4 Some conjectures on the progress of [Jan. 



of Egypt, and her ancient ports, as Philoteras (Wilkinson's M. and C. 

 ch. III.) might, in this sense account for the Hindu analogies ; nay, 

 the passage* in George Syncellus upon the 40th king in his list, 

 Amenophthis ("who is the Vocal Stone. The Ethiopians came from 

 the Indus, and settled in Egypt ;") would go with many who adopted 

 Heeren's view as proof positive, in the absence of a thoroughly critical 

 examination of the records, historical, traditional, and chronological, 

 of the ancient kingdoms of Egypt. 



It so happened that in 1846, a position was put forth in a treatise 

 on military history, published anonymously and obscurely enough by 

 me in Calcutta, maintaining the Egyptians, to have been the original 

 instructors and civilizers of Europe. This idea combated the view 

 taken of them as respects the peculiar "impress of their locality," 

 and was entertained after mature reflection upon consideration that 

 their monuments show them to have been great and mighty conquerors, 

 that they also bore testimony to their progress in art and science, and 

 that art goes forth with arms, the study of which is one of the first 

 historical characteristics with an energetic and enterprising people. 

 After quoting Saxe'sf well-known comment on discipline, it was observed 

 — " the nations of antiquity who derived their military system directly 

 from Egypt, imbibed this great principle together with the rules of 

 practice which their leaders, or their founders carried away from the 

 land, which was truly the focus of all western civilization. These 



* " I have represented the Egyptians as an aboriginal people of Africa, and as 

 descended from the same race as the present inhabitants of Nubia. This race 

 insensibly spread itself by colonies along the valley of the Nile into Lower Egypt. 

 I have confined this assertion, however, to the superior castes of priests and. 

 warriors ; since it appears, according to the relations of the Egyptians themselves, 

 that it was a sacerdotal caste, emigrated from Meroe, which, by the aid of its reli- 

 gion and superior intelligence, founded a dominion over the Nomad tribes, the pri- 

 mitive inhabitants of Egypt. Such is also the opinion of Rosellini, although he 

 does not mention Meroe, but only cites the generic name of Ethiopia. I shall 

 show, a little further on, that Champollion also held the same opinion, which is 

 still further strengthened by the statements of other travellers quoted in my work." 

 Heeren's Res. Vol. V. Appendix XI. Sec. I. 



f The statements of this Byzantine chronologer, with those of his predecessors 

 Theophilus, Panodorus, and Anianus, are critically examined by Bunsen in his 

 •• Egypt's Place." B. I. Sec. II. D. E. P. G.—H. T. 



