in the Nomos Coptites. Its ruins, which are the 

 nr.ost magnificent in the world, enclose within their site the four villages 

 of Camac, Luxor, Medinet Abou, and Goumou. 



5 Its hieroglyphical name was Kobto, and its site is now occupied by 

 the modem town of Kouft or Keft. It was situate in lat. 26° nortli, 

 on the right bank of the Nile, about a mile from its banks. As a halting 

 place or rather watering-place for the caravans, it was enriched by the 

 commerce between Libya and Egypt on the one hand, and Arabia and 

 India and Egypt on the other, the latter being carried on through the 

 port of Berenice on the Red Sea, founded by Ptolemy Pliiladelphus, 

 B.C. 266. In the seventh century of the Christian era, it bore for some 

 time the name of Justinianopolis. There are a few remains of Roman 

 buildings to be seen on its site. 



6 Also called Aphrodite or Aphroditopolis. Of this name there 

 were several towns or cities in ancient Egypt. In Lower Egypt there 

 was Atarbechis, thus named, and a town mentioned by Strabo in the 

 acme of Leontopolites. In the Heptanomis or Middle Egypt there was 



